Tag: lego

  • ‘Piece By Piece’ Interview: Director Morgan Neville

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    Opening in theaters on October 11th is the new documentary/biopic about the life and career of Pharrell Williams called ‘Piece By Piece’, which was completely animated with LEGO.

    Directed by Morgan Neville (‘Won’t You Be My Neighbor?’), the film features LEGO animated interviews with Pharrell, Gwen Stefani, Kendrick Lamar, Timbaland, Justin Timberlake, Busta Rhymes, Jay-Z, and Snoop Dogg.

    Related Article: Marisa Abela and Director Sam Taylor-Johnson Talk ‘Back to Black’

    Director Morgan Neville in 'Piece By Piece, a Focus Features release. Photo: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2024 Focus Features LLC.
    Director Morgan Neville in ‘Piece By Piece, a Focus Features release. Photo: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2024 Focus Features LLC.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with filmmaker Morgan Neville about his work on ‘Piece By Piece’, collaborating with Pharrell and LEGO on the groundbreaking project, making an animated movie for the first time, whether the film is a documentary or a biopic, conducting the interviews, becoming a LEGO figure himself, and the emotional connection the audience has with the characters in the movie.

    You can read our full interview below or click on the video player above to watch the interview.

    Director Morgan Neville discusses 'Piece By Piece'.
    Director Morgan Neville discusses ‘Piece By Piece’.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about how this unique project came together and what it was like working with Pharrell Williams to tell his story on screen?

    Morgan Neville: This crazy idea came from Pharrell, where he apparently had the idea that if he was ever going to do anything like a documentary, it would be in LEGO. Apparently, everybody he told this to said, “That’s a terrible idea,” or “It’s a crazy idea. It’s an unattainable idea.” Fortunately, he was a big fan of my films, and he said, “I want Morgan to do it.” I met him, and the way he pitched me was, “It would be interesting if you made a documentary about my life, and when you were done with it, you threw out all the images and just replaced it with LEGO.” When he said that, I got excited. I didn’t think it was crazy. Well, maybe I did think it was crazy. But the craziness of it is what I thought was interesting because it was so unusual. I didn’t even know what it would mean, and we just spent years in production figuring out what it could mean. But it felt like it opened so many creative doors. From that, we just had this incredible burst of creative freedom, which is what you want. I felt like that was Pharrell producing me, like, “Here are the ingredients. Now you go make it.”

    Pharrell Williams stars in director Morgan Neville’s 'Piece By Piece', a Focus Features release. Photo: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2024 Focus Features LLC.
    Pharrell Williams stars in director Morgan Neville’s ‘Piece By Piece’, a Focus Features release. Photo: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2024 Focus Features LLC.

    MF: Before making this movie you were primarily a documentary filmmaker, what was it like for you to direct an animated movie and work with LEGO on this project?

    MN: The documentary process and the animation process are opposites. The documentary process is revision and looseness. You don’t have a lot of control. You’re just trying to kind of stitch together the messiness of reality into something. In animation, you’re God. You get to build the world. You get to put everybody wherever you want them and make everybody say whatever you want them to say. So, there was a tension between those two things that I really wanted to keep. I think it was interesting. Rather than erasing the imperfections, I wanted to embrace the imperfections and keep the grammar of documentary going. There were many times in working on the film with my animation director, who is fantastic, and our studios, that they would say, “Well, you don’t do it that way in animation.” I was like, “Oh, but we are. We are. We’re going to try.” Whenever they said, “Oh, you don’t do it that way,” I’m like, “Why not? Why can’t we do it that way?” So, there was an interesting tension there that I think bore incredible fruit. It was the kind of thing where I knew my ignorance could be a bit of an asset, like let me insist on doing things this way just to see what it brings, and at the same time, also embracing the freedom of animation where, particularly when songs come in in the movie, anything can happen. So, me saying, “Well, we’re not in a documentary anymore. We’re in his head and in his head, anything can happen. We can be underwater, and we can be floating. Let’s embrace that too.” That, for me, having done this for a long time, was so incredibly liberating.

