• How it Should Have Ended - Lego Movie
    15 replies, posted
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HOQxxNYSHR0[/media]
I can hardly think of any flaws in this movie.
[QUOTE=Devil Traitor;44699070]I can hardly think of any flaws in this movie.[/QUOTE] The end was completely unnecessary and could have been done way better. They could have done without any of the jarring "real life" scenes and the movie would have ended in a much smoother way. Being reminded that "it's just toys and some kids imagination" during the last parts of the movie just ruined the entire plot and makes it feel pointless.
[QUOTE=FelixDragon;44699132]The end was completely unnecessary and could have been done way better. They could have done without any of the jarring "real life" scenes and the movie would have ended in a much smoother way. Being reminded that "it's just toys and some kids imagination" during the last parts of the movie just ruined the entire plot and makes it feel pointless.[/QUOTE] I liked the ending, I thought it was sweet
I thought the ending and the real life scenes were perfectly done honestly. The Lego Movie was flawless.
They didn't really bash it in this one. Just kinda added on a little. That was cool.
[sp]I can totally imagine a kid having superman and batman make casual conversation in a coffeeshop[/sp]
[QUOTE=HazzaHardie;44699157]I liked the ending, I thought it was sweet[/QUOTE] I honestly would have liked the movie better without the real life scenes. It felt shoehorned in. They spent all this time making the entire world feel real (Which is what most other lego movies come off as being, at least in my opinion.) only to have humans just randomly pop up at the last second. I mean yeah, they talked about "The man upstairs" and all of the artifacts were real world objects, but there are plenty of movies that do things like that and still keep the world they live in "real." The ending was still a good one, I'm just one of the few people who thinks it would have been just a BIT better if it was just a lego world instead of an imaginary one.
[QUOTE=Devil Traitor;44699070]I can hardly think of any flaws in this movie.[/QUOTE] Uhh, well Will Ferrel. He ruined the entire movie for me. He's a shit actor who stars in shit movies 99% of the time.
In all honesty The LEGO Movie was the joint worst thing I've ever personally seen. I was basically 100% behind the bad guy and that's an instant lose condition when it comes to my opinion on films. That, and because Superman and Wonder Woman were completely wasted even as cameos go.
How could you be behind him...?
[QUOTE=FelixDragon;44699132]The end was completely unnecessary and could have been done way better. They could have done without any of the jarring "real life" scenes and the movie would have ended in a much smoother way. Being reminded that "it's just toys and some kids imagination" during the last parts of the movie just ruined the entire plot and makes it feel pointless.[/QUOTE] I've got mixed feelings about the ending. I mean it was sweet and well done, but I had already fallen in love with the world they had created within the film and I found myself impatiently waiting to return to it as a result.
[QUOTE=Tuskin;44703389]How could you be behind him...?[/QUOTE] [sp]I mean more The Man Upstairs than "Lord Business", I wouldn't let no snot-nosed punk touch my things without my permission.[/sp]
[QUOTE=FelixDragon;44699132]The end was completely unnecessary and could have been done way better. They could have done without any of the jarring "real life" scenes and the movie would have ended in a much smoother way. Being reminded that "it's just toys and some kids imagination" during the last parts of the movie just ruined the entire plot and makes it feel pointless.[/QUOTE] Are you kidding me? The real life part was [I]the best part of the movie[/I]. It made sense, they fit the rest of the movie in with it perfectly, and it was touching. It turned it from just another movie about "anyone can be a hero" to one about letting your kids be kids. There were certainly parents watching the movie with their kids, and it gave [I]them[/I] a message too. While keeping the first "anyone can be a hero" one for the kids! Also, did you miss Emmet moving on his own? Seriously, how they handled them actually being Legos was brilliant. It wasn't just "ooh they were legos the whole time", but fit each part in with the reveal that there's a real life part. The different worlds being separated was his dad keeping them on separate tables, the micromanagers were the dad putting things back, the destruction of Cloud Cuckoo Land was the kid putting his on works with his dad's and then his dad destroying the whole thing (except the parts that looked like they fit somewhere else), the construction workers destroying and rebuilding things were the kid having fun building but being careful not to anger his dad, the pirate's tale was a different time the kid tried to rebel against his dad, et cetera.
[QUOTE=DiscoInferno;44703566][sp]I mean more The Man Upstairs than "Lord Business", I wouldn't let no snot-nosed punk touch my things without my permission.[/sp][/QUOTE] have fun being the sort of dad no kid would ever be too thrilled about lol
[QUOTE=killerteacup;44703662]have fun being the sort of dad no kid would ever be too thrilled about lol[/QUOTE] The likelihood of me having children biologically is literally 0, adoption is something I would consider only if my partner really wanted it, and I would probably be a very poor mother. Besides, I can be fun, I'm still very possessive, however.
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