
LEGO and Universal launch seven new Wicked sets ahead of new film
Following a successful collaboration on the first film, with four LEGO Wicked sets introduced, the two brands are reuniting with seven sets inspired by the upcoming Wicked: For Good.
The new sets include characters such as Glinda, Elphaba and Fiyero introduced as minifigures, following their minidoll versions in the first sets.
'We're as excited as the fans to see Wicked: For Good coming later this year. While waiting impatiently, it's the perfect time to launch seven all-new LEGO Wicked sets!' said Raquel Ojeda, Creative Lead on LEGO Wicked. 'As we designed these sets, we got a sneak peak which was incredibly exciting! We worked closely with Universal Products & Experiences to gain inspiration, and we immediately had ideas to bring the iconic scenes from this film to life. We hope that the LEGO sets manage to convey the films to their fullest and that fans will enjoy everything we have created, as we put our hearts into the process.'
The seven new LEGO Wicked sets are made for ages 7 and up.
LEGO Wicked Emerald City Wall Art (75685): Bring the magic of the world of Wicked to your home with this colorful wall art. Use the bricks to create a colorful artwork full of movie moments that's a rewarding treat for yourself, or a gift for any Wicked fan. Build with friends or family and enjoy social time with loved ones as you create this eye-catching display, which can be wall-hung or placed on a shelf.
LEGO Wicked Elphaba's Retreat (75687): Step inside Elphaba's magical woodland retreat. Hold the candle as she studies her map. Make plans with her and Fiyero round the fireplace and work out how to thwart The Wizard. Study the Grimmerie and escape from her enemies. Make friends with the rabbits, feed them a carrot and relax with nature in the beautiful woodland hideaway.
LEGO Wicked Glinda's Wedding Day (75688): Take your front row seat for Glinda's big moment. She looks stunning in her tiara and gown, ready to marry Fiyero. Part the butterflies to reveal the wedding scene. But something is wrong! Use the animal figures to play out how Glinda's wedding joy suddenly changes. When the play is over, close the butterflies to make a super cool display.
LEGO Wicked Emerald City & Kiamo Ko Castle (75689): Join Elphaba and Glinda for the dramatic final scene of the Wicked: For Good movie. Build the detailed Emerald City and Kiamo Ko Castle and act out how the story ends for these two iconic characters. Explore the buildings' secret compartments and uncover familiar details from the film. Read the Grimmerie with Glinda and use it as a force for good. Help Elphaba disappear and follow her destiny.
LEGO Wicked Glinda & Elphaba Visit Munchkinland (75690): Welcome to Munchkinland. Join in the celebrations as Glinda announces her engagement to Fiyero. Press the pedal to surround her in her bubble and let her fly above Munchkinland. On the other side of town, catch up with Elphaba, who has flown to Boq's family cottage on her broomstick. Explore his home, from his cozy bedroom to the cute kitchen and recreate magical scenes from Wicked: For Good.
LEGO Wicked Glinda & Elphaba Bookends (75691): Organize your books in magical style with these decorative Wicked bookends. Channel the style of the movies' heroines as you build the characters' signature details, such as Glinda's yellow butterfly and Elphaba's green elixir bottle. Recreate mini versions of Shiz University and Emerald City. Brighten your bookcase with these vibrant display pieces and ensure Wicked movie memories never fade.
