Anyone
who has ever gotten a LEGO set knows that when you first pull the
pieces out of the box, you have two options: You can follow the
instructions or you can build something else entirely. Directors Phil
Lord and Chris Miller understand the rules of playtime. Thanks to them,
The LEGO Movie is packed wall to wall with clever humor and tractor
loads of good fun. Chris Pratt of Parks and Recreation embodies Emmet
Brickowoski, a lovable yet simpleminded everyman (everyminifigure?) who
loves his life, enjoys his friends, and always follows the instructions.
But the attentive viewer will notice that behind the cheery primary
colors and peppy attitude, there's something distinctly Orwellian about
this LEGO world. Everyone has the same morning routine, the same
favorite song, the same positive outlook. Maybe its because they are
LEGOs, you think to yourself. You can't expect LEGOs to have that much
personality. Anyway, thanks to a prophesy, a call to adventure, and a
white-bearded mentor named Vitruvius (Morgan Freeman of course), the
film is soon dutifully following the instructions for your basic Joseph
Campbell Hero's Journey. Or is it?
This is where Devo comes in. That's right. You heard me.
Devo,
the kitsch-sci-fi rock group from the 80s led by Mark Mothersbaugh has
always been known for its deadpan surrealist humor and biting social
satire. Their 2010 album 'Something for Everybody' is no different.
Alongside catchy upbeat electronic music, Mark and his team sing
robotically about their fast-food pop-culture driven dystopia that they
live in. Personality is minimized and people are likened to rockets on a
collision course for their pre-programmed targets. Do they live in the
future or the present? It's impossible to tell.
During the build up to the release of 'Something For Everybody',
Devo sardonically put a billboard up in Waco, Texas that "had been
designed using focus groups to determine what everybody would like". The
focus groups reported that people like: The color blue, soft textures,
family comfort, and sexiness. Not surprisingly (and intentionally so),
the result was rather hideous - a woman in a swimsuit sticking halfway
out of a blue gelatinous Devo pyramid, with a happy family looking on
from their couch. The subtitle: "This is something for everybody."
I suppose it should have not come as a surprise to me when the
credits of The LEGO Movie rolled to reveal that the very same Mark
Mothersbaugh was the composer for The LEGO Movie. And also not
surprisingly, the land Emmet lives in reflects our own; the dumb tv
shows, the generic yet addictive pop songs, and the overpriced coffee
that we all buy anyway. All things that can become our sedentary
comforts, prompting us to never look for another option. But what about
that time when we were kids and we chose NOT to follow the instructions?
No, we've all grown up and have jobs now - there is no time for
experimenting. Best just conform to the familiar pattern. It's the safe
thing to do. It's also the method adopted by the film's villain,
President Business. He wants things to be just the way he likes them,
without anyone else messing it all up. "All I'm asking for is total
perfection" he declares. And so his domain is populated by lemmings who
all live the same lives and have just enough perks to keep them ignorant
and happy as they follow his instructions to build his world for him.
There is a lyric from Devo's song 'No Place Like Home' that reads
"We are creating a brand new world around us / We are creating a brand
new world without us." It seems particularly poignant in this case -
when everything is made for everybody, personality disappears and
creativity is squashed.
Themes in The LEGO Movie are similar, which could have something to
do with directors Lord and Miller's longtime collaboration with Mark
Mothersbaugh. But these ideas actually flow naturally from the very fact
that LEGO minifigures ARE mass produced, and there are literally
millions of identical plastic persons that populate its sets. The
director duo were smart to turn to the ideas of conformity and
creativity, as these seem to be the yin and yang of the LEGO world. But
amidst the social satire, they never stop having fun with it all - after
all, LEGOs are about having fun and being creative. In the world of
this film, the minifigure creations seem to be made in the image of
their creators - they too have the creative spark. In fact, their heroes
are the 'master builders' - those who are so creative they can build
anything out of literally anything. But they underestimate President
Business - who would commit the unthinkable to keep everything just the
way he wants it.
However - just when all of the thematic subtext is screaming out that
authority figures stifle creativity and rebels are to be glorified, the
film takes a rather brilliant turn into something deeper and more
thoughtful. Yes, and just when you forgot that this is a film about children's
toys. The aforementioned Devo song intones "Can't have a rainbow without
the rain / can't have a payday without the pain" and ends with the line
repeated over and over, "And there's no place like home to return to."
The meaning is clear as it is in the final act of the LEGO movie - home
and family and simple acts of love can transcend our mass-produced
humanity, and a selfless act shines so much more brightly than clinging
to ourselves.