Leslie Mann, Rebel Wilson And Dakota Johnson Star In HOW TO BE SINGLE Trailer

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There’s a right way to be single, a wrong way to be single, and then…there’s Alice. And Robin. Lucy. Meg. Tom. David. New York City is full of lonely hearts seeking the right match, be it a love connection, a hook-up, or something in the middle. And somewhere between the teasing texts and one-night stands, what these unmarrieds all have in common is the need to learn how to be single in a world filled with ever-evolving definitions of love. Sleeping around in the city that never sleeps was never so much fun.

HOW TO BE SINGLE stars Dakota Johnson, Rebel Wilson, Damon Wayans, Jr., Anders Holm, Alison Brie, Nicholas Braun, Jake Lacy, with Jason Mantzoukas and Leslie Mann.

Check out the first trailer now.

Christian Ditter (“Love, Rosie,” “The Crocodiles”) directed the comedy from a screenplay by Abby Kohn & Marc Silverstein (“The Vow,” “He’s Just Not That Into You”) and Dana Fox (“Couples Retreat,” “What Happens in Vegas”), screen story by Kohn & Silverstein, based on the book by Liz Tucillo (TV’s “Sex & the City,” He’s Just Not That Into You).

Ditters’ behind-the-scenes creative team is headed by his frequent collaborator, director of photography Christian Rein, as well as production designer Steve Saklad (“Juno,” “Up in the Air”), editor Tia Nolan (“Friends with Benefits”) and costume designer Leah Katznelson (“Enough Said,” “21 Jump Street”). The music is by Fil Eisler (FOX TV’s “Empire”).

HOW TO BE SINGLE opens nationwide on February 12, 2016.

Visit the film’s official site: howtobesinglemovie.com

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HTBS

Win Passes To The Advance Screening Of SLEEPING WITH OTHER PEOPLE In St. Louis

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WAMG has your passes to the upcoming film SLEEPING WITH OTHER PEOPLE!

Can two serial cheaters get a second chance at love? After a one-night stand in college, New Yorkers Lainey (Alison Brie Nudes) and Jake (Jason Sudeikis) meet by chance twelve years later and discover they each have the same problem: because of their monogamy-challenged ways, neither can maintain a relationship.

Determined to stay friends despite their mutual attraction, they make a pact to keep it platonic, a deal that proves easier said than done. Fresh, funny, and full of witty insights about modern love, this hilariously heartfelt film “is the rare rom-com that reminds us why we love them so much in the first place” (Time Out New York).

Amanda Peet, Adam Scott, Natasha Lyonne, and Jason Mantzoukas co-star.

Directed by Leslye Headland, SLEEPING WITH OTHER PEOPLE will open in St. Louis on October 2, 2015 at the Landmark Tivoli Theatre.

WAMG invites you to enter for a chance to win a pass (Good for 2) to the advance screening of SLEEPING WITH OTHER PEOPLE on Thursday, September 24th at 7PM in the St. Louis area.

We will contact the winners by email.

Answer the following:

Alison Brie provided the voice for which character in THE LEGO MOVIE?

TO ENTER, ADD YOUR NAME, ANSWER AND EMAIL IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.

2. A pass does not guarantee a seat at a screening. Seating is on a first-come, first served basis. The theater is overbooked to assure a full house. The theater is not responsible for overbooking.

3. No purchase necessary.

Rated R

http://www.sleepingwithotherpeoplefilm.com/

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Jason Sudeikis and Alison Brie Star In SLEEPING WITH OTHER PEOPLE Red-Band Trailer

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See how Jason Sudeikis and Alison Brie’s new comedy SLEEPING WITH OTHER PEOPLE earns its R-rating in this brand new Red Band trailer.

Can two serial cheaters get a second chance at love? After a one-night stand in college, New Yorkers Lainey (Alison Brie) and Jake (Jason Sudeikis) meet by chance twelve years later and discover they each have the same problem: because of their monogamy-challenged ways, neither can maintain a relationship.

Determined to stay friends despite their mutual attraction, they make a pact to keep it platonic, a deal that proves easier said than done. Fresh, funny, and full of witty insights about modern love, this hilariously heartfelt film “is the rare rom-com that reminds us why we love them so much in the first place” (Time Out New York).

Amanda Peet, Adam Scott, Natasha Lyonne, and Jason Mantzoukas co-star.

