Everyone remembers the slow-motion lobby shootout from The Matrix. Even if you've somehow never seen the film, you know that scene. It's an icon of action cinema, and was, at one point, one of the ...
Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook With, as you’d imagine, significant flying LEGO and some kung-fu. You can check it out below, ...
It's been 16 years since The Matrix changed action films forever by introducing the bullet time craze, making way for tons more slow-motion in the genre. Sadly, the sequels didn't have as big of an ...
The Matrix is a wonderful film, especially if you ignore the two disastrous sequels that followed in its glorious wake. There’s not much that could ever be done to top the film, but YouTube user ...
Here’s a Lego diorama of one of the best scenes of Matrix Revolutions: Zion’s last stand against the Matrix, humans in their mechas against merciless Sentinels. The close-up of the human resistance ...
440 hours and innumerable cups of coffee went into this astonishingly faithful rendering of The Matrix in stop-motion Lego, made to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the original movie. And we mean ...
Lego remakes of iconic Hollywood movie scenes aren't new, but it's always cool to get to watch a new Lego scene every time. The Wachowski brothers' "The Matrix" is the latest film to get one of its ...
The "Brick Flicks" exhibit at the McKinley Presidential Library & Museum features 40 iconic movie scenes depicted with Lego bricks. The exhibit opens Saturday and runs through Sept. 30. Lego artist ...
Quite a few Lego remakes have popped up online of late, but we're still finding each one as amazing as the last. This time, YouTuber Snooperking has recreated the lobby fight scene from The Matrix.
Search isnt firing this back up at me, but thought this would be of interest to the Lego heads and Matrix fans.<BR><BR>http://www.brickfrenzy.com/space_neb.html<BR ...
Dan Fellman started his career with the record-setting release of “Superman,” which opened to $7.1 million in 501 theaters in 1978. Thirty-seven years later, in an age of 4,000-theater, $200 million ...
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