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How to Train Your Dragon is a 2010 American 3D computer-animated action-fantasy film loosely based on the 2003 book of the same name by Cressida Cowell, produced by DreamWorks Animation and distributed by Paramount Pictures. It was directed by Chris Sanders and Dean DeBlois from a screenplay by Will Davies, Sanders, and DeBlois, and stars the voices of Jay Baruchel, Gerard Butler, Craig Ferguson, America Ferrera, Jonah Hill, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, T.J. Miller, and Kristen Wiig. The story takes place in Berk, a mythical Viking village; Hiccup, an undersized teen wishing to become a dragon slayer like the other Vikings, injures a rare Night Fury dragon but is unable to bring himself to kill it. He instead helps and befriends the dragon, and quickly discovers that things are not exactly as they seem in the Viking-Dragon conflict.

How to Train Your Dragon
Theatrical release poster
Directed by
Screenplay by
Based on How to Train Your Dragon
by Cressida Cowell
Produced byBonnie Arnold
Starring
CinematographyRoger Deakins (visual consultant)
Edited by
  • Darren Holmes
  • Maryann Brandon
Music byJohn Powell
Production
company
DreamWorks Animation[1]
Distributed byParamount Pictures[1]
Release dates
  • March 21, 2010 (2010-03-21) (Gibson Amphitheater)
  • March 26, 2010 (2010-03-26) (United States)
Running time
98 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$165 million[2]
Box office$494.9 million[2]

How to Train Your Dragon premiered at the Gibson Amphitheater on March 21, 2010,[3] and was released in the United States five days later on March 26. The film was a commercial success, earning nearly $500 million worldwide. It was widely acclaimed, being praised for its animation, voice acting, writing, musical score, and 3D sequences. It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature and Best Original Score at the 83rd Academy Awards, but lost to Toy Story 3 and The Social Network, respectively. How to Train Your Dragon also won ten Annie Awards, including Best Animated Feature. How to Train Your Dragon is the first entry in what would become the multimedia franchise of the same name, which includes two more films—How to Train Your Dragon 2 (2014) and How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World (2019).


Plot


The viking village of Berk is frequently attacked by dragons, which steal livestock and endanger the villagers. Hiccup, the awkward fifteen-year-old son of the village chieftain, Stoick the Vast, is deemed too weak to fight the dragons. Instead, he creates mechanical devices under his apprenticeship with Gobber, the village blacksmith, though Hiccup's inventions often backfire. Hiccup uses a bolas launcher to shoot down a Night Fury, a rare and dangerous dragon, but cannot bring himself to kill the creature and sets him free.

Before leaving with his fleet to find and destroy the dragons' nest, Stoick enters Hiccup in a dragon-fighting class taught by Gobber with fellow teenagers Fishlegs, Snotlout, twins Ruffnut and Tuffnut, and Astrid, on whom Hiccup has a crush. Failing in training, Hiccup returns to the forest and finds the Night Fury trapped in a cove, unable to fly because Hiccup's bolas tore off half his tail fin. Hiccup gradually befriends the dragon, naming him 'Toothless' after his retractable teeth, and designs a harness and prosthetic fin allowing Toothless to fly with Hiccup riding him.

Learning dragon behavior from Toothless, Hiccup is able to subdue the captive dragons during training, earning admiration from his peers but suspicion from Astrid. Stoick's fleet returns home unsuccessful, though he is gladdened by Hiccup's unexpected success in dragon training. Hiccup is judged the winner of his training class, and must kill a dragon for his final exam. He tries to run away with Toothless, but Astrid ambushes him in the forest and discovers the dragon. Hiccup takes Astrid for a sunset flight to demonstrate that Toothless is friendly, but Toothless is hypnotically drawn to the dragons' nest. There, a gargantuan dragon named the Red Death summons the smaller dragons to feed it live food to avoid being eaten themselves. Realizing the dragons have been forced to attack Berk to survive, Astrid wishes to tell the village, but Hiccup advises against it to protect Toothless.

