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Young hero in
the making trying to prove himself. A father who doesn't believe in him.
The bond of a young hero and his enemy. And a young anachronistic
heroine who helps the hero find himself. We've seen it all before and
then some, but thankfully with "How to Train your Dragon" is handled the
formula so well, it's almost original and unique. Almost. Dreamworks'
animated action adventure film is your classic boy and dog story, except
the boy finds his man's best friend in his purported enemy, a young
dragon who forms a common ground with him in a world where humans and
dragons are eternally grappling at war with one another and are told
they must do battle. One of the finer points of "How to Train Your
Dragon" is that the film is centered on a young man named Hiccup who
figures out how to train dragons when he meets an injured black dragon
in the forest one day and builds an eternal friendship with it. What
comes with training is more based around facial gestures and hand
movement rather than clubbing us over the head with commands, and
director Dean DeBlois, and Chris Sanders center the ideals of
storytelling around such a notion when Hiccup figures out how to best
Dragons without hurting them, which leads to some of the most
breathtaking moments of storytelling I've seen in 2010. Most of the
friendship between Hiccup and the dragon he calls toothless is abundant
with idiosyncrasies and non-verbal communication that brings them closer
and closer together the more hiccup realizes he can best this young
dragon by coming to an understanding with it instead of hurting it.
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This is an instant plea for
friendship by the dragon who forms a companionship with
Hiccup when he learns that the young man is not intent on
hurting so much as he is on co-existing. When the two reach
that crescendo of mutual agreement, the sky is the limit
toward characterization where Hiccup becomes a thinking
man's hero, while his friend the black dragon is his partner
more than his goofy pet. While the first ten minutes opt for
pure sensory overload, "How to Train your Dragon" is much
more story-centric and immensely less clumsily put together
than Dreamworks' cash cow "Shrek." |
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The film opts
instead for nods to Celtic and Norse mythology to provide the themes
for its landscape and root for characters rather than anachronistic
pop culture references. Star Baruchel adds a needed humility to the
young protagonist Hiccup offering a humanity that most actors only
dream of injecting. All the while folks like America Ferrerra, Jonah
Hill, and Gerard Butler compliment the character piece, giving the
film its youthful tone without pandering to its target demographic.
And once the
film manages to find its footing as Dreamworks most sophisticated
outing to date, it prefers to tell the audience a wonderful story
instead of talk down to them and sugar coat its themes of life,
death, irony, and love. What "How to Train your Dragon" ultimately
becomes by the second half is a story about understanding and racial
unity where the dragons act as a symbol for the minority race, and
the Vikings, the white supremacy. And Hiccup figures out before
everyone else that if they can learn to understand and live and let
live, perhaps there can finally be peace in the land around them.
But how do you change a society built on the notion that its primary
purpose it to extinguish all that oppose or hope to co-exist with
them? That becomes the conflict for Hiccup.
Neck and neck with "Toy
Story 3" as the finest animated film of 2010, "How to Train your Dragon"
is undeserving of the Dreamworks stigma as it's one of their most
sophisticated and beautifully told action fantasy films free of the pop
culture pabulum and excess and centered solely on telling a sharp story
with characters we can actually care for at the end of the day. A finely
tuned and intelligent film for the kids, "How to Train Your Dragon" is
proof Dreamworks is capable of delivering something other than juvenile
nonsense.
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