    (L to R) Jay-Z and Pharrell Williams in director Morgan Neville’s 'Piece By Piece', a Focus Features release. Photo: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2024 Focus Features LLC.
    (L to R) Jay-Z and Pharrell Williams in director Morgan Neville’s ‘Piece By Piece’, a Focus Features release. Photo: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2024 Focus Features LLC.

    MF: While the film is an animated documentary, it’s also an animated biopic about Pharrell’s life. Was that the goal or something you found naturally through the process of making this movie?

    MN: It’s a natural process and I feel like this is true of a lot of my filmmaking storytelling in documentary, is that it’s not so much that I want to give you all the achievements of Pharrell Williams, because that is an eight-hour film. It’s more like, how do I tell a story about a Black nerd from the projects who doesn’t fit in, and then suddenly he completely fits in, and what does that mean to his own creative voice, and how does he stay in touch with it? It’s a story of a creative person on this journey. That gets me excited, and that is a story that I identify with as a creative person. So that part of it, I kind of fully embraced, that we were making a movie that way. The other layer to it is that it’s a musical in that I really listened to all the music he did. In my Spotify, I have 10 playlists of Pharrell songs he sang, songs he wrote, songs inspired by, songs with his solo albums, and songs with N.E.R.D. and The Neptunes. I spent a lot of time listening to everything and trying to find songs that spoke to me or felt like they were telling a story about Pharrell’s life and then trying to really use the music to tell the story as much as we could too, which is great. Then on top of that, being able to then show the film to Pharrell and say, “Okay, Pharrell, why don’t you write some new songs based on my view of your story?” He said to me that because he was looking at himself through my eyes, it made it way easier for him to write music as opposed to if somebody just said, “Hey, why don’t you write a song about your life?” But the fact that he was able to see it through my eyes gave him a focus that allowed him to do it. I love all that. I love that creative feedback loop that we created.

    Snoop Dogg in director Morgan Neville’s 'Piece By Piece', a Focus Features release. Photo: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2024 Focus Features LLC.
    Snoop Dogg in director Morgan Neville’s ‘Piece By Piece’, a Focus Features release. Photo: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2024 Focus Features LLC.

    MF: Can you talk about the interviews you did for this film and how did people react when you told them they would be depicted as LEGO figurines?

    MN: Well, we didn’t tell anybody in the beginning that it was going to be LEGO. It was kind of a secret. It’s not that we were trying to deceive people, but we told people it was going to be a documentary and we were going to animate it. Five years ago, we started these interviews, and we didn’t want it getting out, but we also didn’t want people necessarily performing or thinking, “Oh, I’m talking as a LEGO minifigure.” So, we just tried to keep it organic like I normally would on a documentary. Then over years of animation, we started to tell people. I started to show some of the people in the film their character designs. I have to say, every single person was excited. Who doesn’t want to be a minifigure in LEGO? So, a lot of people, even people who were kind of like, “What? Really? Is this going to work,” every one of those people now wants their own minifigure. So, I think it was something that just clicked so well that turned out better than I could have expected. It was exciting.

    (L to R) Pharrell Williams and director Morgan Neville in their film 'Piece By Piece', a Focus Features release. Photo: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2024 Focus Features LLC.
    (L to R) Pharrell Williams and director Morgan Neville in their film ‘Piece By Piece’, a Focus Features release. Photo: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2024 Focus Features LLC.

    MF: You are also featured in the film. What was that like for you as a filmmaker to be a character in the movie and what did you think about your own LEGO representation?

    MN: Yeah, I’m not normally a character in my movies, but this was such an unusual movie that I felt like if I was honest about my role in the film, it helped the audience understand how we got here. So really it was a way of me solving a story point, but it’s real. That’s really me trying to figure out what this movie is. So, in that way, even though the film is a documentary, it also plays like a film about a guy trying to make a documentary about Pharrell too. All those different gears, the lines of what’s documentary and what’s musical and what’s a biopic, to me, you have a lot of those questions going in, but hopefully when you come out, it just makes sense.

    (L to R) Director Morgan Neville and Pharrell Williams in their film 'Piece By Piece', a Focus Features release. Photo: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2024 Focus Features LLC.
    (L to R) Director Morgan Neville and Pharrell Williams in their film ‘Piece By Piece’, a Focus Features release. Photo: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2024 Focus Features LLC.