In his final exam, Hiccup faces a captive Monstrous Nightmare dragon, and tries to subdue him to prove that dragons can be peaceful. When Stoick inadvertently angers the dragon into attacking, Toothless escapes the cove to protect Hiccup, but is captured by the Vikings. After Hiccup accidentally reveals that Toothless knows the location of the dragons' nest, Stoick ignores his son's warnings about the Red Death and disowns him, setting off for the nest with Toothless chained to the lead ship as a guide. Hiccup is devastated, but Astrid prompts him to realize that he spared Toothless out of compassion, not weakness. Regaining his confidence, Hiccup shows Astrid and their friends how to befriend the training dragons, and they set out after Toothless.

Stoick and his Vikings locate and break open the dragon's nest, awakening the Red Death, which soon overwhelms them. Hiccup, Astrid, and their friends fly in on the training dragons, distracting the Red Death. Hiccup attempts to free Toothless from the damaged ship; the two nearly drown, but Stoick rescues them, reconciling with his son. Toothless and Hiccup lure and kill the Red Death. In the ensuing explosion, Toothless shields Hiccup, but Hiccup loses his lower left leg and faints.

Awakening some time later, Hiccup finds that Gobber has fashioned him a prosthetic, and he is now admired by his village, including Astrid, who kisses him. Berk begins a new era of humans and dragons living in harmony.


Voice cast



Production


Early production concept artwork of Toothless and Hiccup
Early production concept artwork of "Toothless" and "Hiccup"

The book series by Cressida Cowell began coming to attention to the executives at DreamWorks Animation in 2004. Coming off her success in Over the Hedge, producer Bonnie Arnold shortly became interested in the newly acquired property. She kept focusing on the project as time went on, and when DreamWorks Animation co-president of production Bill Damaschke asked her what she wanted to work on next, she chose "How to Train Your Dragon".[8]

During initial development, the plot followed the original novel closely, but about halfway through production Chris Sanders and Dean DeBlois, previously the writers & directors of Disney's Lilo & Stitch, took over as co-directors and it was altered. The original plot has been described by DeBlois as "heavily loyal to the book," but was regarded as being too "sweet" and "whimsical" and geared to a younger demographic.[9] In the novel, Hiccup's dragon, Toothless, is believed to be a Common or Garden Dragon, a small breed. In the film, Toothless is an injured Night Fury, the rarest species of all dragons, far faster, aerodynamic and more powerful than the other species, and is large enough to serve as a flying mount for both Hiccup and Astrid. The filmmakers hired cinematographer Roger Deakins (known for frequently collaborating with the Coen brothers) as a visual consultant to help them with lighting and overall look of the film and to "add a live-action feel".[9] Extensive research was done to depict both flight, as the directors knew they would be the biggest draw of the film's 3D effects, and fire, given animation could break away from the limitations seen in live-action films, where propane flames are usual due to being easier to extinguish. The dragons' designers made sure to create animals that were comical and also innovative compared to other dragon fiction. Toothless in particular tried to combine various dragon traits in a black panther-inspired design, that also had large ears and eyes to convey emotion better.[10]

The directors made sure to cash in the improvisation abilities of the secondary cast—Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Jonah Hill, Kristen Wiig and T.J Miller—by frequently bringing them together in the recording sessions.[4]


Music


John Powell returned to DreamWorks Animation to score How to Train Your Dragon, making it his sixth collaboration with the studio, following Antz, The Road to El Dorado, Chicken Run, Shrek, and his previous score for Kung Fu Panda (all of which he scored with either Harry Gregson-Williams and/or Hans Zimmer). Powell composed an orchestral score, combining bombastic brass with loud percussion and soothing strings, while also using exotic Scottish and Irish tones with instruments like the penny whistle and bagpipes. Additionally, Icelandic singer Jónsi wrote and performed the song "Sticks & Stones" for the film. The score was released by Varèse Sarabande on March 23, 2010.

Overall, the score was well received by film score critics. Powell earned his first Academy Award nomination for his work on the film, ultimately losing to Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross for their score for The Social Network.