SLEEPING WITH OTHER PEOPLE was produced by Will Ferrell and Adam McKay and is in theaters September 11, 2015 and will open in St. Louis on October 2, 2015 at the Landmark Tivoli Theatre.

http://www.sleepingwithotherpeoplefilm.com/

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GET HARD – The Review

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It’s team-up time for twin titans of comedy once again . Actually one of the stars of this new film was attempting this just a couple of months ago. The in-danger-of-over-saturation star Kevin Hart made an attempt to broaden his fan base by joining up with another rising comic star, Josh Gad, In the modest hit (couldn’t have cost that much) THE WEDDING RINGER. Well it certainly worked for Kevin’s comic predecessors Richard Pryor, Eddie Murphy, and Chris Tucker. But this time out he’s truly going for it, making a run for the comedy big leagues, by teaming with an established superstar of laugh-filled flicks, Will Ferrell (sure he’s had some duds, but when he scores, he scores big). And this new film takes some hot-button current topics, and gives them a spin that may remind you of certain Pryor and Murphy classics. So, let’s see if some farcical fireworks spark between these two as Kevin helps teach Will that the only way to survive the big house is to GET HARD.

In the opening moments we’re introduced to these two men almost at the opposite ends of the economic spectrum. James King (Ferrell) is living the ole’ “life of Reilly” at a big LA investment company. His home is a huge Beverly Hills mansion which he shares with his gorgeous fiancée Alissa (Alison Brie). At work, it looks like his boss Martin (Craig T. Nelson), who’s also his future father-in-law, is going to make him partner. Things aren’t quite as sweet for Darnell Lewis (Hart), who’s trying to scrape together the needed cash to send his pre-teen daughter to a private, and much safer, school. He just needs another thirty grand. Darnell operates a small car wash inside the parking garage of Martin’s office. He tries to interest James in getting a private car wash club card (guess the cost), but the oblivious James doesn’t bite. Then King’s world comes crashing down. FBI agents arrest him during his lavish birthday party on a charge of investment fraud. Martin’s lawyer implores him to take the plea deal and do a year sentence at a country-club type of correctional facility. James declines, believing that the jury will see that he’s completely innocent. Nope, and so the judge decides to make an example of him, and sentences James to ten years at San Quentin, starting in just a few short weeks. When he runs into Darnell again he implores him to become his paid coach in surviving “the joint’ (since he’s black and the percentages are…you know). After calming down after the insult, the law-abiding Darnell takes the gig (again, guess his fee). As the clock ticks down to the “big house” the two bond and it becomes clear to Darnell that James is indeed innocent, and there’s no way that James will survive SQ.

Ferrell, once again, totally commits to a comic character whether loopily lunging as part of his training in “South American martial arts” or ignoring a gruesome head wound (painfully hysterical). James King has little of the doofus aggression of Ron Burgundy or Chaz Michaels from BLADES OF GLORY while having just a bit of the sheltered guilelessness of Buddy the Elf. Most of all, Ferrell’s still got that endless comic energy from some of his best work even in the service of this hit-or-miss script. Thankfully his skills encourage Hart to up his game and not rely so heavily on his usual motor-mouthed con man. His tightly wound energy bounces off well from Ferrell’s low-key panic. This is especially evident in one training sequence that requires Hart to portray three different prison gangsters accosting James on “the yard”. We also get to see him as a dedicated family man. Here he gets great support in those domestic scenes from Edwina Finley Dickerson as his no-nonsense spouse and Ariana Neal as his precocious daughter. Ferrell too gets a great female sparing partner with Brie (so great in TV’s “Mad Men” and “Community”) as the ultimate spoiled “trophy” fiancée, it’s a shame she disappears for much of the film’s mid-section. Nelson makes a formidable “boss/poppa”, but Greg Germann as his shifty shyster is underused, as are “Daily Show” and “Veep” vets Dan Bakkedahl and Matt Walsh in too brief cameos.

