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The Official Student Paper of Riverside Poly High School

Build It and They Will Come

Mar 10, 2014

BUILD: The Lego Movie is a treat for viewers of all ages.

By Stephen Park, Staff Writer

The

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Lego Movie is a true gem, a diamond in the rough. No matter what your perception is, go and see this movie; it is shocking how much this is truly a movie for all audiences. Everything about it is amazing—no, awesome. Imagine the charm of Toy Story, only mixed in with some sort of wicked acid trip. A no-rules, surprised-filled, chaotic bonanza. This is how you make a kids’ movie. No! This is how you make a movie. This is how you utilize an all-star cast, this is the Will Ferrell movie you’ve waited for since Elf. This is how you make something memorable, something that will make money. Disregard it as a kids’ movie; it’s far away from being something like Frozen. The Lego Movie is a fantastic movie worth the money.

This movie is wickedly smart, and equally funny. The brightly imagined worlds come to life, in a way no other movie I’ve seen has yet to accomplish. You’ll go to many places, from the amazing opening sequence of a Lego-ized city, bustling and gigantic, alive and breathing, to an amazingly reenvisioned depiction of the midwest. It is truly something when plastic blocks are just as breathtaking as the Grand Canyon. These Legos will blow your mind to the fullest extent of the phrase. I still can’t get the dastardly catchy tune about how awesome everything is out of my head.

Now normally I’m against movies based on toys or action figures, especially when they result in entertainment up-chuck like Transformers, G.I. Joe, and Battleship. But if a movie doesn’t follow that pattern, and can hold its own in making fun of corporate branding and simultaneously bring Dumbledore and Batman together in the fight for mankind… well, maybe I can let it slide.

With recent animators settling on easy, cash-creating sequels, it’s refreshing to see that The Lego Movie isn’t just a 100-minute marketing campaign. Instead, it is a dangerously charming, subversive satire. It follows the rules but at the same time embraces individuality and creativity. It might be a 100-minute ad, but it’s a ferociously entertaining one, with jokes that whiz around at lightspeed.

The movie is also a grand spectacle for the eyes. It’s fully animated yet was created to appear as if made in stop motion. This may seem like a waste, but it enables the Legos to feel like real Legos. It also allows for some jaw-dropping scenes, with constantly changing settings and characters.

It isn’t fair to any potential viewers to spoil what happens, so just know that very few movies have so much wit, chaos and amusement packed into them. If that doesn’t draw you in, maybe a Shaggy-esque Jesus Lego voiced by Morgan Freeman will.

Photo courtesy of www.artrix.co.uk

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