Release



Theatrical


How to Train Your Dragon had its United States premiere on March 21, 2010 at the Gibson Amphitheatre in Universal City, California,[3] and was theatrically released on March 26, 2010 in the United States.[11] It was originally scheduled for release on November 20, 2009, but was pushed back to avoid competition with other family films released in November.[12] The film was digitally re-mastered into IMAX 3D, and released to 186 North American IMAX theatres, and approximately 80 IMAX theatres outside North America.[11]

A month before the release, DreamWorks Animation CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg protested Warner Bros.' decision to convert Clash of the Titans from 2D to 3D, then to release it one week after How to Train Your Dragon.[13] Entertainment reporter Kim Masters described the 3D release schedule around March 2010 as a "traffic jam", and speculated that the lack of 3D screen availability could hurt Katzenberg's prospects despite his support of the 3D format.[14] That month, theater industry executives accused Paramount Pictures (who distributed the film on behalf of DreamWorks) of using high-pressure tactics to coerce theaters to screen How to Train Your Dragon rather than competing 3D releases, Clash of the Titans and Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland. As theater multiplexes often had just one 3D screen, theaters were unable to accommodate more than one 3D presentation at a time.[15]


Home media


How to Train Your Dragon was released on single-disc DVD, two-disc double DVD pack and Blu-ray/DVD combo pack editions in Canada and the United States on October 15, 2010. Among the features available in the two-disc DVD edition and Blu-ray is an original sequel short film, Legend of the Boneknapper Dragon. As of February 2012, 9.7 million home entertainment units were sold worldwide.[16] The film was reissued on Blu-ray on May 27, 2014, with the short film Book of Dragons and an episode of DreamWorks Dragons added as additional bonus features.[17]

In July 2014, the film's distribution rights were purchased by DreamWorks Animation from Paramount Pictures and transferred to 20th Century Fox[18] before reverting to Universal Studios in 2018. As a result, Universal Pictures Home Entertainment released a 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray version of the film on January 22, 2019 alongside the film's sequel How to Train Your Dragon 2, making them the first DreamWorks Animation catalog titles to be released on that format, and in preparation for the release of How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World the following month.[19][20]


Reception



Box office


How to Train Your Dragon topped the North American box office with $43.7 million in its first weekend of release.[21] The film grossed $217,581,231 in the United States and Canada and $277,297,528 in foreign countries with a worldwide total of $494,878,759.[2] How to Train Your Dragon is DreamWorks Animation's highest-grossing film in the American and Canadian box office other than the Shrek films.[22] It is the fifth-highest-grossing animated film of 2010 with $494.8 million, behind Toy Story 3 with $1,063.2 billion, Shrek Forever After with $752.6 million, Tangled with $576.6 million, and Despicable Me with $543.1 million and the 10th-highest-grossing movie of 2010.[23] As of 2019, the How to Train Your Dragon series has grossed over $1 billion worldwide.[24]


Critical response


How to Train Your Dragon was widely praised upon its release. Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports that 99% of critics gave the film a positive review, based on 212 reviews from professional critics, with an overall rating average of 7.9/10.[25] The website's critical consensus states, "Boasting dazzling animation, a script with surprising dramatic depth, and thrilling 3-D sequences, How to Train Your Dragon soars."[25] The film is DreamWorks Animation's highest-rated film on the Rotten Tomatoes website.[26] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 75 out of 100 based on 37 reviews from critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[27] CinemaScore polls conducted during the opening weekend revealed the average grade cinemagoers gave How to Train Your Dragon was "A" on an A+ to F scale.[28]

Matt Risley of Variety wrote a highly positive review, hailing it as "undoubtedly Dreamworks' best film yet, and quite probably the best dragon movie ever made".[29] James Berardinelli of ReelViews gave it 3.5 out of 4 stars, and complimented both the "technically proficient" animation and the "witty, intelligent, surprisingly insightful script".[30] Claudia Puig of USA Today noted that the film had "surprising depth", and praised the "sweetly poignant tale of friendship between man and animal".[31] Entertainment Weekly film critic Owen Gleiberman praised the film's usage of 3-D in all "its breathtaking spatial and emotional possibilities"; he gave a rating of A−.[32]

Both Roger Ebert of The Chicago Sun-Times and A. O. Scott of At The Movies felt that character and story development had been sidelined in favour of the visual spectacle. Ebert criticised the lengthy "aerial battles between tamed dragons and evil ones", but did note that "[the film] is bright, good-looking, and has high energy".[33] Similarly, Scott commended the cinematography, observing that the "swooping and soaring [was] worth the price of a ticket."[34] Rolling Stone film critic Peter Travers, giving it three out of four stars, wrote that the film "works enough miracles of 3-D animation to charm your socks off."[35]