First-time feature director Etan Cohen tries to keep the plot’s momentum rolling along, working from the script he collaborated on with three other writers(!). This may account for the film’s disjointed quality, giving it a “pieced together” tone as if we’re “binge-viewing” the first four episodes of a very raunchy made-for-premium-cable-TV comedy series. It’s the pilot followed by an ep about self defense, then submitting, etc., etc. It doesn’t help that the story completely shifts into detective-mode in the film’s last act with Darnell suddenly becoming a compact melding of the Hardy Boys and the latest “CSI” spin-off. Then there’s the general reliance on heterosexual panic for most of the film. The makers wish to wring as many laughs as possible about the probability of James getting “man-handled” as soon as he walks through the prison gate. Then the writers try to dodge the homophobic vibes during another training scene (James must learn to submit and ‘service’) by having Darnell start up a friendship with a confused gay suitor. Sorry fellas’, you don’t get a pass that easily. And when things get slow, they’ll put Ferrell in goofy street fashions for some easy “fish out of water” gags. And, of course, we’ve got to exploit the whole “Mutt and Jeff” size difference, by having too many bits with James using a “Darnell barbel” during endless training montages. This might have been long after they gave up in attempting a modern-day riff on TRADING PLACES. Fans of the two leads should enjoy this pairing of comic styles, but these guys should get better flicks than GET HARD. Cell block, lights out!

3 out of 5

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Kevin Hart And Will Ferrell Star In First Poster For GET HARD

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Here’s your first look at the poster and photos from GET HARD. The film is scheduled to open nationwide on Friday, March 27, 2015.

When millionaire hedge fund manager James (Will Ferrell) is nailed for fraud and bound for a stretch in San Quentin, the judge gives him 30 days to get his affairs in order. Desperate, he turns to Darnell (Kevin Hart) to prep him for a life behind bars. But despite James’ one-percenter assumptions, Darnell is a hard-working small business owner who has never received a parking ticket, let alone been to prison.

Together, the two men do whatever it takes for James to “get hard” and, in the process, discover how wrong they were about a lot of things – including each other.

Will Ferrell and Kevin Hart join forces in the feature comedy GET HARD, also starring Tip “T.I.” Harris, Alison Brie, and Craig T. Nelson.

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The film is directed by Etan Cohen, making his feature directorial debut following a successful writing career, with credits including “Tropic Thunder.” The screenplay is by Jay Martel & Ian Roberts and Etan Cohen, story by Adam McKay and Jay Martel & Ian Roberts. Will Ferrell, Adam McKay and Chris Henchy are the producers, with Ravi Mehta, Kevin Messick and Jessica Elbaum serving as executive producers.

The creative filmmaking team includes director of photography Tim Suhrstedt (“Little Miss Sunshine”); production designer Maher Ahmad (“The Hangover Part III”); editor Michael Sale (“We’re the Millers”); and costume designer Shay Cunliffe (“The Bourne Legacy”). The music will be composed by Christophe Beck (“Frozen”).

A Warner Bros. Pictures presentation of a Gary Sanchez Production, it will be distributed worldwide by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company.

This film is rated R for pervasive crude and sexual content and language, some graphic nudity, and drug material.

www.GetHardMovie.com

Photos: © 2014 WARNER BROS. ENTERTAINMENT INC. AND RATPAC-DUNE ENTERTAINMENT LLC / Patti Perret

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Kevin Hart And Will Ferrell Join Forces On Etan Cohen’s Comedy GET HARD

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(via Kevin Hart’s Facebook page)

Will Ferrell and Kevin Hart are headlining the new comedy, GET HARD, for director Etan Cohen.

The movie is scheduled to open nationwide on Friday, March 27, 2015.

When millionaire hedge fund manager James King (Ferrell) is nailed for fraud and bound for a stretch in San Quentin, the judge gives him 30 days to get his affairs in order. Desperate, he turns to Darnell Lewis (Hart) to prep him for a life behind bars. But despite James’ one-percenter assumptions, Darnell is a hard-working small business owner who has never received a parking ticket, let alone been to prison. Together, the two men do whatever it takes for James to ‘get hard’ and, in the process, discover how wrong they were about a lot of things – including each other.

The film also stars Craig T. Nelson, Alison Brie, and rapper Tip “T.I.” Harris. The movie began filming on location in New Orleans Monday, March 17.

Cohen marks his feature directorial debut with GET HARD, following a successful writing career, with credits including TROPIC THUNDER.

GET HARD is written by Jay Martel & Ian Roberts and Etan Cohen, with a story by Adam McKay and Jay Martel & Ian Roberts. It will be produced by Adam McKay, Will Ferrell, and Chris Henchy, with Kevin Messick and Ravi Mehta serving as executive producers.

