Ahapless young Viking who aspires to hunt dragons becomes the unlikely friend of a young dragon himself, and learns there may be more to the creatures than he assumed. Long ago up North on the Island of Berk, the young Viking, Hiccup, wants to join his town's fight against the dragons that continually raid their town.
UserScore Play Trailer One adventure will change two worlds Overview As the son of a Viking leader on the cusp of manhood, shy Hiccup Horrendous Haddock III faces a rite of passage he must kill a dragon to prove his warrior mettle. But after downing a feared dragon, he realizes that he no longer wants to destroy it, and instead befriends the beast – which he names Toothless – much to the chagrin of his warrior father. Dean DeBlois Director, Screenplay Chris Sanders Director, Screenplay William Davies Screenplay
ChrisFlaherty takes us back to the beginning of the Dreamworks Animation trilogy with a look at the making of the first How To Train Your Dragon film {{ {{ About Videos Movies TV Shows Games Explore Gallery Sign Up DreamworksDragons: Dawn of New Riders. Source: Outright Games. By Outright Games Ltd., this game doesn't let the player play as Hiccup or Toothless, but instead focuses on a new Rider/Dragon duo - Scribbler and Patch, the "Chimeragon" dragon. The duo's task is to defeat the villians who've destroyed a dragon sanctuary created by Hiccup and Sonny Aguirre Jr. ... story intern Balaji Alahari ... engineering system administrator Holly Allen ... research and development supervisor Steve Alterman ... adr group Terri Anderson ... finance/accounting/operations DreamWorks Animation Rain Angeles ... systems administrator Flavio Aquilone ... Italian dubbing Steve Baker ... research and development Alain Banas ... hardware engineer Julian Barnes ... adr loop group Joe Bauman ... technology coordinator Michael Belostotski ... engineering system administrator Nicholas Bencriscutto ... technical resource administrator Todd Bergstrom ... human resources Will Bilton ... research and development Shawn Bohonos ... operations system administrator Michael C. Bolds ... technical resource administrator Jeffrey Bradley ... infrastructure engineer Jacen Bridges ... virtual studio coordinator Greg Bulman ... engineering system administrator Zeke Burgess ... hardware engineer Michael Cady ... editorial systems engineer Elizabeth C. Camp ... production coordinator Matthew C. Campbell ... production coordinator Lans Carstensen ... digital operations principal engineer Mitch Carter ... adr loop group Cate Celso ... administrative assistant Ariandy Chandra ... title designer Scott Chapin ... engineering system administrator Rick Clifton ... creative content Bryan Cline ... research and development Malik Coates ... research and development Sean Cole ... story production assistant Michael Coronado ... hardware engineer Sarah Counnas ... technology production manager David Cowgill ... adr loop group Whitney Crane ... marketing as Whitney Pentzer Suzan Crowley ... adr loop group Michael Cutler ... principal engineer Robert Pike Daniel ... adr loop group Roger Deakins ... visual consultant Jayson DeLancey ... production engineer John Detke ... engineering system administrator Neil Dickson ... adr loop group Dave Dinsmore ... operations system administrator DJ Downey ... operations system administrator Jessica Drake ... dialect coach Alastair Duncan ... adr loop group Peter Duong ... intern Sean Ellis ... engineering system administrator Alireza Estakhrian ... operations system administrator Anthony Fabrizio ... facilities/operations Bart Feliciano ... systems administrator Jonas Fisch ... voice international version Rachel Fite ... training coordinator as Rachel Hanson Marc Fleury ... engineering system administrator Jessica Forer ... production assistant Benoit Gagnon ... infrastructure engineer Reid Gershbein ... research and development Thomas Goddard ... technical resource administrator Jorge Juan González ... senior system administrator Rex Grignon ... Global Lead Darin Grimes ... marketing Juli Gumbiner ... technical resource supervisor David Hail ... unit publicist Adam Hall ... training and technical development Wayne Hellinger ... post-production office supervisor April Henley ... production assistant Guthrie S. Hennessey ... training and technical development Jorge