    MF: Finally, have you been surprised by the emotional connection audiences are having with these plastic characters?

    MN: Yeah. I was worried because a LEGO minifigure is very reductive. Characters have no nose; they have no ears. You can’t see them cry or sweat. There’s a lot of restrictions. The question was, if I’m showing close-ups of a minifigure in an interview, is that compelling? Is it going to be emotional? Is it going to connect? Right when we started doing tests, it started to work. Kind of my own theory on it is that you project a lot of yourself into LEGO because it’s low resolution in that way, that you can see yourself in characters more. Now a lot of people who see the film say, “I forgot I was watching a LEGO movie,” and I love that. There are a lot of people saying that they get emotional watching it, and I felt emotional about making it, but you never know if that’s going to translate. So that’s been one of the best things to come out of finally being able to show people this film is just seeing how it connects so deeply with folks.

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    What is the plot of ‘Piece By Piece’?

    The film documents Pharrell Williams’s life and musical career, incorporating Williams’s faith and expressing his artistry by means of LEGO.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Piece By Piece’?

    • Pharrell Williams as himself
    • Morgan Neville as himself
    • Gwen Stefani as herself
    • Kendrick Lamar as himself
    • Timbaland as himself
    • Justin Timberlake as himself
    • Busta Rhymes as himself
    • Jay-Z as himself
    • Snoop Dogg as himself
    (L to R) Daft Punk and Pharrell Williams in director Morgan Neville’s 'Piece By Piece', a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Daft Punk and Pharrell Williams in director Morgan Neville’s ‘Piece By Piece’, a Focus Features release. Photo: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2024 Focus Features LLC.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Piece By Piece’:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Piece By Piece’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Pharrell Williams Music on Amazon

     

     

  • ‘Jurassic Park’ Lego Special Coming to Peacock

    ‘Jurassic Park’ Lego Special Coming to Peacock.
    ‘Jurassic Park’ Lego Special Coming to Peacock. Photo courtesy of Peacock.

    It is 30 years since ‘Jurassic Park’ sent dinosaurs stomping all over cinema screens, and if you’re someone who saw the original movie in theaters upon release, allow us to commiserate on feeling a little closer to extinction right now.

    Naturally, Universal has been celebrating that fact this year, with merchandise and re-releases of the movie into theaters.

    And its streaming service Peacock is getting in on the fun, with a planned Lego special that is called ‘Lego Jurassic Park: The Unofficial Retelling’.

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    What’s the story of ‘Jurassic Park’?

    Jeff Goldblum as Dr. Ian Malcolm in director Steven Spielberg's 'Jurassic Park.'
    Jeff Goldblum as Dr. Ian Malcolm in director Steven Spielberg’s ‘Jurassic Park.’

    We’re assuming there will be the typical Lego riffs on certain points and characters (as with the ‘Star Wars’ specials), but the phrase “re-telling” leads us to believe that it’ll roughly track the story of Steven Spielberg’s original blockbuster.

    In case you’ve been stuck in the cretaceous period and are somehow unaware, ‘Jurassic Park’ is the story of a giant attraction envisioned by billionaire John Hammond (Richard Attenborough), who funds scientific research that invents DNA technology to bring long-extinct dinosaurs back to life. The dinos are intended to be kept safe on an island theme park for the public’s enjoyment.

    To assuage the concerns of investors and his legal team, Hammond invites paleontologist Alan Grant (Sam Neill) and paleobiologist Ellie Sattler (Laura Dern) to tour the facility alongside chaotician Ian Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum). And to assess the reaction of his main target audience, Hammond has his grandchildren Tim (Joseph Mazzello) and Lex (Ariana Richards) along for the visit.

    Thanks to a combination of corporate espionage and hurricane weather, things do not go exactly as planned… It starts with “ooh and aah”, but later there is running and screaming.

    Related Article: Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard Talk ‘Jurassic World Dominion’

    Who else is in ‘Jurassic Park’?

    Jeff Goldblum as Dr. Ian Malcolm in director Steven Spielberg's 'Jurassic Park.'
    Jeff Goldblum as Dr. Ian Malcolm in director Steven Spielberg’s ‘Jurassic Park.’