The creative filmmaking team includes director of photography Tim Suhrstedt (“Little Miss Sunshine”); production designer Maher Ahmad (“The Hangover Part III”); editor Michael Sale (“We’re the Millers”); and costume designer Shay Cunliffe (“The Bourne Legacy”).

A Warner Bros. Pictures presentation of a Gary Sanchez Production, the film will be distributed worldwide by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company.

Follow Kevin Hart on Twitter: @KevinHart4real

Follow Etan Cohen on Twitter: @etanjc

#GetHard

THE LEGO MOVIE Has Passed $200 Million Mark At Box Office

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Audiences are connecting with THE LEGO MOVIE in a big way, driving the first-ever full-length theatrical LEGO adventure past $200 million in worldwide box office, less than two weeks after its record-breaking release. The announcement was made today by Warner Bros. Pictures.

THE LEGO MOVIE, from Warner Bros. Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures and LEGO System A/S, made its North American debut on Friday, February 7. It took in an opening weekend gross of $69.1 million, making it the largest February opening for any animated film and the largest opening for an animated Warner Bros. release. It has since gone on to earn a total of $146.3 million at the domestic box office, and still building.

The film has also launched its international engagements in a number of European, Asian, and Latin American markets, including the UK, Spain, Scandinavia, Hong Kong, Korea, Brazil and Mexico, earning $60.4 million to date, for a combined worldwide box office total of $206.7 million, and climbing.

Many major territories have yet to open, including Germany, Russia, France, Italy, Australia and Japan.

THE LEGO MOVIE tells an original 3D computer animated story about Emmet, an ordinary, rules-following, perfectly average LEGO minifigure who is mistakenly identified as the most extraordinary person and the key to saving the world. He is drafted into a fellowship of strangers on an epic quest to stop an evil tyrant, a journey for which Emmet is hopelessly and hilariously underprepared.

Directed by Phil Lord & Christopher Miller, THE LEGO MOVIE stars Chris Pratt, Will Ferrell, Elizabeth Banks, Will Arnett, Nick Offerman, Alison Brie and Charlie Day, with Liam Neeson and Morgan Freeman. Lord & Miller also wrote the screenplay, from a story by Dan Hageman & Kevin Hageman and Phil Lord & Christopher Miller, based on LEGO construction toys.

The filmmaking team includes cinematographer Pablo Plaisted, production designer Grant Freckelton, editors David Burrows and Chris McKay, and composer Mark Mothersbaugh. (Read our interview with him HERE.)

Chris McKay also serves as animation co-director.

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THE LEGO MOVIE is a Warner Bros. Pictures Presentation, in association with Village Roadshow Pictures, in association with LEGO System A/S, a Vertigo Entertainment/Lin Pictures Production. It will be distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company, and in select territories by Village Roadshow Pictures. www.thelegomovie.com

This film is rated PG for “mild action and rude humor.”

LEGO, the LEGO logo, the minifigure and the brick and knob configuration are trademarks of The LEGO Group. ©2014 The LEGO Group. Used with permission. All rights reserved.

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Meet Emmet and Wyldstyle From THE LEGO MOVIE – New Trailer Assembles In 3 Days

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Meet free-spirited heroine Wyldstyle and hero Emmet from Warner Bros. Pictures THE LEGO MOVIE.

The original 3D computer animated story follows Emmet, an ordinary, rules-following, perfectly average LEGO minifigure who is mistakenly identified as the most extraordinary person and the key to saving the world. He is drafted into a fellowship of strangers on an epic quest to stop an evil tyrant, a journey for which Emmet is hopelessly and hilariously underprepared.

Get to know the characters over at USA TODAY.

THE LEGO MOVIE, the first-ever, full-length theatrical LEGO® adventure, directed by Phil Lord & Christopher Miller, opens in theaters February 7, 2014.

It stars the vocal talents of Chris Pratt, Will Ferrell, Elizabeth Banks, Will Arnett, Nick Offerman and Alison Brie, with Liam Neeson and Morgan Freeman.

http://www.thelegomovie.com/index.html

https://twitter.com/thelegomovie

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Phil Lord, Chris Miller, and Chris McKay Talk THE LEGO MOVIE : Comic-Con 2013

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Hey there LEGO fans! We have something fun for you…

While at Comic-Con 2013, WAMG got the chance to talk with Phil Lord, Chris Miller, and Chris McKay about their new film THE LEGO MOVIE. During the intimate press conference, these fun-filled directors talked about their animation choices, their incredible voice cast, and even some of the superheroes that we will see! Check it out below.

