Becoming A Master Builder — Blue Ink Alchemy
I may not be a Master Builder. I may not have a lot of experience fighting or leading or coming up with plans. Or having ideas in general. In fact, I'm not all that smart. And I'm not what you'd call the creative type. Plus, generally unskilled. Also scared and cowardly. I know what you're thinking: "He is the least qualified person in the world to lead us!" And you are right.I can't be the only one who relates very well to Emmet's speech. For the whole maybe half-dozen of you who haven't seen it, in The LEGO Movie, the protagonist LEGO Minifig, a construction worker named Emmet, literally falls smack into one of those prototypical genre-crossing movie plots. There's a thing that the antagonist is going to use for something nefarious, the protagonist has another thing that can stop the first thing, and the plot revolves around getting his thing onto the other thing (phrasing). There's even a prophecy, a rhyming one at that, which tells of the destined hero saving the day by being skilled, imaginative, brave, powerful, smart, and I think there's something in there about them smelling good, too. The twist is this: Emmet is none of those things. He freely admits this, in a speech given to a room full of 'Master Builders', franchise characters in Minifig forms who can change whatever they want about the world around them. Their only limits are their imaginations. Emmet, on the other hand, is a stickler for instructions. He's a construction worker; he follows blueprints. When there is no blueprint, he gets lost. And while he may be friendly and a bit of a goofball, his relative incompetence becomes a pretty major hindrance when he stumbles upon the thing from the prophecy. A protagonist in a story like this tends to be described as an "everyman", a perfectly average and decidedly unremarkable individual to whom extraordinary things happen. We are meant to relate to this character, to place ourselves comfortably in their shoes. Emmet does this well by owning up to truths some of us avoid facing: we're not perfect. We're failures. I for one have lost count of the times I've come up short when facing various situations or challenges. Despite living in mortal quaking fear of letting down the people I care about, I have done just that, on more than one occasion. How can I be a master of anything if I can't even be a decent programmer, or a consistent writer, or a reliable and honest friend? There's no reason the wonderful people I love should give me the time of day, considering how spectacularly I can fuck things up. I can't deny the truth: I'm going to screw up. I'm going to disappoint. I'm going to fail.
Swamp Creature: Is this supposed to make us feel better?! Emmet: There was about to be a but... Gandalf: You're a butt!
"Well, you were right about him being a ding-dong."
Blue Ink Alchemy
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