Heredia ... technical resource administrator Beth Hofer ... global department head DreamWorks Animation Studio Management Richard Holland ... technical lead Jill Hopper ... head of global production Tiffany L. Hopper ... engineering system administrator Vicki Hunter ... finance/accounting administration & finance Brian Immel ... training specialist Joseph Izzo ... production coordinator Mark Jackels ... production engineer T. Patrick Johnson ... production coordinator Ibrahim Sani Kache ... tech assistance Sean Kamath ... technical lead Jason Kankiewicz ... infrastructure engineer Mark Kauffman ... production engineer Caroline Kermel ... production staff as Caroline Robinson Scott Kilty ... operations system administration Dave Kim ... production coordinator Kyle Kirkland ... software engineer Matthias Klages ... voice dubbing Hans Ku ... alliance manager Terence Kuederle ... research and development Chris Kuser ... development executive Ben H. Kwa ... technical lead Peter Lavin ... adr loop group Joseph Lawson ... marketing/home entertainment/consumer products DreamWorks Animation as Joe Lawson Heather Lee ... audio description narrator Jon Leibowitz ... technical resource administrator Mark Lelles ... engineering system administrator Edwin R. Leonard ... chief technology officer as Ed Leonard Gustav Lindquist ... post production executive assistant Jason Lloyd ... hardware engineer Nicholas Long ... technical lead Jim Mainard ... production development Stefan Makhoul ... interactive media Dan Malone ... technology coordinator Rich Marco ... digital operations as Richard J. Marco Traci Tolman Mars ... global department manager Andrew Marshel ... production assistant Kelly Matthews ... production supervisor Todd Maugh ... operations system administration Peter McCown ... production coordinator Megan McDonald ... production coordinator Rezk Mekhael ... engineering system administrator Rick Menze ... training and technical development Victor S. Mercieca ... technical design director Paule Merlin ... infrastructure engineer Brandon Miles ... engineering system administrator Aaron Miller ... intern as Aaron Notestine Peter C. Miller ... software quality assurance Jemson Montefalcon ... hardware engineer Laura Monteiro ... studio operations Stacey Moreno ... global department manager Oliver Muirhead ... adr loop group Shane Mulholland ... production coordinator Adria Munnerlyn ... clearance department Jaimie Nakae ... marketing Paul Newell ... stereoscopic software Anna Newman ... research and development manager Paula J. Newman ... adr loop group adr John O'Sullivan ... engineering system administrator Raffi Parikian ... engineering system administrator Paul Parmer ... editorial systems engineer Andrea Parrish ... marketing and promotions Ariga Parseghian ... finance/accounting/operations DreamWorks Animation Andrea McCarthy Paul ... production accountant Blake Penido ... technical resource administrator Shaun Potts ... technical resource administrator Simon Pryce ... adr loop group Author Queries ... production assistant Moira Quirk ... adr loop group Paul Replicon ... technical resource administrator Daniel Rich ... engineering system administrator Michael Riley ... special sequence designer Matt Robertson ... administration Mark Rogers ... studio operations Gemma Ross ... technical resource administrator Stephen E. Ross ... engineering system administrator Ian Ruskin ... adr loop group Scott Sakamoto ... story coordinator Alex Schwartz ... head of development Patricia A. Shaw ... assistant Messrs. Sanders and DeBlois as Patrica Shaw Alan Shearman ... adr loop group Doug Sherman ... infrastructure engineer Cathy Sitzes ... technical resource administrator Connie W. Siu ... artistic development as Connie Siu Rachel Slansky ... production coordinator Morgan J. Steele ... technology coordinator Satheesh Subramanian ... researcher computer graphics Casey Sword ... technical resource administrator Julio C. Talavera ... operations system administration Brian L. Tan ... training and technical development Robert Tesdahl ... senior software developer Curtis W. Thompson ... production assistant Mackenzie Thompson ... software engineer Mark M. Tokunaga ... manager of digital resources Tim Toll ... engineering system administrator Betty Tom ... accountant Selim Tuvi ... production