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THE LEGO MOVIE will incorporate some of the LEGO world’s most popular figures while introducing several new characters, inviting fans who have enjoyed the brand’s innovative toys and hugely popular video games for generations to experience their visually unique LEGO world as never seen before. The original 3D computer animated story follows Emmet, an ordinary, rules-following, perfectly average LEGO mini figure who is mistakenly identified as the most extraordinary person and the key to saving the world. He is drafted into a fellowship of strangers on an epic quest to stop an evil tyrant, a journey for which Emmet is hopelessly and hilariously underprepared. Chris Pratt as the voice of Emmet. Will Ferrell stars as the voice of his primary adversary, President Business, an erudite, anal-retentive CEO who has a hard time balancing world domination with micro-managing his own life; while Oscar nominee Liam Neeson voices the president’s powerful henchmen, known as Bad Cop, who will stop at nothing to catch Emmet. Starring as Emmet’s fellow travelers are Oscar winner Morgan Freeman as Vitruvius, an old mystic; Elizabeth Banks as tough-as-nails Wyldstyle, who mistakes Emmet for the savior of the world and guides him on his quest; Will Arnett as the mysterious Batman, a Lego minifigure with whom Wyldstyle shares a history; Nick Offerman as a craggy, swaggering pirate obsessed with revenge on President Business; Alison Brie as a sweet, loveable, member of the team, with a powerful secret and Charlie Day, as the spaceman Benny.

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Legos are a pure toy of creativity. How did you adapt the idea of their creativity into a narrative that explores that side?

Phil Lord: It’s funny. We started out with this idea that they are a machine of creativity. Let’s make a movie – can a regular construction worker learn those skills? We found out that there’s a really high bar. The more you hear the word “creativity”, the less you want to hear it. (Laughs) It started to get really preachy, really fast. There were versions of this movie that felt like a college paper. (Laughs)

Chris Miller: So the word “creativity” is not in the movie at all. This movie is, obviously, all about creativity. The idea is that there are two different ways that people play with Legos. There are those that buy the kit, follow the instructions, and build the piece how it is, which is awesome. Then there are the people who dump all the bricks together and build whatever they want to, and that’s awesome as well. We wanted to have dialectic on the different ways there are to make things.

Phil Lord: That sounds super… not fun at all!

Chris McKay: … a dialectic…

Phil Lord: … a wonderful dialectic…

Chris McKay: I think the most fun thing about it is – these guys especially – really opened up everybody on the crew to, kind of, access their inner child. It was a lot like play, in the way we set up all of the departments, and the storyboards, and then going into the animation and layout, and then everything else. It was just “Play like you’re a kid. Have fun! What if the story was this?’. You just start running with ideas, and that kind of thing. It was very organic, and almost improvisational. The whole process was just “How crazy can we make this?” The way these guys had talked about it earlier was like “If Michael Bay kidnapped Henry Selick and forced him to make the Lego movie stuck in Michael Bay’s brain…”. You know, that’s what this movie is. (Laughs) It’s literally those two guys coming together on this one. It’s an explosion of creativity! (Laughs) It’s almost, kind of like a joyride through a ten-year-old’s imagination.

Phil Lord: Yeah. I know this is a long answer to a short question, but McKay built a creativity machine, that was the production, and he did it in a way that was really flat, and allowed for a lot of dialog in between departments without a lot of layers. The editors could talk to the storyboard artists and request some drawings, and try things out without showing us first so that really got everyone energized. Everyone’s office was right next door to one another, so it really became a very fluid creative process.

You have some amazing voice talent for this film. Did you have anyone in particular in mind when you first started, and can you tell us a little bit about casting this film?

Phil Lord: I’m trying to think who the first ideas were.

Chris Miller: We thought of Pratt early on because he’s hilarious. He’s a, sort of, regular guy. He actually grew up two blocks from me, and he’s just a hilarious guys-guy sort of guy. He seemed perfect for that.

Phil Lord: I knew him from Anna Farris on CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS. We had met him, and he was sort of her boyfriend. We just met him as a guy, and then watched him become the funniest person on television. He has a real sincerity to him that we thought was really important to the character. Also, we got a lot of people that we went after. We got this idea to make Morgan Freeman into a wizard (laughs)…

Chris Miller: We were like “Oh, yeah. He’ll never do it!” and he did it!