Roger Moore of The Orlando Sentinel, who gave the film 2½ stars out of 4, felt that the film's inclusion of more dramatic subject matter, instead of more comedic themes, was to the detriment of the film, making it a "waste of a funny book, some very funny actors and some darned witty animation."[36] Village Voice film critic Ella Taylor also gave a more negative review of the film, describing it as an "adequate but unremarkable animated tale".[37] Kyle Smith of the New York Post gave the film two stars out of four stars, describing it as, "Avatar for simpletons."[38]


Accolades


Accolades received by How To Train Your Dragon (film)
Award Date of ceremony Category Recipient(s) Result Ref.
3D Creative Arts Awards February 9, 2011 Best Feature Film – Animation How To Train Your Dragon Won [39]
Best Stereoscopic Feature Film – Animation How To Train Your Dragon Won
3D Talent Award Jay Baruchel Won
Academy Awards February 27, 2011 Best Animated Feature How To Train Your Dragon Nominated [40]
Best Original Score John Powell Nominated
Alliance of Women Film Journalists Awards December 24, 2010 Best Animated Feature How To Train Your Dragon Nominated [41][42]
Best Animated Female America Ferrara Won
American Cinema Editors Awards February 19, 2011 Best Edited Animated Feature Film Maryann Brandon and Darren T. Holmes Nominated [43][44]
Annie Awards February 5, 2011 Best Animated Feature How To Train Your Dragon Won [45][46]
Outstanding Achievement for Animated Effects in an Animated Production Brett Miller Won
Jason Mayer Nominated
Outstanding Achievement for Character Animation in a Feature Production Gabe Hordos Won
Jakob Hjort Jensen Nominated
David Torres Nominated
Outstanding Achievement for Character Design in a Feature Production Nico Marlet Won
Outstanding Achievement for Directing in a Feature Production Dean DeBlois and Chris Sanders Won
Outstanding Achievement for Music in a Feature Production John Powell Won
Outstanding Achievement for Production Design in an Animated Feature Production Pierre Olivier Vincent Won
Outstanding Achievement for Storyboarding in a Feature Production Tom Owens Won
Outstanding Achievement for Voice Acting in an Animated Feature Production Jay Baruchel Won
Gerard Butler Nominated
Outstanding Achievement for Writing in a Feature Production William Davies, Dean DeBlois, and Chris Sanders Won
British Academy Film Awards February 13, 2011 Best Animated Film How To Train Your Dragon Nominated [47]
Best Original Music John Powell Nominated
Chicago Film Critics Association Awards December 20, 2010 Best Animated Film How To Train Your Dragon Nominated [48]
Critics' Choice Movie Awards January 14, 2011 Best Animated Feature How To Train Your Dragon Nominated [49]
Genesis Awards March 19, 2011 Best Feature Film How To Train Your Dragon Won [50]
Golden Globe Awards January 16, 2011 Best Animated Feature Film How To Train Your Dragon Nominated [51]
Golden Reel Awards February 20, 2011 Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Musical for Feature Film Randy Thom, Jonathan Null, Al Nelson, Pascal Garneau, Chris Gridley, Colette D. Dahanne, Josh Gold, Pete Horner, Sue Fox, Andrea Gard, Richard Quinn, Dennie Thorpe, and Jana Vance Won [52]
International Film Music Critics Association Awards February 24, 2011 Film Score of the Year John Powell Won [53][54]
Best Original Score for an Animated Film John Powell Won
Film Music Composition of the Year John Powell for "Forbidden Friendship" Nominated
John Powell for "Test Drive" Nominated
February 18, 2021 Best New Archival Release of an Existing Score – Re-Release or Re-Recording John Powell Nominated [55][56]
Nebula Awards May 21, 2011 Ray Bradbury Nebula Award for Outstanding Dramatic Presentation Chris Sanders, Dean DeBlois, and Will Davies Nominated [57][58]
Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards April 2, 2011 Favorite Animated Movie How To Train Your Dragon Nominated [59][60]
Online Film Critics Society Awards January 3, 2011 Best Animated Film How To Train Your Dragon Nominated [48]
People's Choice Awards January 5, 2011 Favorite Family Movie How To Train Your Dragon Nominated [61][62]
Producers Guild of America Awards January 22, 2011 Best Animated Motion Picture How To Train Your Dragon Nominated [63][64]
Satellite Awards December 19, 2010 Best Animated or Mixed Media Feature How To Train Your Dragon Nominated [65][66]
Saturn Awards June 23, 2011 Best Music How To Train Your Dragon Nominated [67]
Best Production Design How To Train Your Dragon Nominated
Best Animated Film How To Train Your Dragon Nominated
St. Louis Film Critics Association Awards December 20, 2010 Best Animated Film How to Train Your Dragon Nominated [48]
Teen Choice Awards August 8, 2010 Choice Animated Movie How To Train Your Dragon Nominated [68][69]
Toronto Film Critics Association Awards December 14, 2010 Best Animated Film How To Train Your Dragon Won [48]
Venice Film Festival September 1  September 11, 2010 Most Creative 3D Film of the Year How To Train Your Dragon Won [70]
Visual Effects Society Awards February 1, 2011 Outstanding Visual Effects in an Animated Feature Simon Otto, Craig Ring, and Bonnie Arnold Won [71]
Outstanding Animated Character in an Animated Feature Gabe Hordos, Cassidy Curtis, Mariette Marinus, and Brent Watkins Won
Outstanding Effects Animation in an Animated Feature Motion Picture Andy Hayes, Laurent Kermel, Jason Mayer, and Brett Miller Won
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Awards December 6, 2010 Best Animated Feature How To Train Your Dragon Nominated [48]
World Soundtrack Awards August 23, 2010 Soundtrack Composer of the Year John Powell Nominated [72]
Best Original Song Written Directly for a Film Jónsi Nominated