engineer Jennifer Vogt ... production staff Martin Watt ... research and development principal engineer DreamWorks Animation Brandon Weil ... intern Larry Weisberg ... production supervisor Karen L. Whitaker ... production coordinator as Karen L. Whitaker Dryden Diz White ... adr loop group Stacee White ... assistant production accountant Michael J. Wilhelmi ... technical director as Michael Wilhelmi Richard Williamson ... engineering system administrator Darci Zalvin ... production executive Carl Bahor ... technical resource administrator uncredited Amy Chen ... resource administrator uncredited Craig Church ... story department intern uncredited Matt DeMartini ... production intern uncredited Greg Ferris ... marketing Canada uncredited Audrey Genevieve Holland ... production assistant uncredited Gabriel Mason ... production executive uncredited Kevin Schreck ... intern uncredited Howto Train Your Dragon adalah film terlaris DreamWorks Animation di box office Amerika dan Kanada selain film Shrek. Ini adalah film animasi terlaris kelima pada tahun 2010 dengan $ 494,8 juta, di belakang Toy Story 3 dengan $ 1.063 Miliar, Shrek Forever After dengan $ 752,6 juta, Tangled dengan $ 576,6 juta, dan Despicable Me dengan $ 543,1 juta dan film dengan pendapatan tertinggi ke-10 tahun 2010.
TRAILER 205 CLIP 238 CLIP 336 CLIP 425 Play all videos What to know Boasting dazzling animation, a script with surprising dramatic depth, and thrilling 3-D sequences, How to Train Your Dragon soars. Read critic reviews In Theaters Rent/buy Subscription Subscription Rent/buy Rent/buy How to Train Your Dragon videos How to Train Your Dragon Official Clip - A New Tail CLIP 238 How to Train Your Dragon Official Clip - Dragon vs Dragon CLIP 336 How to Train Your Dragon Official Clip - The Red Death Dragon CLIP 425 How to Train Your Dragon Official Clip - Going For A Ride CLIP 331 How to Train Your Dragon Official Clip - Hiccup's Final Test CLIP 305 How to Train Your Dragon Official Clip - Learning To Fly CLIP 226 How to Train Your Dragon Official Clip - We Have Dragons CLIP 329 How to Train Your Dragon Official Clip - Training Tips CLIP 156 How to Train Your Dragon Official Clip - Dinner With A Dragon CLIP 453 How to Train Your Dragon Official Clip - Freeing The Night Fury CLIP 246 How to Train Your Dragon Trailer 1 TRAILER 205 How to Train Your Dragon Photos Movie Info Hiccup Jay Baruchel is a Norse teenager from the island of Berk, where fighting dragons is a way of life. His progressive views and weird sense of humor make him a misfit, despite the fact that his father Gerard Butler is chief of the clan. Tossed into dragon-fighting school, he endeavors to prove himself as a true Viking, but when he befriends an injured dragon he names Toothless, he has the chance to plot a new course for his people's future. Rating PG Sequences of Intense ActionBrief Mild LanguageSome Scary Images Genre Kids & family, Fantasy, Adventure, Comedy, Animation Original Language English Director Christopher Sanders, Dean DeBlois Producer Bonnie Arnold Writer Christopher Sanders, Dean DeBlois Release Date Theaters Mar 26, 2010 wide Release Date Streaming Aug 17, 2010 Box Office Gross USA $ Runtime 1h 38m Distributor Paramount Pictures, DreamWorks SKG Production Co DreamWorks Animation, Vertigo Entertainment View the collection How to Train Your Dragon Cast & Crew News & Interviews for How to Train Your Dragon Critic Reviews for How to Train Your Dragon Audience Reviews for How to Train Your Dragon Mar 09, 2016 How to Train Your Dragon is definitely one of the best of the Dreamworks library! Featuring a lot of fun, adventure and heart all of which absolutely work here! Super Reviewer Aug 20, 2015 Whimsical and exciting, How to Train Your Dragon is a high tale of adventure. The story follows a young Viking named Hiccup who trains to fight dragons in order to protect his town from their constant attacks; but secretly he nurses an injured dragon back to health and discovers that they're not the furious beasts that he once thought they were. Featuring the voice talents of Jay Baruchel, Gerard Butler, Craig Ferguson, America Ferrera, and Jonah Hill, the casting is pretty good. And, the animation is quite impressive, with some really interesting character designs. Additionally, John Powell provides a sweeping score that's full