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IMDbPro

A Lego Brickumentary

  • 2014
  • G
  • 1h 33min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,8/10
2310
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
A Lego Brickumentary (2014)
A look at the global culture and appeal of LEGO.
Riproduci trailer2:18
1 video
4 foto
Un documentario

Questo divertente documentario esplora come i mattoncini LEGO sono passati dai giocattoli per bambini a un fenomeno globale amato da collezionisti, artisti, innovatori e costruttori di tutte... Leggi tuttoQuesto divertente documentario esplora come i mattoncini LEGO sono passati dai giocattoli per bambini a un fenomeno globale amato da collezionisti, artisti, innovatori e costruttori di tutte le età.Questo divertente documentario esplora come i mattoncini LEGO sono passati dai giocattoli per bambini a un fenomeno globale amato da collezionisti, artisti, innovatori e costruttori di tutte le età.

  • Regia
    • Kief Davidson
    • Daniel Junge
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Daniel Junge
    • Davis Coombe
    • Kief Davidson
  • Star
    • Jason Bateman
    • Jamie Berard
    • Marcos Bessa
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,8/10
    2310
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Kief Davidson
      • Daniel Junge
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Daniel Junge
      • Davis Coombe
      • Kief Davidson
    • Star
      • Jason Bateman
      • Jamie Berard
      • Marcos Bessa
    • 18Recensioni degli utenti
    • 44Recensioni della critica
    • 51Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 1 candidatura in totale

    Video1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:18
    Official Trailer

    Foto3

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali28

    Modifica
    Jason Bateman
    Jason Bateman
    • Narrator
    • (voce)
    Jamie Berard
    • Self
    Marcos Bessa
    • Self
    Bryan Bonahoom
    • Self
    Corey Burton
    Corey Burton
    • Emmet Brickowski
    Marta Fernández
    Alice Finch
    • Self
    Jens Kronvold Frederikson
    • Self
    Richard Gottlieb
    • Self
    Bret Harris
    Bret Harris
    • Self
    Iain Clifford Heath
    Carly Henderson
    • Self - Host
    Dwight Howard
    Dwight Howard
    • Self
    Cody Hughes
    • Self
    G.W. Krauss
    • Self
    Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen
    • Self
    Dan Legoff
    • Self
    Soren Lethin
    • Self
    • Regia
      • Kief Davidson
      • Daniel Junge
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Daniel Junge
      • Davis Coombe
      • Kief Davidson
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti18

    6,82.3K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    7comicman117

    A Vision

    A Lego Brickumentary, also known as Beyond the Brick: A Lego Brickumentary is a very interestingly done documentary that looks at the global culture, appeal, and history of the Lego Company and its building block toys. The documentary borders on mockumentary at times, and it features some rather confusing scenes, but overall, it's worth a watch, especially if you're a huge fan of the popular brick company. The film shows the audience the origin of Legos through its country of origin, Denmark, to modern day. The film goes through both the accomplishments and struggles of the company, and how it almost went bankrupt around 1999. The film shows how the company changed with the times, as well as, footage of Lego conventions, and various fans using their Legos in very creative ways. Creative use of Legos included a person who built an entire house out of Lego bricks, and another person who built an actual car using Legos. Both examples are crazily creative. The movie even contains scenes showing how Legos are improving the world, with some psychiatrist using Legos to help their patients, and one boy, named Adrian Pitt, who is using Legos to help with his speech problem.

    The documentary is narrated by Jason Bateman, playing a fictional Lego, who appears sometimes in well-done stop-motion sequences and tells the audience about an aspect of Legos. What I appreciated about these particular sequences was the amount of creativity that went into them. It must have taken the filmmakers hours just to make one sequence. We even get to see some behind the scenes footage of the making of the recent The Lego Movie.

    The film contains interviews with various people who work at Lego, as well as, entertainers such as Ed Sheeran, Trey Parker, and Dwight Howard, all of whom relate their personal experiences and appreciation for Legos. These sequences are nice, as we get to see that Lego fans go well-beyond supposed children or even nerds.

    In spite of all of the praise I've given this film, I can't say it's perfect. One thing, a Brickumentary falls apart in, is it's a lack of focus. While all the various Lego stories are interesting, much of the material that happens at the actual Lego studios left me uninterested. Maybe I'm just not into the actual behind the scenes aspects of the company, but I did find the actual Lego creative stories more eventful, and thankfully, they do make up the bulk of the film.

    That major flaw aside, A Lego Brickumentary is a fairly well-made, well-done documentary that serves as a good look at the history and success of one of the world's biggest toy companies, who got popular simply off one product, and not many companies can say that.
    JohnDeSando

    A memorable doc about a memorable toy.