    The movie’s cast also includes Samuel L. Jackson, Wayne Knight, Bob Peck, Martin Ferrero and B.D. Wong.

    It seems unlikely that the original cast will return to voice the special, but you never know –– the poster features Goldblum’s Ian Malcolm (albeit looking more like he does in later movies), but that doesn’t necessarily mean he’s lending his unique vocal talents.

    Jurassic Park as a franchise

    Chris Pratt in 'Jurassic World Dominion.'
    Chris Pratt as Owen Grady in ‘Jurassic World Dominion,’ © 2021 Universal Studios and Amblin Entertainment. All Rights Reserved.

    ‘Jurassic Park’ was a giant hit, and spawned two direct sequels, an entire follow-up trilogy (the ‘Jurassic World’ series of movies) and a T-Rex-sized batch of merchandise, theme park attractions and other spin-offs, including Netflix’s ‘Camp Cretaceous’ animated series.

    We suppose a Lego special was really just the next logical step, given how many sets of the toys have been themed to the movie’s dino-tastic story.

    Universal and Lego

    Dr. Ian Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum), Dr. Alan Grant (Sam Neill), Dr. Ellie Sattler (Laura Dern), Claire Dearing (Bryce Dallas Howard), Owen Grady (Chris Pratt), Maisie Lockwood (Isabella Sermon) and Kayla Watts (DeWanda Wise) in 'Jurassic World Dominion.''
    (L to R) Dr. Ian Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum), Dr. Alan Grant (Sam Neill), Dr. Ellie Sattler (Laura Dern), Claire Dearing (Bryce Dallas Howard), Owen Grady (Chris Pratt), Maisie Lockwood (Isabella Sermon) and Kayla Watts (DeWanda Wise) in ‘Jurassic World Dominion,’ co-written and directed by Colin Trevorrow.

    It’s also been made possible because Universal scored the rights to make movies and TV shows with Lego projects back in February of this year and has a new ‘Lego Movie’ in development (the original few examples were released by Warner Bros.).

    It all means that the characters and cameos won’t cross over into the new movie, though given that Chris Pratt also starred in the ‘Jurassic World’ movies, there’s a chance his character Owen Grady could show up in the film, even if he can’t play Emmett from the previous main ‘Lego’ titles.

    We don’t yet know when the special will be on Peacock –– the service’s marketing simply says “Coming soon” right now. But since it’s part of the 30th anniversary celebrations, expect it before the end of the year.

    ‘Jurassic Park’ Lego Special Coming to Peacock.
    ‘Jurassic Park’ Lego Special Coming to Peacock. Photo courtesy of Peacock.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Jurassic Park’ Lego Special:

    Buy ‘Jurassic Park’ Movies On Amazon

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  • A ‘Friends’ LEGO Set Coming Soon to Celebrate 25th Anniversary

    A ‘Friends’ LEGO Set Coming Soon to Celebrate 25th Anniversary

    LEGO

    They’ll be there for you — in LEGO form!

    “Friends” is celebrating the 25th anniversary of the show’s premiere on NBC. An immersive pop-up experience is opening in New York City, while a line of themed coffees and teas is already brewing. 

    Now, LEGO is releasing a special edition inspired by “Friends,” featuring a recreation of the iconic Central Perk cafe with the familiar orange sofa, armchair, and chairs.

    The set includes seven new toy figurines of Ross, Rachel, Chandler, Monica, Joey, Phoebe, and cafe manager Gunther. Each come with accessories to role-play memorable scenes. There’s even a stage where Phoebe can perform “Smelly Cat” on her guitar.

    The set contains over 1,000 pieces and will retail for $59.99 in the U.S. It will be available starting September 1.

  • How Did ‘Kingsman: The Golden Circle’ Wallop ‘The LEGO Ninjago Movie’ at the Box Office?

    After a September dominated by “IT,” we were suddenly supposed to get a close three-way race at the box office this weekend. Didn’t quite happen.

    While “IT was expected to fall to $30 million — a still-impressive figure for a movie in its third weekend of release — the horror hit was supposed to face close competition from two new wide-release sequels to popular franchises. Predictions for “Kingsman: The Golden Circle” and “The LEGO Ninjago Movie” were all over the map, but analysts believed both movies would open in the 30s and maybe even the 40s.