Phil Lord: We had no other casting ideas for that part. (Laughs) We didn’t talk about what we were gonna do.

Chris Miller: We saw that ‘Life’s Too Short’ that Liam Neeson was on, and it was hilarious, so we were like “We’ve gotta put this guy in the movie!”. We asked him to do it, and we thought he’s never do it, and he did it too! We couldn’t believe it! We’ve always wanted to work with Will Ferrell because he’s an amazing guy, and hilarious, and just a wonderful person, and this was a wonderful opportunity to do that. We’ve been friends with Elizabeth Banks for years. We worked with Charlie Day many years ago, so we tried to assemble some buddies, and some people we really like.

Warner Bros. has had tremendous success with the Lego video game, and they’ve done some really funny cut scenes. Did you talk with them, or work with them?

Chris Miller: Yeah. We went to Manchester and met with Jon [Burton], and saw his whole operation, and what they were doing. They stuff they are doing is really clever, and they really use the “Lego-ness” off the Lego characters. Their arms pop off, and… it really helped us think about… When you are writing it, you tend to think about them as people, and you forget that they are these little plastic dudes. You want to remember to continually use that as part of the charm of them. That really helped us.

Phil Lord: There’s been a lot of dialog back and forth. A lot of sharing of digital assets, and every time we cut the movie it goes over to Manchester.

Chris Miller: … because they’re making the video game. And, they’re doing it in sort of a limited animation style, where as our movie… Their characters show a lot of emotion…

Phil Lord: They were psyched to have us over there. We were like “We’re going to try to break every rule that you guys have had opposed on you.”. (Laughs)

What was the recording process like? Did you get a chance to get any of the actors together, or was it just you one-on-one with the voice talent? 

Chris Miller: We did Chris Pratt, Elizabeth Banks, and Will Arnett together a couple of times because they kind off of each other. Also, we did Liam Neeson and Will Ferrell together over the phone, which was kind of funny. Liam was in New York, and Will was in L.A., so they did their scene over the phone, which was kind of awkward at first, but then it became amazing Those were the only ones that we could get in the same room. It was our goal to get – it’s more fun to get people together to play off of each other, because there’s a lot of improvisation. These people are all super funny people that can riff, so we ended up getting a lot of good stuff out of them.

Phil Lord: The sad reality of casting really famous movie stars in your movie is that they are incredibly busy.

Chris Miller: It’s like “Oh, you’re doing THE HUNGER GAMES, and you’re doing ANCHORMAN [2]… “. There were a million different things, but we kind of worked around their schedules, and we tried to make it work as much as we could.

The look of the movie is “so Lego”. Can you talk about your decisions to create this look, in the old-style animation too?

Chris Miller: It was inspired by brick films that people make online. There are a ton of these on YouTube, where people, very creatively, make funny, funny Lego movies. The animation of the characters is kind of funny. Also, there are some photographers who photograph the little Lego people. They try to make them look really, really epic just from the lighting, and we thought that was really cool. We tried to marry a cinematic lighting style with a brick film aesthetic.

Phil Lord: I think it was a choice that we made us – that helped to finish the project.

Chris Miller: We wanted it to feel like a real Lego set come to life.

Chris McKay: You would be surprised how many people were resistant to that idea. On every level, people didn’t get it, and didn’t think that the charm would come through. Until we proved that you could.

Phil Lord: We had to prove it on every level. On the conceptual level with the folks at Warner, and then again on the technical side, then again with the animators, and with all kinds of people. I’m sure there will be some reviews that are like “Meh. I don’t like what they did!”, but we discovered that we could get a lot of expressiveness and emotion… You know, what they have done as a team to get so much [animation] out of the dumbest drawings! That was our dream. What a great trick it would be to make you care about the dorkiest looking things in the whole universe.

Chris Miller: In THE MUPPET MOVIE Kermit’s eyes don’t move, and he’s just doing this [moves head around] and you get so much expressiveness out of the limitations.

How do you walk the line, in a movie like this, between having it be a creative film with the story, and having it be an ad?

Phil Lord: Ah, yes. Well, it’s all an ad. (Laughs) The ad was inescapable.

Chris Miller: That’s something we were really, really nervous about… You know, making a 90 minute commercial for toys.