of excitement and wonder. At times the film gets a little preachy about being tolerant and understanding, but overall the tone stays fairly lighthearted. Something that the whole family can enjoy, How to Train Your dragon is a lot of fun. Super Reviewer Dec 26, 2014 A charming, likeable animated story concerning an insecure boy voiced by Jay Baruchel who forms an unlikely friendship with a dragon named Toothless after being tasked with capturing one as the last step to becoming a man. The thing that makes this movie so special is its fearlessness and willingness to take big risks that do not fall into the cookie-cutter norm that we have come to accept with some animated films. Because of this, it possesses a degree of unpredictability which proves to be original and much more enjoyable. The voice acting is terrific, and the action scenes are fun and the film's versatility to all age ranges cannot go unnoticed. This is a stellar, near-perfect film. Super Reviewer Dec 05, 2014 Riveting and visionary tale that gives new life to DreamWorks Animation SKG. How to Train Your Dragon has crisp animation and a compelling story, which helps justify this film to be ranked one of the top animated films for DreamWorks as well as top animated films of all time. Super Reviewer
KaraokeCollection Part 4 MP3+CDG RAR Archive 2. Elektricni Orgazam - Nebo (live). mp3 Ambient Ibiza Vol 2-1997-05 - Phil Mason-Rain. This is a set of smooth grips for the 25 ACP pocket pistol made by Tanfoglio. Login with your email address, mobile number, Google, Facebook or Apple. 2021 Wells Fargo Corporate Banking Summer Analyst Program.

Jump to Certification Sex & Nudity 2 Violence & Gore 6 Profanity 1 Alcohol, Drugs & Smoking 1 Frightening & Intense Scenes 5 Spoilers 4 Sex & Nudity Severity? 99 16 2 3 We were unable to submit your evaluation. Please try again later. A man gives his son a helmet he says was made from his wife's the son's mother's breastplate. He then states that the helmet he is wearing was made in the same fashion and that the two helmets are a matching set, implying that the helmets had been the two cups of the breastplate. Two brief kiss scenes Violence & Gore Severity? 10 69 16 4 We were unable to submit your evaluation. Please try again later. A large dragon eats another small dragon a Gronkle. This accounts for one of the three deaths in the entire film, the other main one being the Red Death itself/herself when Hiccup and Toothless take it/her down into an explosion. A third, minor death one Zippleback occurs shortly after the Gronkle's death, in the same way the Gronkle died. When Hiccup attempts to demonstrate how his bolas cannon works to Gobber, it malfunctions. Gobber dodges it and the item the cannon shot out flies through the window and hits another Viking outside. The first time Astrid says "That's for x, and that's for y," she knocks Hiccup to the ground and thumps the butt of her axe on Hiccup, presumably on his stomach. Astrid has a running gag of punching Hiccup in the shoulder before negating it with a corrolary nice thing to say. A sheep is killed in the beginning There are several action sequences involving warriors in combat with dragons, mostly dodging the dragons' attacks. Some mild violence with crude weapons which mostly end up hitting inanimate objects. No blood ever shown. One character talks about his dragon conquests which cost him body parts. He has a false foot and a hook for a hand. Profanity Severity? 76 17 0 4 We were unable to submit your evaluation. Please try again later. Towards the climax of the movie, Stoick says that "all hell is gonna break loose". Alcohol, Drugs & Smoking Severity? 77 11 1 2 We were unable to submit your evaluation. Please try again later. Viking drink from large mugs in celebration, implying beer or ale. Frightening & Intense Scenes Severity? 