    As it turns out, predictions for “IT” were right on the money, since it came in exactly at $30.0 million according to estimates. But “Kingsman” dethroned it with an estimated $39.0 million. While “Ninjago” debuted in third place, it fell well below expectations with just an estimated $21.3 million.

    Why did “Kingsman” so easily take the crown while “Ninjago” bricked? Some experts will be arguing that the lopsided victory demonstrates how much “IT” has rewritten the rules for what to expect from the September box office, but really, it’s just a matter of following the old rules, which “Kingsman” did and its competition didn’t. Among the factors that mattered:

    1. Timing

    Exhibitors may have thought that, after a summer of tumbleweeds and crickets at the multiplex, the enormous success of “IT” got moviegoers back into the habit of going to the theaters no matter what’s playing. Not so; audiences are still picky and careful with their money. For instance, not too many were going to go see another horror movie while “IT” was still playing, which is one reason why “Friend Request,” this weekend’s third new wide release, disappointed with a seventh-place premiere and a take estimated at just $2.4 million (although its budget was only $9.9 million).

    Meanwhile, “NInjago” may have had the family marketplace to itself, coming out two months after the last big family hit (“The Emoji Movie“). Unfortunately, “Ninjago” arrives just seven months after “The LEGO Batman Movie,” and it’s not clear that there was demand for another film from the brick-toy franchise so soon after the last one.

    “Kingsman”‘ had its own timing issues, yet its opening is still impressive for early fall. The first “Kingsman” opened two years ago on a weekend that included a big moviegoing holiday (Valentine’s Day) and cleared $36.2 million. So it’s a coup for the sequel to top it on a weekend in September, with no holidays, strong adult competition from “IT” and several other films, and action competition from last week’s “American Assassin” (fourth this weekend with an estimated $6.3 million) and possibly from next weekend’s “American Made,” for which some action fans may be saving their money. In fact, “Kingsman” now boasts the fifth-biggest September debut of all time. Manners definitely make the man (and the box office gold).

    2. Age

    Unlike the first two “LEGO” films, “Ninjago” has little appeal for adults. Not only did the first two spoof pop culture franchises and characters that were familiar to grown-ups, but they also got great reviews. “Ninjago,” however, draws on a recent kiddie TV series that few adults know, and its reviews were mixed (just 53 percent fresh at Rotten Tomatoes). As a result, while moviegoers over 18 made up 59 percent of “The LEGO Movie” audience and 62 percent of the “LEGO Batman” crowd, they made up only about half of the “Ninjago” viewers.

    “Ninjago” and three-week-old romantic comedy “Home Again” are the only movies in this weekend’s top 10 that are not rated R, so competition for adults was fierce this weekend. (Besides the two new R-rated releases, there were several Oscar-hopeful movies in limited release aiming to attract grown-ups, including Jake Gyllenhaal‘s “Stronger,” which debuted at No. 9 with an estimated $1.7 million despite playing on just 574 screens, and Ben Stiller‘s “Brad’s Status,” which expanded into 453 venues and landed at No. 12 with an estimated $1.0 million.)

    Even so, the R rating helped “Kingsman” while hurting “Friend Request.” For “Kingsman” fans, the rating proves that the movie isn’t skimping on the sex and violence that distinguish the series from more decorous and discreet spy franchises (like the coy but PG-13 James Bond movies). “Friend Request,” however, might have benefited from a PG-13 in order to attract the teens who might have embraced the movie’s social-media-driven plot.

    3. Star Power

    Actually, we’re not sure if this matters much at all anymore — but we’re including it anyway. Horror movies don’t need stars to succeed (as “IT” has proved in spades), and it’s not clear that the star-studded “Kingsman” cast was an asset. Lead Taron Egerton is a non-entity outside the franchise. Colin Firth, Jeff Bridges, Halle Berry, and Julianne Moore are beloved Oscar-winners but not box office draws. Channing Tatum‘s box office drawing power is in question now after ticket buyers showed little love for “Logan Lucky.”

    And the star-heavy voice cast of “Ninjago” might actually have hurt the film. After all, young fans are accustomed to the voice players from the TV show. Many were alienated by hearing their beloved characters voiced by strange new actors on the big screen.

