This review of 75003 A-Wing Starfighter may be a few years late, after all this set came out in…. ::checks the bottom of the box:: 2013. But it’s been sitting around taking up some space....[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]Original link
Yep. Today is Friday, so that means another new episode of the final season of The Clone Wars is up on Disney+ ready to be streamed to your device. Enjoy this teaser clip shared by Lucasfilm. I wish...[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]Original link
The above video was published on Nintendo’s YouTube channel giving the world a sneak peek into what the upcoming LEGO Super Mario theme will look like. I don’t know what I was expecting,...[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]Original link
I’m a sucker for superhero movies. I love the superpowers, the epic explosions, the over-the-top bad guys, and even the mysterious hideouts that shelter the heroes. One such hideout is Doctor Strange’s Sanctum Sanctorum (Latin for Holy of Holies), a building on Bleeker Street in New York City that serves as both a storehouse for mystic artifacts and a node for protecting the Earth from enemy attacks. Anders Horvath has built a beautiful rendition of the Sorcerer Supreme’s lair, in the style and scale of LEGO’s Creator Expert modular buildings. In fact, it would fit right into your collection at home. It is based on official LEGO set 76108 Sanctum Sanctorum Showdown but upscaled to a point where it is a whole new thing. The interior is lovely, too, so you should check out the album on Flickr. I love the appearance of a microscale Disney Castle, as well as the...

We’ll never know if Annie is doing “OK” despite the few hundred times that Michael Jackson asked the very same question. What we do know is the signature moonwalk move by the King of Pop that’s moulded into our minds decades later. This micro build of the moonwalk in action perfectly angled by the 1×1 tile with clip by Joeri Ridder coupled with the tip of the fedora is the embodiment of how a simple looking dance moves together with the right beats can impact a generation of music. The post Annie are you OK? We’ll never know if Annie was OK appeared first on The Brothers Brick. Original linkOriginal author: Edwinder
