I suppose it's worth mentioning that since some moments in the video are
recreating scenes from the film, they might constitute spoilers for those of you who take spoilers very seriously.
If we're
recreating a scene from a film and a character dies... you know, LEGO characters never die.
Not exact matches
If now not, it may well be any other play on a vintage end - credits
scene just like the filmmakers did with the primary Deadpool
film,
recreating the end - credits coda
from Ferris Bueller's Day Off.
This is one of those
films that, 20 - years
from now, people will be
recreating scenes and quoting lines.
At the end of the
film, actual brief
scenes from The Room appear on a split screen next to the same
recreated scenes in The Disaster Artist.
Campaigners
from Justice4Grenfell
recreated a
scene from the award - winning
film last month to expose the «lack of progress» made since the fire.
Scorsese lovingly
recreates scenes from Méliès»
films showing the techniques that early filmmakers used and how truly groundbreaking the art form was.
The replay of the end of the first
film and a museum steps
scene recreated nearly shot for shot
from the one in Rocky still have more heart than anything new Stallone is able to deliver here.
They didn't use all of the ones that they shot in the main
film but they took the time to
recreate a few of the
scenes from the The Room with The Disaster Artist cast.
Commercially speaking, this probably doesn't matter: The Disaster Artist's target audience are people who have already semi-memorized The Room and who will appreciate Franco's studious recreations of
scenes from the
film, as well as the lengthy clip reel coda that plays his
recreated scenes side - by - side with the originals to further demonstrate their studiousness.
The Disaster Artist also
recreated some major
scenes from The Room, and James Franco has revealed in an interview with the Kernels podcast he remade up to 25 minutes
from Wiseau's
film.
Each week his characters
recreate a famous
scene from a familiar
film.
The journey
recreated the opening
scene from the 1969 cult
film, which featured the Miura traveling up the hairpin curves of the Italian Alps.
Reimagined with TT Games» signature LEGO humour, the thrilling adventure
recreates unforgettable
scenes and action sequences
from the
films, allowing fans to experience for themselves the franchise's most memorable moments and the opportunity to fully explore the expansive grounds of Isla Nublar and Isla Sorna.
Even with all the latest visual technology, though, the
film basically boils down to a series of faithfully
recreated scenes from the anime.
Maybe you'll
recreate scenes from the classic animated
film starring Sorcerer's Apprentice Mickey or take inspiration
from the just - released videogame Fantasia: Music Evolved.
Reimagined in LEGO form and told in TT Games» signature classic LEGO humor, the thrilling adventure
recreates unforgettable
scenes and action sequences
from the
films, allowing fans to play through key moments and giving them the opportunity to fully explore the expansive grounds of Isla Nublar and Isla Sorna.
Various locations
from the
films are
recreated, and more often than not you'll feel like you're a part of one of the famous action
scenes from the series.
It's like
recreating that exceptional
scene from the
film X-Men 2 where Nightcrawler teleports gracefully around the oval office, unleashing a flurry of kicks and punches on the secret service officers.
The set of 69 images of self - portraits
recreated the
scenes as
film stills taken
from Italian neorealism or American
film noir of the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s.
Riffing on our difficulty to nail down complex creatures like artworks and loved ones, Gander
recreates a
scene from Schnabel's
film with a voiceover that describes the ambiguous nature of one artist's homage to another.
The thrilling adventure
recreates unforgettable
scenes and action sequences
from the
films, allowing fans to play through key moments and giving them the opportunity to fully explore the expansive grounds of Isla Nublar and Isla Sorna.