    4. Execution

    That’s really the most important thing — not necessarily being good enough to please critics (indeed, all three of the new wide releases earned “rotten” scores at RT), but rather, delivering what audiences want. That’s the difference between a franchise that still feels fresh, as “Kingsman” does to its fans, and one that doesn’t. After three installments, the diminishing returns for the “LEGO” movies is apparent. The first opened with $69 million, the second with $53 million.

    After a summer full of family-movie sequels that underperformed — “Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul,” “Cars 3,” “The Nut Job 2: Nutty by Nature” — it’s clear that family franchise installments are no longer automatic hits. The parents who buy the tickets are more discerning, and they’re not just going to shell out for anything animated. Parents can tell when a sequel is less a story that needed to be told than a cynical cash grab. Judging by “Ninjago,” kids can tell, too. That’s a lesson that franchises for teens and grown-ups should heed as well.

  • Check Out the Awesome New ‘Ghostbusters’ LEGO Set

    ghostbusters, lego, new ghostbusters, ghostbusters lego, legosFans got a good look at the cast of the upcoming “Ghostbusters” reboot via some new photos released earlier this week. Now, prepare to see those characters in LEGO form.

    Yes, everyone’s favorite toy bricks are releasing a “Ghostbusters”-themed set of minifigs and vehicles in honor of the new flick, and the company previewed the pieces on Friday. The models include titular heroines Erin Gilbert (Kristen Wiig), Abby Yates (Melissa McCarthy), Jillian Holtzmann (Kate McKinnon), and Patty Tolan (Leslie Jones), along with their bespectacled receptionist Kevin (Chris Hemsworth).
    ghostbusters, lego, new ghostbusters, ghostbusters lego, legos, erin gilbert, abby yates, patty tolan, jillian holtzmann, kevinghostbusters, lego, new ghostbusters, ghostbusters lego, legos, erin gilbert, abby yates, patty tolan, jillian holtzmann, kevinghostbusters, lego, new ghostbusters, ghostbusters lego, legos, erin gilbert, abby yates, patty tolan, jillian holtzmann, kevinghostbusters, lego, new ghostbusters, ghostbusters lego, legos, erin gilbert, abby yates, patty tolan, jillian holtzmann, kevinghostbusters, lego, new ghostbusters, ghostbusters lego, legos, erin gilbert, abby yates, patty tolan, jillian holtzmann, kevinIn addition to those known characters, there was also a slight SPOILER revealed by the new models, so if you don’t want to know any more about the film’s plot, stop reading now. Aside from the regular version of Kevin, it looks like there’s also a possessed version, too, featuring red eyes and a menacing snarl. He’s accompanied by what appears to be one of the main antagonists of the film, described by LEGO as a “red Daemon,” which looks sort of like a skeletal, evil bat. (We imagine it’ll be even scarier on film, since director Paul Feig has promised a spookier version of events this time around.)

    The Ecto-1 car and a motorbike dubbed Ecto-2 are also included in the set. (Check out more photos of the set here.) The entire thing will retail for $59.99, and will go on sale on July 1.

    “Ghostbusters” hits theaters on July 15.

    [via: Yahoo! Movies]

    Photo credit: LEGO via Yahoo! Movies

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  • ‘Lego’ Filmmakers: 8 Building Blocks for a Documentary Career

    Directors Daniel Junge (L) and Kief Davidson
    Directors Daniel Junge (L) and Kief Davidson

    Waiting for that big break? Well, you may have to keep waiting … and waiting … and waiting.

    “There’s no such thing as a door with someone who says, ‘Come on in and just fill out the application to be a filmmaker,’” Oscar-winning director Daniel Junge tells Made in Hollywood: Teen Edition.

    But the good news is you don’t have rely on that someone.

    “Film is about do-it-yourself: Literally the only way to make films is to make films,” says Junge. “The tools are at everybody’s disposal today, there’s no excuse why anyone from a 5-year-old to a grandparent can’t start picking up a camera and making a film.”