Phil Lord: So we settled on an 85 minute… (laughs)

Chris Miller: So, we decided that obviously Legos are a medium that people use to tell a story. It’s like clay for a claymation movie, in a way. Luckily, the people at Lego were very trusting of us… Maybe too foolishly trusting. (Laughs) They allowed us to make a story that we thought was fun, and were really there to just help us make our ideas a reality.

Phil Lord: Yeah. The short answer to your question is zero ad. 100% creative movie. That’s what we’re going for. I think the partners at Lego realize that the entire movie was made out of Lego, and it’s called THE LEGO MOVIE (laughs), so I think that’s a good enough ad.

How long has the movie taken to make? 

Chris Miller: Well, it’s not done yet!

Phil Lord: Hopefully only six more months.

Chris Miller: We started writing it before we did 21 Jump Street, so…

Phil Lord: Summer before we left for 21 Jump Street, right?

Chris Miller: Yeah, we started writing it. So it’s been… I don’t even know how long ago.

Phil Lord: 2010?

Chris Miller: It comes out in February, so…

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Are you allowed to reveal any other superhero characters that may be in it?

Chris Miller: Yes. We just said in Hall H that there are other DC superheroes in it. Superman is being played by Channing Tatum, Green Lantern is being played by Jonah Hill, and Wonder Woman is being played by Colbie Smulders. There are a lot of other characters that we’re not allowed to talk about right now from other movies… from other Lego sets. They all, sort of, interact in a way – like a kid was playing with a bucket full of Legos. They would play together. That’s a really fun part, but we can’t really tell you about that stuff.

FOR MORE INFO:

WEBSITE: thelegomovie.com

FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/TheLEGOMovie

Follow THE LEGO MOVIE on Twitter : @TheLEGOMovie

THE LEGO MOVIE hits theaters in 3D and 2D on February 7, 2014

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SAVE THE DATE And CHEERFUL WEATHER FOR A WEDDING SundanceNOW Giveaway

The SundanceNOW channel has released two new films, and we are giving away a chance to view them for free! SAVE THE DATE and CHEERFUL WEATHER FOR A WEDDING are now available to watch now on SundanceNOW.

SAVE THE DATE

Starring:
Lizzy Caplan, Alison Brie, Martin Starr, Mark Webber, Geoffrey Arend
Synopsis:
After an ill-timed and very public marriage proposal, fiercely independent Sarah (Lizzy Caplan) breaks up with her overeager boyfriend Kevin (Geoffrey Arend). Sarah turns to her sister Beth (Alison Brie) for support, but Beth is too busy obsessing over the details of her own wedding to Kevin’s bandmate, Andrew (Martin Starr). When Sarah suddenly finds herself caught up in an intense rebound romance with the adorable Jonathan (Mark Webber), she is forced to examine her own fears of commitment and vulnerability. With honesty, heart, and humor, all five struggle with the trials, happiness, and pain of modern love. In the end Sarah must decide – is it better to stay safely single or to risk it all on love?
Led by rising stars Alison Brie (COMMUNITY, MAD MEN) and Lizzy Caplan (BACHELORETTE, PARTY DOWN), Sundance Film Festival hit SAVE
CHEERFUL WEATHER FOR A WEDDING

Starring:

Felicity Jones, Luke Treadaway, Elizabeth McGovern
Synopsis:
In this lighthearted and steamy romantic comedy, bride-to-be Dolly (Felicity Jones) must choose between her devoted fiancee and the former lover she wants to seduce her.
Led by rising stars Alison Brie (COMMUNITY, MAD MEN) and Lizzy Caplan (BACHELORETTE, PARTY DOWN), Sundance Film Festival hit SAVE THE DATE is a hilarious and sincere story about the familial and romantic bonds that form us all.
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3. Which actor or actress  from SAVE THE DATE or CHEERFUL WEATHER FOR A WEDDING are you excited to see the most (in their role) and why?

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Both films are available on SundanceNOW at the links below.
Save The Date
Cheerful Weather For The Wedding

About SundanceNOW:

SundanceNOW, the digital sister to Sundance Selects, is an online destination where independent film fans can download, watch instantly and discuss a broad range of independent films from around the globe.  Offering the option to stream, download to own and download to rent, SundanceNOW provides audiences in search of independent films with an extensive selection covering all genres, including both American and foreign films. SundanceNOW operates independently of the non-profit Sundance Institute and Sundance Film Festival but shares the overall Sundance mission of encouraging artistic freedom of expression. SundanceNOW is a subsidiary of AMC Networks, Inc.
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