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I am probably going to order this as I missed it in the Theaters. I t kind of snuck up on me and I did not even realize it was out. Amazon currently has it for $22.98.
I was reading the Amazon reviews of this movie and it has done very well. Here are a few Excepts.
“Applications abound:
* A therapist named “Dr Legoff” (no kidding!) successfully treats children with Autism. They learn how to work as a three-person team and it is remarkable!
* People from rock stars to basketball heroes play with Legos® to relax.
* We see an artist (a former lawyer) create an amazing show that draws not only adult aficionados and children, but legitimate art critics!
* We see interviews at MIT, in Japan, Denmark, the Prague, plus countless other cities, where children and adults express their admiration and love for their favorite pastime.
* Legos® are used by movie makers, Master Builders, NASA, architects, city planners, and hobbyists, to name just a few.
* A mathematician at a chalkboard is still working on the “infinite possibilities” offered in the Legos® world.”
and
“
“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.”
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