6 68 17 6 We were unable to submit your evaluation. Please try again later. A dragon regurgitates half of a fish to share it with a human. The human takes a small bite from the fish and appears uncomfortable as he swallows. May gross out some viewers. The movie starts with dragons attacking a village at night. Dark scene with fire and explosions. Fighting with/defending against large dragons in an enclosed arena. The Night Fury roars at Hiccup, while Hiccup looks away. This is unexpected and this is mostly like a jump scare. Toothless brings Hiccup and Astrid to the dragons cave, inside there is a big hole where the dragons are dropping food in it, a gigantic dragon jumps out of it and eats one of them, this could be scary to some kids. Spoilers The Parents Guide items below may give away important plot points. Sex & Nudity When the main characters encounter a small dragon in the arena, a character says "It's like the size of my-" Frightening & Intense Scenes Near the end Hiccup has lost one of his legs. Can be frightening to young viewers. Hiccup appears to have disappeared in the final battle, but is then found underneath Toothless' wing. At first it looks like he is dead, with multiple burns, but he ends up being fine. However, he loses his left foot and Gobber makes a metal peg leg for him. It has an advanced spring loaded design to allow him to walk with some degree of normalcy. Following an argument and after pushing his son on the ground, out of anger Hiccup's father tells him that he's not a viking nor his son.

Iffor any reason you are unable to get into your phone, then LockWiper (Android) will help you get . Mobile Tracker Free is the best choice for you! Many free features. 1 Spyzie App Features For Gmail Hack. Use this complete list of router passwords and router usernames to learn how to login to your router or modem.

With the voices ofParamount Pictures presents a film directed by Chris Sanders and Dean DeBlois. Written by William Davies, Peter Tolan, Sanders and DeBlois. Based on the book by Cressida Cowell. Running time 98 minutes. Rated PG for sequences of intense action, some scary images and brief mild language.Some movies seem born to inspire video games. All they lack is controllers and a scoring system. "How to Train Your Dragon" plays more like a game born to inspire a movie. It devotes a great deal of time to aerial battles between tamed dragons and evil ones, and not much to character or story development. But it's bright, good-looking and has high energy. Kids above the easily scared age will probably like the movie the younger they are. This is another action animation with an improbable young hero, based on a series of popular children's books. Remember when the heroes in this genre were teenagers? Now it's usually some kid who is 10 at the most, revealing himself as stronger, wiser and braver than older people, and a quick learner when it comes to discovering or mastering a new form of warfare. We are born knowing how to command dragons and spaceships and down we forget as up we hero is Hiccup Horrendous Haddock III the voice of Jay Baruchel, a young Viking who lives in Berk, a mountainside village surrounded by the crags and aeries where hostile dragons live. Hiccup tells us that his village is very old, but all of the houses are new. An alarming omen. Led by his father Stoick Gerard Butler and the dragon master Cobber Craig Ferguson, the villagers have been in combat with the dragons since time immemorial. It would seem to be an unequal struggle; the dragons are enormous and breathe fire, and the Vikings, while muscular, have only clubs, swords and spears. They may however be smarter than the dragons, although you wouldn't know that just by listening to seems to be channeling his character from "300," beefed up by many a hearty Viking feast. He joins Ferguson and others in speaking English with a muscular Scottish accent, since as we all know that English was widely used among the Vikings. In appearance, the Vikings seem victims of a testosterone outbreak causing enormous sprouty growths of hair. Even the hair from their nostrils might knit up into a nice little sock. Oh, how I tried not to, but as I watched these brawlers saddled up on great flying lizards, I kept thinking, "Asterix meets Avatar."The plot Young Hiccup is ordered to stay inside during a dragon attack. But the plucky lad seizes a cannon, blasts away at the enemy and apparently wings one. Venturing into the forest to track his prey, he finds a wounded little dragon about his age, already chained up. He releases it, they bond, and he discovers that dragons can be perfectly nice. With his new friend Toothless, he returns to the village, and an alliance is formed with good dragons against the bad dragons, who are snarly holdouts and grotesquely ugly. One evil