“ | I'm not the bad guy here. I'm just an amusing side character. | ” |
Finn's Mother is the mother of Finn and Bianca, the husband of the Man Upstairs and a minor character in The LEGO Movie, and one of the two main antagonists (alongside Rex Dangervest) of The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part. She is voiced by Amanda Farinos in the first film and played by Maya Rudolph in the sequel.
Biography[]
The LEGO Movie[]
While not making a physical appearance, her voice can be heard near the end of the movie. She tells Finn and his father to come upstairs for dinner, while they were down in the basement. She also says that she made "Taco Tuesday", Finn and his father's favorite, which mirrors the event of the same name that Lord Business had killed.
The LEGO Movie 2: The Second Part[]
In The LEGO Movie 2: The Second Part, she physically appears near the end of the movie, while also briefly being heard a few times beforehand. She halted Finn and Bianca's constant bickers and told them to put their LEGO creations away after Finn smashes Bianca's creations, while injuring her feet This causes the "Armamageddon", which is actually a play on words "Our-Mom-gets-in", as Lucy witnesses. At the end of the movie, she sees Finn and Bianca outside building and playing together with their LEGO creations and she smiles in relief. Then her husband asks her: "Honey, where are my pants?"
Trivia[]
- She is a foil to the Man Upstairs. Where he's a LEGO super fan, she's indifferent at best and generally annoyed by them, accidentally stepping on bricks left out on the floor. And while both serve as the greater threat to the LEGO universe, her role in the movie is also comparatively smaller than his in the first. Where The Man Upstairs serves as the primary antagonist and has a minifig representative within the LEGO world, she's merely an indifferent force of nature.
- When she interrupts Finn and Bianca playing, she steps on Lego bricks, to which she says the pain of her feet is almost like that of childbirth. While she's joking, studies have shown that the pain of stepping on Lego bricks, in fact, exceeds that of walking across hot coals or broken glass. There is also the thing saying that Lego bricks do NOT break.