How To Train Your Dragon: Just As Awesome In 'Regular-D'
Monday, April 5, 2010 at 11:10PM 
If you are reading  this then chances are you are more interested in reading about animated  movies than watching them in a crowded movie theater. There is an even  stronger chance that you have friends and/or a significant other who  would rather eat fire than to watch an animated dragon breath it.  Moreover, I probably feel the same way you do. Animated movies on this  scale kind of suck. The formulas are old and even the best current  animated movies know that their bread is buttered with the family  demographic. How To Train A Dragon is the best example of how far  animated movies have come. I dare say that How To Train A Dragon is currently [mind you it is April 5th, 2010] the best movie in  theaters.
Starring Jay Baruchel,  an actor I usually find annoying in just about anything -- he plays the  diminutive Viking-in-training known as Hiccup. Admittedly, the start of  Dragon is fairly typical for most animated movies. Hiccup is the  son of the King Viking Stoik [Gerard Butler] who'se bravery is  known as far as the land he protects reaches. Hiccup is a clumsy  representation of what a viking should be and his eager  classmates let him know that whenever their town is periodically  attacked by a fleet of dragons [it is 'fleet' right?]. So within ten  minutes into Dragon we know what kind of character Hiccup is, we  know what kind of environment this character inhabits and, most  importantly, we know what conflict the character is enduring. Why is  this so hard for live action movies?
As Dragon progresses something strange occurs, characters are developed. A deadly  dragon known as a "Night Fury" is introduced and, as a viewer, I  actually become interested in where Hiccup and his new dragon friend,  Toothless, end up. The relationships between Hiccup and his father is  actually interesting because so many topics rarely dissected in animated  movies are tactfully addressed. Though Dragon carries a PG  rating, death and body mutilation are openly referenced. The training  aspect of Dragon is definitely handled with kid-gloves its when  you see Toothless and Hiccup interact [weird to say seeing as I am  referring to two computer generated characters] or Hiccup train with his  peers that this movie grabs you. The supporting cast holds such names  as Jonah Hill [who plays the annoying Snotlout],  Craig Ferguson [Gobber] and  America Ferrera [who  plays Hiccups love interest, Astrid]. Director's Dean DeBlois and Chris Sanders have proven to be incredibly capable of balancing  story immersion while reigning in the voice actors recognizable nuances.
My biggest bone to pick with Dragon is the  same gripe I have with most animated features of this depth. Ultimately  there is one final enemy or dragon in this case that the main  characters have to face. A PG-13 would suit movies like this better.  Dragon slaying, maiming and fire-breathing death is accepted given the  well-crafted story, but you never actually see the act. The movie ends  on an incredibly powerful note that is rarely seen in any movie. We are  use to seeing characters met with insurmountable odds and by fairy tale  movie magic they make it out unscathed. This does not happen in How  To Train A Dragon. If anything, every character depicted is flawed  either physically or otherwise and the story doesn't  progressively change every character into a stereotypical hero. This  movie teaches you to accept who you are and that that should be  heroic enough.
I Give How To Train A Dragon...



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