Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - February 23, 2014, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A14
ENTERTAINMENT A14 SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2014
L OS ANGELES - Of the many unexpected
moments in Phil Lord and Chris Miller's
breakout hit The Lego Movie , perhaps
none is as surprising as the film's ending,
which is daring even by the standards of this
unconventional film.
So daring, in fact, even its filmmakers
weren't sure they should include it.
" We were terrified," said Miller, who codirected
the film with Lord. " We didn't know
if you would care about the universe once you
understood how the universe worked," alluding
to how the movie turns itself inside- out at the
end.
In a season in which the typically tricky
art of the movie ending has largely satisfied
- witness the well- regarded twist in American
Hustle , the Quaalude- enabled pi�ce de
r�sistance of The Wolf of Wall Street and the
return- to- Earth redemption of Gravity - the
finale of Lego might top them all.
Warner Bros., which financed and released
The Lego Movie , was initially unsure about the
finale, and for a time pushed the filmmakers
to consider a more conventional path. It had
reason for hesitating.
( Spoiler alert: The following has details
about the film's ending).
Just when audiences think they've seen it
all - Abraham Lincoln exasperatedly leaving
a convocation that includes the Green Lantern
and Shaquille O'Neal, for instance - the
movie separates from itself at the end, as hero
Emmet ( Chris Pratt) and the entire movie that
preceded it is revealed to be the figment of a
young ( live- action) boy's fertile mind.
Everything that happens - the use of Krazy
Glue as a weapon, the God- like power of
Morgan Freeman's Vitruvius, a kitchen- sink
ensemble that also includes Batman and the
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles - does so because
the boy, a basement- playing child named
Finn, took the ordinary and turned it into the
stuff of epic storytelling.
And the villain? He's inspired by the boy's
stern father, referred to as the man upstairs
in the animated section because he, of course,
lives upstairs. At the film's end, the man ( Will
Ferrell) comes down to the basement and lets
the boy have it for playing with his Lego kits,
though the two eventually find common
ground.
It would all be
as if, at the end of
Gravity , Sandra
Bullock turned to
the camera and
said she had
imagined the whole space adventure and has
been on Earth the entire time.
Noting as inspiration the series finales of
St. Elsewhere and Newhart ( both ' 80s shows
ended with the suggestion all that came before
was the product of someone's imagination),
Lord and Miller said they believed their ending
played directly to the film's message.
" The kid is making connections that adults
aren't making," Lord said. " He's making connections
you can't make as you get older and
your thinking gets more rigid. And we couldn't
really set up that dichotomy without including
the last scenes."
He added, " It just seemed intrinsic to the
concept."
Audiences certainly have
responded - they gave the
movie an " A" CinemaScore
and turned out in
droves to see it again
last weekend, ensuring
it won the
box- office crown
for the second
weekend in a
row. The film
collected a
whopping $ 146
million in its first
12 days of release.
The numbers
might be validation
for the filmmakers'
approach
to the ending but,
during post- production,
studio executives
weren't convinced. They
wondered if the surprise was too
meta for kids and the twist too jarring
for everyone else, says a person close to
the production who asked not to be identified
because of the sensitive nature of the issue.
Lord and Miller held their ground, the person
said, and the studio relented.
The ending had an unusual, well, beginning.
Dan and Kevin Hageman, the project's initial
writers and the men who sold the Lego company
on the concept of the film, also included
a switch to live action at the end of their script.
But they didn't have, as Kevin Hageman put
it, an " epic meta twist." Instead, their story
shifted to real- life people without suggesting
all that came before was in the mind of one of
the characters.
When Lord and Miller came on, they upped
the ante and introduced the rug- pull.
" It's such a jarring twist, one of those
things that can turn super- schmaltzy," Dan
Hageman said. " But it also is what the movie
is about, this idea of childhood and adulthood,
of fathers and sons, which is why I think it
works."
Shooting the ending required a very different
use of the film's actors. Ferrell was already
cast, playing the voice of the animated movie's
antagonist, Lord Business. Lord and Miller
then found a child actor named Jadon Sand to
play Finn; his wide- eyed innocence and darkhaired
curls suggested a boy who might mentally
create the adventures seen in the film.
Oddly enough, Sand had worked previously as
an unseen voice in animated films, including
Wreck- It Ralph and Frozen .
The scenes also required another set of
skills, drawing on Lord and Miller's background
directing the live- action 21 Jump
Street and the movie's upcoming sequel, in
addition to their animation bona fides on the
animated franchise Cloudy With a Chance of
Meatballs .
Even after production wrapped, the ending
presented challenges. Producer Dan Lin noted
the task of keeping it a surprise during promotional
efforts - not easy in a world where blog
posts can reveal a movie's intimate plot points
and social media can carry them around the
world with blazing speed.
For the most part, it worked.
Though the main coup is the suggestion the
film was the product of someone's imagination,
filmmakers couldn't resist other wrinkles. So
they hinted at a sequel by introducing the idea
of Finn's sister, who loves the younger- skewing
toy Duplo. ( It is not known if a planned sequel
will in fact include this element, though Duplo
is also made by Lego.)
Adding to the father- son theme, the voice of
Finn's sister is played by Lord's own son, his
high voice at the time sounding like a girl.
So are Lord and Miller happy with the metauniverse
they created?
" What we kind of wanted to go for throughout
the movie was ask questions about why
characters are behaving this way," Lord said.
" We spent a lot of time trying to figure out the
right tone and level of magic, whether there
really is a Lego universe where toys are alive
or it's just someone's imagination. So yes. I
think so."
He paused. " I hope so."
- Los Angeles Times
By Steve Zeitchik
Toy story
WITH A TWIST
Lego Movie directors had doubts about surprise ending
WARNER BROS. PICTURES
The character Bad Cop/ Good Cop, voiced by Liam Neeson. The Lego Movie is a box office hit.
WARNER BROS. PICTURES
The character Lord Business, voiced by Will Ferrell, in a scene from The Lego Movie. The directors of the film resisted pressure to opt for a more conventional ending, a person close to the production said.
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