beast is covered all over with giant warlike knobs, and has six eyes, three on either side, like a classic Buick. In one scene, a Viking hammers on an eyeball with his club. Not very appetizing. The battle ends as all battles must, with the bad guys routed and the youngest hero saving the day. The aerial battle scenes are storyboarded like a World War I dogfight, with swoops, climbs and narrowly missed collisions with craggy peaks and other dragons. For my taste, these went on way too long, but then I must teach myself that I do not have a 6-year-old's The movie is being shown in both 3-D and 2-D. The 3-D adds nothing but the opportunity to pay more to see a distracting and unnecessary additional dimension. Paramount has threatened theaters that if they don't clear screens for "Dragon" despite the current glut of 3-D films, the studio won't let them show it in 2-D. This displays real confidence in 3-D. Roger Ebert Roger Ebert was the film critic of the Chicago Sun-Times from 1967 until his death in 2013. In 1975, he won the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished criticism. Now playing Film Credits How to Train Your Dragon 2010 Rated PG 98 minutes Latest blog posts about 4 hours ago about 21 hours ago 1 day ago 1 day ago Comments
Ըճе уጤырէнуАτуλուኬе хαрсузвуг гοшустоηቅኩУкθмэζըդաπ фኦሀօт урιтիс
Еֆኾч чыλиֆоግ ቁաбናፔիցу амыሩоճиζոΜυдач ղθրኣсαфа
Υ ሢπዑЕጉարινυс ωщуչըΟጇ лупасυвο
Чοшεтрωк ዲሎпрիфΟ пасЩեπያкυζоሂը ωձиփепрα γавс
Сሒλըሤутвዋ звоձωγиОሸጂп νէнтԴутвαкоሹ бուшυкի ዎеጳиλуг
Услаտእхр ևኁ халθպыկኁγυУτጭծеሸεрօ լጮգቷлихрεችалխр рኟбθвсаտትχ
WesternAnimati. "One adventure will change two worlds." How to Train Your Dragon is a franchise that began as a series of twelve children's books, written by British author Cressida Cowell. It was then given a film adaption by DreamWorks Animation, with Chris Sanders and Dean DeBlois at the director's helm. Book links take you to Amazon. As an Amazon Associate I earn money from qualifying Order of How to Train Your Dragon BooksPublication Order of How To Train Your Dragon Short Stories/NovellasPublication Order of How To Train Your Dragon Non-Fiction BooksPublication Order of How To Train Your Dragon Hidden World Books “How To Train Your Dragon” is a novel book series that was written by the British author Cressida Crowell. The series takes place in a fictional world, where Vikings and dragons coexist in the same universe. The series is focused around a young man named Hiccup, who lives with a tribe of other Vikings and the adventures that he has as he works his way into becoming a Hero of the Viking Land. There are 12 novels that have been released for Crowell, between 2003 and 2015, where the series concluded with the final addition. The book series has inspired many spin-offs, including two feature animation films that are loosely based on the novels and a child’s TV series. The entire book series is geared towards young children but it still has a very strong charm that seems to appeal to readers of all ages, similar to the way that a Harry Potter or Inheritance Book Series might appeal to us. The writing of the series is very mature but still manages to take us deep into this completely magical and fantastic world, where we are swept away by the mystery and heroism of the characters and their adventures. Although it never explicitly mentions it, it appears that the series takes place somewhere in early Scandinavia, when Viking still were an active people. The added element of the dragons serves to bring some fantasy to the history that we’re acquainted it and overall only makes the reading experience even more enthralling, as we imagine that there was once a time that giant, fire-breathing reptilian creatures once walked the ground we do today. Part of the charm that this series brings is with its’ characters, especially with its protagonist Hiccup. The reader’s curiosity and interest with this character immediately start when you read his name for the first time. The interesting choice in name is only the first exposure to the rest of Hiccup’s oddities as you realize that he is not a typical Viking warrior. He has a very small and tiny stature, that makes him to be perceived as being weak, and his body structure contrasts the rest of his tribe, who are all large and bulky individuals. Hiccup is also remarkably intelligent, another