    "LEGO toys build anything. Especially pride." LEGO

    A LEGO Brickumentary is a memorable documentary about one of the world's most successful businesses devoted to only one toy, but perhaps the most creative toy ever devised. Although the doc could be considered an extended ad for the little building blocks, and in a way it is whether the filmmakers mean it or not, the film is a colorful—in all senses of the word—history. Its founders and artists are more creative and enthusiastic, I suspect, than even lucky Google employees.

    Or maybe even eccentric: the founder, Ole Kirk Christiansen, kept building new factories after at least three in a row burned down, the first one the original LEGO factory in Denmark. That joyful determination pervades the enterprise, where artists and scientists collaborate (Lego is a model of creativity sharing) like brainy kids given their first Gilbert chemistry sets.

    If one doesn't work for LEGO, it doesn't mean you aren't invested in the product: Brickartist Nathan Sawaya in Manhattan claims to spend more than $100,000 a year on the bricks. His full-size human and animal LEGO artworks show his investment and enthusiasm as well as mesmerizing subjects.

    It's worth seeing if only for the grand creations such as a full-sized plane and a village so beautifully appointed you'll want to shrink just to live there. If I sound rhapsodic, then so be it, for I am good with following the instructions when my grandson Toby and I put a themed model together. I leave digging out old bricks to create something unique to Toby.

    If you loved The Lego Movie, this doc will show you the models used in that lovable film, and if you wonder what AFOLS is (Adult Fans of LEGO), or if you're curious how LEGOs are used in therapy, then sit back and relax with this unusual Brickumentary.
    paul-allaer

    An unabashed love letter to LEGO

    I grew up in Belgium, and as a young kid in the 1960s, LEGO was one of my primary toys. I must've spent hundreds of hours playing and building LEGO stuff. Then I passed on the love for LEGO to my young son here in the US 30 years later. When I found out that, if not parallel with, then certainly as a result of the smashing success of the (CGI, not brick-made) "Lego Movie", a documentary was being made about the LEGO phenomenon, I couldn't wait to see it.

    "A LEGO Brickumentary" (2014 release from Denmark and the US; 93 min.) opens with seeing 3 LEGO minifigs on a space ship, and the narrator (Jason Bateman) telling us he'll explain later what that is about. Soon after, we get a LEGO 101 on the company's roots and history. But it's not too long before we finally get what we all came to see this for: bigger, better, ever more imaginative if not out-right exotic LEGO creations. Along the way, we get the LEGO celebrity fans (Ed Sheeran singing his hit single "Lego House", NBA player Dwight Howard, etc.). Co-directors Kief Davidson and Daniel Junge decide to keep things very light-hearted. There is only the slightest critical comment about LEGO, and even there, it's turned into a plus for LEGO (how the company turned things around financially by listening better to its customers). The best part of the movie comes in the second half, when the co-directors look at the possible therapeutic effects of playing with LEGO, and also where a Danish university math professor examines whether he can come up with a formula for finding how many different positions just 6 or 7 LEGO bricks can be used/interlocked.

    In the end this film is nothing more than an unabashed love letter to LEGO. It's pleasant (to see the LEGO creations) but it's also devoid of any critical tone, and hence there is also no strong narrative that pulls you in, reason that I rate this 6 stars. The movie opened just this weekend at my local art-house theater here in Cincinnati. The early evening screening where I saw this at was not particularly well attended, which really surprised me. Given the strong brand that LEGO is and the very positive response to The LEGO Movie, I would've expected more people for that on its opening weekend. If you are a LEGO fan, you should definitely check this out, but you should also keep your expectations modest. If you are not into LEGO, I'd suggest you check out something else to see.
    8StevePulaski

    Admittedly fan service, but delightfully so

    LEGOs have been the anomaly of the toy industry since their inception in 1949. While Mattel keeps it head above water with successful, universally recognizable toy lines such as Hot Wheels and Barbie, and Hasbro has had strong success with G.I. Joe, LEGO has found a way to solely capitalize on the versatility and incalculable possibilities of their construction toy. Even though LEGO has succeeded in spawning a variety of spinoffs, such as the ever-so popular and beloved "Bionicles" when I was young, LEGO Architecture, and LEGO Customs, LEGO really only sells one product, whereas other toy companies scramble to try and find the next successful thing to franchise.

    Most childhoods I know were accompanied by a LEGO set or two; sitting right beside me as I write this review is a six-foot-long table, admittedly cluttered and disorganized as all Hell, of a variety of LEGO buildings, some erected from the directions out of the box and some from my imagination. As a child, I loved LEGOs and fondly recall making an event out of sitting beside my mother as we built a barrage of sets together. LEGOs were the quintessential gift for children due to the fact that you had the choice of adhering to the instructions that came with every set or exercise your creative freedom by building whatever you found to be enticing. The potential for a universe was at your fingertips and all you had to do was build it.