Sequels and franchise


The film was followed by two sequels, How to Train Your Dragon 2 (2014), and How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World (2019). Five post-movie short films were released: Legend of the Boneknapper Dragon (2010), Book of Dragons (2011), Gift of the Night Fury (2011),[73] Dawn of the Dragon Racers (2014)[74] and How to Train Your Dragon: Homecoming (2019).

A television series based on the film premiered on Cartoon Network in Autumn 2012. Jay Baruchel, America Ferrera, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, and T. J. Miller reprise their roles as Hiccup, Astrid, Fishlegs, and Tuffnut. The series, set between the first and second film, follows Hiccup and his friends as they learn more about dragons, discover new ones, teach others to feel comfortable around them, adapt traditions within the village to fit their new friends and battle against enemies as they explore new worlds.[75]

An action adventure video game released by Activision, called How to Train Your Dragon, was released for the Wii, Xbox 360, PS3 and Nintendo DS gaming consoles. It is loosely based on the film and was released on March 23, 2010. In addition, School of Dragons, a 3D free-to-play MMO, was released on July 17, 2013, at the San Diego Comic-Con.[76][77] The game is available for PC, Android and iOS.[78]

HarperCollins Children's Books published a storybook version of the film in 2010. The story was adapted by Rennie Brown while the illustrations were painted by Michael Koelsch.[79]

How to Train Your Dragon Arena Spectacular is an arena show adaptation of the first film featuring 24 animatronic dragons, acrobats and projections. It premiered on March 2, 2012, in Melbourne, Australia.[80]


Notes


  1. ^ Though the dragon is never named in the film itself, its name is mentioned in the official illustrated tie-in book,[81] as well as in DreamWorks Dragons. On the film's soundtrack, the dragon is erroneously referred to as the "Green Death" in the track listings.

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На других языках


[de] Drachenzähmen leicht gemacht

Drachenzähmen leicht gemacht (Originaltitel: How to Train Your Dragon) ist ein US-amerikanischer 3D-Computeranimationsfilm von DreamWorks Animation SKG aus dem Jahr 2010.
- [en] How to Train Your Dragon (film)

[ru] Как приручить дракона

«Как приручи́ть драко́на» (англ. How to Train Your Dragon) — полнометражный анимационный фильм производства студии «DreamWorks Animation», премьера которого состоялась в России 18 марта 2010 года в форматах 2D, 3D и IMAX 3D[3]. Мультфильм снят режиссёрами Крисом Сандерсом и Дином Деблуа по мотивам одноимённой серии книг британской детской писательницы Крессиды Коуэлл.



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