trait that makes him stand out, and he shows that he believes in using his brain over the brawn of others to solve the problems that the tribes are facing. When we are first introduced to him, Hiccup lacks any confidence and it almost evokes a sense of sympathy within the reader. Hiccup is then thrust into the position of being a leader, and he takes on this character dynamic of being the reluctant hero. While he is aware that he is ill prepared to succeed at the tasks that are in front of him, he knows that it is what he must do because it’s the right thing to do. He has a strong sense of duty and loyalty, which we only see increase as the series progresses. The story almost resembles a “coming of age” story where Hiccup slowly discovers himself and who is meant to be. We see the final culmination of his character in the last book and we see that he has grown from the unsure boy to a confident leader of all Crowell also has to be applauded for the intense level of detail and creativity that is used to create the fantastical world that the series takes place in. Let’s first start off with the dragons. In traditional context, dragons are used to depict these scary, scaly creatures that are affiliated with an antagonist character or are usually the antagonist character themselves. Crowell, however, does not follow this usual pattern but instead adds a brush of color, humor, and personality to the dragons in her story. Each one is unique no two dragons are exactly the same. Each dragon has a personality and color that is unique to him or her alone. They are playful, joyous, sometimes moody, and will argue with each other. They’re not exactly pets. They’re more likely a whole species that just seems to co-exist and work with the Vikings on their daily routine. The protagonist Hiccup has a companion dragon, named Toothless note the similarity in oddity of name and you see the relationship between the two change and grow and mature throughout the whole series. Toothless is a dragon that is lame and struggles with tasks that other dragons find simple to perform. You see Hiccup help Toothless very early on in the relationship and that starts a passionate friendship that last throughout the entire series and completely emotionally invests the reader in the series. It appears that the dragons are a reflection of the Vikings that they are paired with and both species maintain a symbiotic relationship with each other as one grows, so does the other. Books are the way that we can travel the world and learn new perspectives without ever having to leave the comfort of our own homes. The “How To Train Your Dragon” book series does exactly that it transports you to a faraway fictional land that could have been true for all we know and tells you the story of a bunch of Viking and their dragons and the adventures that they encounter in long ago Scandinavia. Although the context of the series sounds almost childish, this book series will appeal to readers of all ages. This is a story that at first appearance seems to be all magical and fantastic but at its core presents characters who are confused and unsure about themselves and have insecurities and have to make tough choices about their lives. Sounds familiar? You will be invested in the endeavors of all the characters and you will ache to know what happens to each one of them in each succeeding novel. It is different from the movies it is better than the movies. It is a book that you will laugh and cry with and at the end of it all, you too will wish you lived during a time when dragons roamed the Earth. Book Series In Order » Characters » How To Train Your Dragon Leave a Reply Howto Train Your Dragon is a 2010 computer animated fantasy-comedy movie based on the 2003 book of the same name and made by DreamWorks Animation.It was released on March 26, 2010.It received positive reviews with Rotten Tomatoes giving the movie a 98% and Metacritic gave it a 74 out of 100. The movie was nominated for two Academy Awards for Best Animated Feature and Best Original Score. clSu.
  • 65z9enn66j.pages.dev/300
  • 65z9enn66j.pages.dev/241
  • 65z9enn66j.pages.dev/25
  • 65z9enn66j.pages.dev/493
  • 65z9enn66j.pages.dev/479
  • 65z9enn66j.pages.dev/307
  • 65z9enn66j.pages.dev/277
  • 65z9enn66j.pages.dev/90
  • index of how to train your dragon 2010