Friday, March 26, 2010

How to Train Your Dragon

***1/2 Stars

The most refreshing and surprisingly wonderful film of the early year belongs to How to Train Your Dragon, DreamWorks finest animated film since the original Shrek. Believe it or not, Dragon is as much a fine drama as it is comedy. It never surrenders to cheap laughs or potty humor. It's always nice to watch a fantasy film that remains faithful to the world it lives in and doesn't reduce itself to pop-culture references.

The story begins with an epic battle between vikings (the good guys) and dragons (the bad guys) through the eyes of the most notable viking's son Hiccup (Jay Baruchel) who one day dreams of becoming a true viking by killing a dragon. Unfortunately for Hiccup, he doesn't have the muscles or training to become one. However, he does get lucky during the opening battle by shooting down the most feared dragon of them all, the Night Fury. Too bad for him, no one was watching.

After the battle, Hiccup wonders through the forest, frustrated that no one believes his accomplishment. As he's walking, he finds the dragon he shot down without half of his tail, thus making it unable for him to fly. Too good of a person to kill it, Hiccup forms a connection with the dragon. He calls him "Toothless," because when he doesn't attack something, he hides his teeth. Hiccup decides to help the wounded creature by building it an artificial tail. The more he helps, the more Toothless trusts him.

Back in town, Hiccup's father Stoick (Gerald Butler) tells him he's ready for Dragon training. Hiccup takes what he's learned from his secret lessons with Toothless and applies it to his training, making him the best in school and a local hero amongst the vikings.

The title for the film, How to Train Your Dragon, seems to be both a literal and metaphorical statement, one that actually creates an emotional and political message of understanding in regards to a two-sided battle and the bonds these characters create simply by listening to each other. The relationship between Hiccup and his dragon is a beautifully executed one, which comes from a great screenplay based off Cressida Cowell's novel. I saw it in 2-D, and it was this good. 3-D must be on a whole other level. Either way you choose to see it, all that's important is that you simply choose to see it.


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