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IMDbPro

A Lego Brickumentary

  • 2014
  • G
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
A Lego Brickumentary (2014)
A look at the global culture and appeal of LEGO.
Play trailer2:18
1 Video
4 Photos
Documentary

A look at the global culture and appeal of the LEGO building-block toys.A look at the global culture and appeal of the LEGO building-block toys.A look at the global culture and appeal of the LEGO building-block toys.

  • Directors
    • Kief Davidson
    • Daniel Junge
  • Writers
    • Daniel Junge
    • Davis Coombe
    • Kief Davidson
  • Stars
    • Jason Bateman
    • Jamie Berard
    • Marcos Bessa
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    2.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Kief Davidson
      • Daniel Junge
    • Writers
      • Daniel Junge
      • Davis Coombe
      • Kief Davidson
    • Stars
      • Jason Bateman
      • Jamie Berard
      • Marcos Bessa
    • 18User reviews
    • 44Critic reviews
    • 51Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:18
    Official Trailer

    Photos3

    View Poster
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    View Poster

    Top cast28

    Edit
    Jason Bateman
    Jason Bateman
    • Narrator
    • (voice)
    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
    • Directors
      • Kief Davidson
      • Daniel Junge
    • Writers
      • Daniel Junge
      • Davis Coombe
      • Kief Davidson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    6.82.3K
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    Featured reviews

    7subxerogravity

    The greatest toy ever invented and this documentary reinforces that.

    This movie was nothing but dope. As dope as The Lego Movie.

    A LEGO Brickumentary explores what seems to be by the documentary standards a history of the invention of Lego, but mostly it goes through how Lego has changed lives since it's invention.

    It's a geek culture that I am aware of but sadly I'm not fully a part of, despite my admiration to the product. The filmmakers due an amazing job of impressing me with how far beyond the bricks have come from being just a toy.

    It's fitting that the documentary spends a lot of time unavailing a life size X-wing fighter from the movie Star Wars, another product that sparked the same type of geek culture.

    But the movie documents how Legos are more awesome than the Star Wars movies (except Star Wars geeks have better nicknames). The documentary showcases how Kids teens and Adults use Legos literally as a tool for the imagination, similar to a pen and a pad (and this is what I love most about the toys). It also shows the growing cult phenomenon that goes outside of the Lego company with people who are able to make a living off of Legos without the company's permission and how Lego encourages this, not something you expect from the #2 biggest toy company in the world.

    I feel like Lego does not get enough credit that it deserves, I'm hoping this doc changes that. It has inspired me to pick up the Legos I have.
    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.
    8browilliams

    More Than an Infomercial

    Confession: I am documentary junkie. That said, this film was not exactly a work of art. It has the feeling of an IMAX or theme park film, but don't let that stop you.

    The story of Lego is reminiscent of many titans of business; big ideas growing out of a small shop, and so forth. What this movie is really about though is summed up in this statement: "99% of the smartest people in the world do not work for us." Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen explains as he recounts the near death experience of Lego in the early 2000's.

    Clearly Lego is *capitalizing on their success. As such, this movie shows how great of a company Lego is; and to be honest, Lego seems to deserving of all the attention it has been getting.

    But this "Brickumentary" is more than that. It is also a window into the immensely diverse world of Lego fanboys and girls, (think Bronys,Trekkies, et.al.), and lets us in to the way Lego utilizes "crowd-sourcing", something Lego appears to have been on the cutting edge of. It shows us how Lego has become a medium for the arts, a tool of scientific inquiry, and how little kids who started with a box of plastic bricks were later inspired to engineering things that have helped us in the real world.

    My family loved it. Looking forward to watching it again soon.

    (PS: my only complaint is that there is a split second or two of non-kid friendly content. Surely the filmmakers knew that their audience would predominantly be children. Some things are better left unsaid or in this case, un-shown...)
    6CleveMan66

    "A Lego Brickumentary" is an interesting 93-minute-long commercial.

    Parade of the Virgins! That's what I thought when I saw that "A Lego Brickumentary" (G, 1:33) focused mainly on adult Lego enthusiasts. Then I saw married couples and families in this documentary… so I couldn't use that particular line. Next I thought that I could just mock the adults whose main hobby was building with Legos as being simply uncool. That's when I saw award-winning singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran, "South Park" co-creator Trey Parker and Houston Rockets star Dwight Howard all extol the virtues of the plastic bricks. At that point… well, I was kinda led to take this documentary a little more seriously. And that was only the beginning.

    The movie does begin at the beginning, explaining how Lego bricks were invented and became one of Denmark's most famous exports, but who knew that so many adults took those colorful little bricks so seriously? Jason Bateman narrates the documentary which spends most of its time introducing us to adults who have made Lego a way of life, and showing us many, many different uses for this construction "toy".

    After we meet Lego "master builders" who are full-time employees of the company, the film introduces us to ordinary people in different countries who became self-made Lego innovators, some of whom have been welcomed into the Lego corporate family. There are also clubs and conventions for those who refer to themselves by the unfortunate-sounding acronym AFOL (Adult Fan of Lego).

    Then things get serious. The documentary shows us how Legos have been used in modern art and to build a full-sized replica of a Star Wars X-Wing Fighter. Legos have even been used in city planning and in therapy for autistic children. Throughout the movie, an animated Lego minifigure ("min-fig" for short) pops up to provide moviegoers with explanations of the movie's main points, but mostly, this film is about the people, the surprising variety of people all over the world using Lego bricks in a surprising variety of ways.

    "A Lego Brickumentary" follows several of these Lego-centered stories and brings some of them to interesting and satisfying conclusions. The movie was more interesting and wide-ranging than I thought it would be, but it was still not much more than a Lego commercial on steroids. The documentary is fun, but it plays out as a long visitor's center video at the Lego factory or one of the Lego theme parks. "B"
    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.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      While the documentary suggests the young filmmakers making the BrickFilm "Melting Point" were editing the final parts of the film when the documentary was released, this was unfortunately not quite the case. In fact, the director was near radio silent on the film's progress until 2017-- a good four years after they announced the film on Kickstarter-- releasing a short BrickFilm explaining what happen to the film: it was too ambitious of a project and he would rather stay creative by becoming a writer. Since then, he has not made any more BrickFilms, however his book remains available on Amazon. He has gone on record saying he will release the scenes he already had filmed, most of which have still yet to be released. Additionally he offered refunds to anyone who contributed on the Kickstarter who requested one. It is unclear whether refunds were successful or not.
    • Quotes

      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.

    • Connections
      Features CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite (1941)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 31, 2015 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Denmark
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • English
      • Portuguese
    • Also known as
      • Beyond the Brick: A Lego Brickumentary
    • Production companies
      • Global Emerging Markets (GEM)
      • HeLo
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $1,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $101,531
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $43,285
      • Aug 2, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $101,531
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 33m(93 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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