    A LEGO Brickumentary is a film that works to articulate that point and show that LEGO conventions, warehouses, and "master builders," people that work to create record-breaking LEGO sculptures in addition to creating brand new sets, are just as limitless in their scope as the plastic pieces themselves. The creator of the toy was a Danish man by the name of Ole Kirk Christiansen, who created wooden toys in a factory during the 1940's, consistently having to erect new factories following the destruction of one after another in fires. Christiansen purchased a plastic molder upon its invention, marveling at the fact that the machine, while so primitive, could mold and create a wide variety of complex plastic pieces. He found that, when properly manipulated and detailed, plastic blocks could be created and used to construct many different things, which eventually lead to the birth of LEGOs.

    The major invention to these multicolored blocks was the "clutch power" added in later, otherwise known as the tiny stubs and holes present on nearly every LEGO block, allowing for secure connectivity and easy transitioning between pieces. Fast-forward decades later and current LEGO engineers and master builders work to create stories and depth behind the characters they create in their new LEGO sets, allowing for a certain richness to come packed in with each construction set. Furthermore, licensed products such as The Avengers, Spider-Man, and Star Wars all found themselves converted to the multicolored bricks in a way that booned the company to record profits and notoriety, in addition to allowing children the freedom to take their beloved characters home in a way that wasn't as vapid as just a plain action figure.

    However, our narrator Jason Bateman - who also voices an ordinary LEGO character in the film - tells us how that wasn't always the case. In the mid-2000's, LEGO almost found itself closing its doors, with record-low profits and middling success with their new lines of toys (IE: "Jack Stone" and "4 Plus"). One employee says, at that time, LEGO had become a very arrogant company, one that was hesitant to listen to customer feedback due to perceived superiority on the ends of the CEOS and the employees themselves. When that changed, however, product lines such as LEGO Architecture, a line of universally known and renowned buildings such as the Taj Mahal, Willis Tower, and Empire State Building condensed into LEGO form, and LEGO Customs, a website allowing you to conceive your own LEGO set and having the ability to vote on others for the potential of making it a real set, came to be.

    A LEGO Brickumentary's core focus, however, is the fandom and the ostensible impossibilities in size, scope, and popularity LEGOs have achieved on a global level. We are taken into many different conventions, where LEGO fans hold their own competitions (IE: building a LEGO set without being able to see the set of the piece, building LEGOs while the pieces are inside of a bag, and so forth. In addition, we are shown the elaborate codenames that have been given to different pieces and fans of LEGOs, with "AFOL" ("adult fan of LEGOs") being the most common and "MOC" (my own creation) perhaps being the second most. Arguably the most humorous is the nickname for an attractive woman at a LEGO convention, known as a "one-by-five" because LEGO does not make a one-by-five piece.

    Finally, directors Kief Davidson and Daniel Junge show us how LEGO is working to break records every day. We see the creation of a life-size ex-wing fighter, using over five million LEGO bricks, equating to more than eight tons of material. With that, numerous "master builders," engineers, and interior designers work to create and perfect the steel frame and structure behind the fighter.

    A LEGO Brickumentary is, admittedly, fan service; similar to Plastic Galaxy: The Story of Star Wars Toys, anyone already acquainted and thoroughly in love with the product in hand will find themselves delighted by the film solely because of its existence. While corny when it focuses on Bateman's LEGO character, this is a fairly solid look into a company that continues to expand and shows no sign of slowing down, creatively or financially.

    Directed by: Kief Davidson and Daniel Junge.
    ForTheMostPart1999

    As a Lego fan myself, I was pleasantly inspired by this documentary

    It just goes to show that just because something is made out of some sort of melted plastic element does not always mean it's a product for kids. I grew up with the knowledge of several enough elements when I would fiddle with Legos and one thing I would admit is that I was more into just building the models on the market rather than create my own. In a way though, it still was a deep passion for my self and it felt that way every time I saw a brick. It still like that to this day as I still enjoy collecting larger sets that are currently on the market to this day. As for this documentary, it was definitely well engaging the first half and had some neat topics covered, including the largest lego ever built and the inspirations of the stop motion videos. The special needs topic also captured me, as I myself had some slight disabilities growing up, but without Lego, I don't know how much creative passion I would have today. This was a pretty good documentary overall.

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      Narrator: This story is about a simple toy that became, well, more than a toy. And how its unique properties ushered in a new era of creativity, not just for kids, but for a whole generation.

    • Connessioni
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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 31 luglio 2015 (Stati Uniti)
    • Paesi di origine
      • Danimarca
      • Stati Uniti
    • Siti ufficiali
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Lingue
      • Inglese
      • Portoghese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Beyond the Brick: A Lego Brickumentary
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Global Emerging Markets (GEM)
      • HeLo
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    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 1.000.000 USD (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 101.531 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 43.285 USD
      • 2 ago 2015
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 101.531 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 33min(93 min)
    • Colore
      • Color

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