![]() ![]() Because sometimes, you vaguely remember an old movie that had some sort of plot twist at the end of it, but can’t remember what it was.Because sometimes, the surprise “spoiler” ending is the only reason you’d pay $11 to see what is otherwise a turkey of a film.Next thing Emmett’s world knows, three beings drop in from “Planet Duplo” (LEGO set for ages 2-5, you under-rock dwellers!!). Meanwhile, The Man Upstairs tells his son that if he is going to let him play with the LEGO Universe, his sister needs to be allowed too. ![]() The “relic” is given to Business, who caps the tube of KRAzyGLuE (kragle in the story), and the world is reborn as a new land where everyone can build as they please without the order of Business’s instruction-built world. Emmett feels a symbiotic realization to the boy’s, and is returned to LEGO world with a newfound creativity of a Master Builder. But the man realizes his son’s creativity, and chooses to help his son finish the adventure before Taco Tuesday for dinner. When The Man Upstairs sees what his son has been doing with his LEGO sets (beautifully built into the many worlds we see throughout the story), he initially starts breaking it down, which we see happening from Emmett’s point of view as their side losing the battle. The entire story is an imaginative world made up by the son of “The Man Upstairs” (Will Ferrell, who also provides the voice of the main villain – Business, and Emmett is essentially the hero that the boy created for the story we’ve been watching). ![]()
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