    For his latest project, Junge teamed with director Kief Davidson for “Beyond the Brick: A LEGO Brickumentary,” chronicling the meteoric rise, dominance and influence of one of the world’s most iconic toymakers, LEGO. The documentary arrived in theaters on July 31. Junge was honored with a Best Documentary (Short Subject) Oscar in 2012 for his HBO film “Saving Face,” and Davidson earned his first Oscar nomination for 2013’s “Open Heart.”

    “This toy is being used for very serious applications,” Junge says. “Things like therapy, engineering, city planning — It’s gone far beyond, not just for kids and adults, but for really serious applications.”

    With their days as rookie directors long behind, Junge and Davidson are sharing their eight best pieces of advice for aspiring filmmakers with Made in Hollywood: Teen Edition.

    Daniel Junge accepts a Best Documentary (Short Subject) Oscar "Saving Face" during the 2012 Annual Academy Awards
    Daniel Junge accepts a Best Documentary (Short Subject) Oscar “Saving Face” during the 2012 Annual Academy Awards

    1. Don’t break the bank. Junge advises those starting out to not worry about purchasing fancy, expensive cameras and gadgets. “I don’t think there should be a hierarchy on what the best tools are,” he explains.

    2. You likely already have what you need. An affordable and easy way to begin recording stories is with a smartphone. “Any digital camera now, including the one on your phone, and there’s digital systems on almost every computer,” Junge says.

    3. Remember what’s most important. Documentary filmmaking is the process of sharing, highlighting and presenting the real world. “I think the main thing is to find stories and express yourself,” Junge says.

    4. Pursue your passion. Davidson says he was unhappy with his first “staff job” ahead of pursuing a career as a director. “I was pretty young when I took it and I realized very quickly that I wasn’t a staff, corporate guy,” he explains. “I needed to pick a career that was going to have a creative arc to it. That’s the good thing about filmmaking, even if you do make a film that’s successful and good, you want to make something better.”

    5. Don’t make excuses. “Invariably you’ll never get there,” Davidson warns. “You have to just pick up a camera and start shooting, get in the editing room and start cutting.”

    6. Time is not on your side. “I placed artificial deadlines when they weren’t there,” Davidson recalls of his start, adding that by waiting for “money” or other cursory filmmaking business elements can often create unnecessary delays.

    Filmmakers Daniel Junge (L) and Kief Davidson
    Filmmakers Daniel Junge (L) and Kief Davidson

    7. Hit the road. “If you don’t have a story yet, get out and start traveling,” Davidson advises, recalling that his early projects were of his summer vacations.

    8. Everybody has a story to tell, so tell it. “They say when you write a novel, write what you know. With film, film what you know, what you’re passionate about,” Junge says, adding, “That passion will help you get through as a filmmaker.”

    “Beyond the Brick: A LEGO Brickumentary” hits theaters on Friday. Watch the trailer below.

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  • Father-Daughter Duo Recreates ‘Jurassic Park’ With LEGO, Awesomeness Ensues (VIDEO)

    Jurassic Park, LegoAs “The LEGO Movie” proved, those little plastic bricks are very versatile, something a father-daughter duo put on display with an awesome, adorable video that recreates scenes from “Jurassic Park” using only the toy.

    The clip is visually stunning, remaining quite faithful to small moments from the film (the rippling water glass signaling the T-rex is coming, the brachiosaurus sneezing in Lex’s face, the animated Mr. DNA video) and big set pieces alike (the climactic showdown at the visitors center between the T-rex and the velociraptors), all while maintaining an air of humor and charm (Samuel L. Jackson’s famous quip “Hold onto your butts” becomes “Hold onto your bricks”). The minifigs (a.k.a. Lego people) are especially true to the movie’s characters, most noticeably Ian Malcolm (played by Jeff Goldblum in the 1993 flick), who comes complete with a pompadour and black sunglasses.

    In a short clip at the end of the video, father Paul Hollingsworth and his daughter, Hailee, explain why they decided to tackle the project. As Paul says, “I wanted to prove to Hailee that we could do anything with Lego.”

    Thanks to Paul’s job as a film editor and animation director — and with $100,000 worth of Legos and the help of a host of professional filmmakers — the duo succeeded. Check out the impressive clip below.
    [via: digitalwizardz, h/t The A.V. Club]

    Photo credit: YouTube
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