LEGO BrickHeadz Wicked Elphaba & Glinda Figures (40794): Join Elphaba and Glinda for magical adventures and creative fun as you conjure up spellbinding scenes from Wicked with this authentically detailed pair of collectible LEGO BrickHeadz figures. This buildable toy looks great displayed alongside other BrickHeadz characters (sold separately). You can even combine elements to create hybrid characters of your own.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mirror
3 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Parents of Southport stabbing victim, 7, say her 'light lives on' one year on from attack
Bebe King was killed along with Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, and Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, when Axel Rudakubana launched his knife attack on the Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport on July 29 last year The family of Southport attack victim Bebe King have told how her light "lives on". They issued a tribute today, on the eve of the first anniversary of the attack. The six-year-old was killed along with Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, and Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, when Axel Rudakubana launched his knife attack on the Taylor Swift-themed dance class in the town on July 29 last year. A post on the Instagram account of Bebe's Hive, set up by her parents Lauren and Ben, detailed the youngster's "favourite musical" Wicked with the quote: "Because I knew you, I have been changed for good." Bebe's Hive was set up by her family to provide support for grieving children. The post, which appeared to have been written by Bebe's mother Lauren, referred to her as "my mini me" and "her dad's soulmate". It went on: "It's time for us to take the space we need. To feel, to breathe, to hold each other close. To just be. To be able to create something so purposeful, so needed, has given us a strength we didn't know we had. A reason. A focus. "We love and thank every single person who has helped us carry this. I feel her with me every day and that feeling is what keeps us going. Her light, her care, her spark - it lives on, and we'll continue it for as long as we can. "To our incredible family and friends, thank you for keeping us afloat, while trying to keep yourselves above water. Thank you for loving Bebe so deeply and for riding this forever journey with us. "To our amazing community, I don't think you realise what you've done. To everyone further, we also thank you from the bottom of our hearts. Your kindness has saved us. "To Elsie and Alice, we never had the chance to meet you, but we feel like we know you. Your light shines so brightly through your parents, and we're proud to walk alongside them." In a reference to the Taylor Swift song Bejeweled, the post went on to say: "Our girls' energy will continue to shimmer. And to every brave child, every adult, every family whose lives were changed forever that day, we see you and we're sending you so much love." A video of Bebe dancing and playing with a bubble machine accompanied the caption, along with photos of her. Sefton Council asked people not to lay flowers to mark the anniversary of the attack. They suggested donating to causes including Bebe's Hive, as well as Elsie's Story and Alice's Wonderdance, which were set up in the victim's memories. A three-minute silence will be held in the town at 3pm on Tuesday. Sgt Greg Gillespie, one of the first officers at the scene of the tragedy, recalled the look of "fear and terror" in the faces of the people who flagged him down as he arrived. "I don't think there's any amount of training or experience that can quite prepare you to deal with something like that or to process it," he told the BBC. "As a father, the thought of something like that happening to a child and then having to get up the next morning and try to proceed with your life is unfathomable. But the three sets of parents have not only done that… They've continued the legacy of their daughters' names and they brought the community together."


The Guardian
4 hours ago
- The Guardian
Christopher Nolan criticised for filming in occupied Western Sahara city
The organisers of the Western Sahara international film festival (FiSahara) have criticised Christopher Nolan for shooting part of his adaptation of the Odyssey in a Western Saharan city that has been under Moroccan occupation for 50 years, warning the move could serve to normalise decades of repression. The British-American film-maker's take on Homer's epic, which stars Matt Damon, Charlize Theron, Zendaya, Lupita Nyong'o and Anne Hathaway, is due to be released on 17 July 2026. According to the Hollywood studio Universal, which is backing the project, the film will be 'a mythic action epic shot across the world' made 'using brand new Imax film technology'. But the decision to film in the Western Saharan coastal city of Dakhla has provoked fierce criticism from Sahrawi activists and those who were forced to live under occupation or to go into exile after Morocco annexed the country following the withdrawal of its former colonial power, Spain, in 1976. The UN classifies Western Sahara as a 'non-self-governing territory'. In a report last year, the UN secretary-general noted that the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) had not been granted access to the territory since 2015, adding that OHCHR 'continued to receive allegations relating to human rights violations, including intimidation, surveillance and discrimination against Sahrawi individuals particularly when advocating for self-determination'. In its most recent country report, Amnesty International said that the 'authorities continued to restrict dissent and the rights to freedom of association and peaceful assembly in Western Sahara'. Reporters Without Borders has described Western Sahara as a 'desert for journalists' and said that 'torture, arrests, physical abuse, persecution, intimidation, harassment, slander, defamation, technological sabotage, and lengthy prison sentences are daily fare for Sahrawi journalists'. Last month the UK suggested it supported a proposal for Western Sahara to remain under Rabat's sovereignty but with a degree of self-rule. FiSahara's organisers say the recent presence of Nolan's high-profile cast and crew in Dakhla will help whitewash the Moroccan occupation and normalise the repression. The festival's directors said that while Dakhla was 'a beautiful location with cinematic sand dunes', it was, 'first and foremost … an occupied and militarised city whose indigenous Sahrawi population is subjected to brutal repression' by Moroccan occupation forces. 'By filming part of The Odyssey in an occupied territory … Nolan and his team, perhaps unknowingly and unwittingly, are contributing to Morocco's repression of the Sahrawi people and to the Moroccan regime's efforts to normalise its occupation of Western Sahara,' said María Carrión, the festival's executive director. 'We are sure that if they understood the full implications of filming a high-profile film in a territory whose Indigenous peoples cannot make their own films about their stories under occupation, Nolan and his team would be horrified.' FiSahara said it was calling on Nolan and his crew and cast to 'stand in solidarity with the Sahrawi people who have been under military occupation for 50 years and who are routinely imprisoned and tortured for their peaceful struggle for self-determination'. Carrión said Morocco was keen to control how its occupation was perceived abroad, and used tourism and culture to project a distorted view of life in Western Sahara. 'Morocco only allows entry into occupied Western Sahara to those who fit its strategy of selling its occupation to the outside world,' she said. 'Tourists who go to Moroccan-built and -owned resorts to practise kitesurfing, companies willing to participate in its plundering of natural resources, journalists willing to toe its line, and high-profile visitors like Nolan and his team who help Morocco sell the narrative that Western Sahara is part of Morocco and that the Sahrawis are content to live under its rule are given the red carpet treatment.' But she said Amnesty International, the UN commissioner for human rights, and 'the hundreds of journalists and observers who have been barred or deported from the territory' would tell 'a very different story'. The Guardian has contacted Nolan's representatives for a response, but the director has yet to comment. FiSahara, which was founded in 2004, is held in Sahrawi refugee camps in the Algerian desert. Labelled 'the Cannes of the desert', it aims to use film to 'entertain, convey knowledge and empower refugees from the Western Sahara'.


Glasgow Times
5 hours ago
- Glasgow Times
Bebe's ‘light, care and spark' live on a year after Southport attack, family say
The six-year-old was killed along with Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, and Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, when Axel Rudakubana launched his knife attack on the Taylor Swift-themed dance class in the town on July 29 last year. On Monday, a post on the Instagram account of Bebe's Hive referenced the youngster's 'favourite musical' Wicked with the quote: 'Because I knew you, I have been changed for good.' Bebe's Hive was set up by her family to provide support for grieving children through creativity and connection. The post, which appeared to have been written by Bebe's mother Lauren, referred to her as 'my mini me' and 'her dad's soulmate'. Flowers and tributes outside the Atkinson Art Centre in Southport last year (Paul Currie/PA) It said: 'It's time for us to take the space we need. To feel, to breathe, to hold each other close. To just be. 'To be able to create something so purposeful, so needed, has given us a strength we didn't know we had. A reason. A focus. 'We love and thank every single person who has helped us carry this. 'I feel her with me every day and that feeling is what keeps us going. 'Her light, her care, her spark – it lives on, and we'll continue it for as long as we can. 'To our incredible family and friends – thank you for keeping us afloat, while trying to keep yourselves above water. Thank you for loving Bebe so deeply and for riding this forever journey with us. 'To our amazing community – I don't think you realise what you've done. To everyone further, we also thank you from the bottom of our hearts. 'Your kindness has saved us. 'To Elsie and Alice, we never had the chance to meet you, but we feel like we know you. Your light shines so brightly through your parents, and we're proud to walk alongside them.' In a reference to the Taylor Swift song Bejeweled, the post went on to say: 'Our girls' energy will continue to shimmer. 'And to every brave child, every adult, every family whose lives were changed forever that day – we see you and we're sending you so much love.' A video of Bebe dancing and playing with a bubble machine accompanied the caption, along with photos of her. Sefton Council has asked people not to lay flowers to mark the anniversary of the attack but instead to consider donating to causes including Bebe's Hive, as well as Elsie's Story and Alice's Wonderdance, which were set up in the victim's memories. A three-minute silence will be held in the town at 3pm on Tuesday.