Watch: How to Train Your Dragon 2010 123movies, Full Movie Online – 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. However, his macho father and village leader, Stoik the Vast, will not allow his small, clumsy, but inventive son to do so. Regardless, Hiccup ventures out into battle and downs a mysterious Night Fury dragon with his invention, but can’t bring himself to kill it. Instead, Hiccup and the dragon, whom he dubs Toothless, begin a friendship that would open up both their worlds as the observant boy learns that his people have misjudged the species. But even as the two each take flight in their own way, they find that they must fight the destructive ignorance plaguing their world..
Plot: 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.
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8.1/10 Votes: 736,491 | |
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75/100 | MetaCritic | |
N/A Votes: 11340 Popularity: 80.529 | TMDB |
Who wouldn’t want Toothless as a pet?Honestly I can see my future kids and their future kids loving this movie as much as I do. How To Train Your Dragon is just that great of a movie. It’s gorgeous, funny, heartfelt, and it’s got something to say. I can’t praise this wonderful film enough.
First of all, the animation in this is spectacular. All the scenery in the film looks like something you could find in real life. The action, mainly the climax, and flying shots in this film also show how great the animation is. The main thing about the animation that is amazing is how the dragons look. They all look like real, kinda cartoonish, dragons that come across as vicious but also cute. The cinematography in this film is stunning. The lighting in each and every scene was chosen correctly for it. I really like the score in this film that was done by John Powell. The music in the film just helped bring you into this fantasy world of Vikings and dragons. Now my main problem is mainly the casting of the voice actors. They all did great jobs as their roles but I think some of them would have been better casted if their character was older and not a teenager. That can mainly be seen with Hiccup who is supposed to be a teenager but sounds like an adult who already went through puberty. I also had a few issues with the pacing in this film. Some scenes were way too short and I would have liked to have seen them a tiny bit longer. Now I do get that it’s a film made for children but as long as there’s moving objects on screen kids won’t care what’s happening in the movie. In the end How to Train Your Dragon is an excellent film for everybody no matter how old you are. I give How to Train Your Dragon a 9/10.
Genuinely superb and a step forward in 3D films
HTTYD is the latest in a run of animated 3D films to hit the family market. One might be forgiven for feeling a little weary of this genre as the big production studios churn out one “action-packed film with a cute central character and some pretty effects” after another. But wait…HTTYD stands apart from these other attempts for a number of reasons. First, the 3D (Odeon digital in this screening) is moving more toward the subtle with fewer “gratuitous” 3D moments than in movies like Bolt and Coraline. As 3D becomes a staple of high street cinema, directors seem to be finding 3D to be more about adding depth rather than a brief focal-point. That’s not to say that there isn’t effective use of the 3D wow-factor here; it’s just not all the film has to hold attention.
Second, a cast of voice talent that does not demand too much consideration of the man/woman behind the microphone is refreshing. Baruchel is not over-playing the sugar or the heroics and, as much as an animated character can be, he is believable and as three-dimensional as the visuals. Butler is not greatly stretched here but manages to stay just the right side of a Mike Myers impression so as not to annoy. How many kids will now think the Vikings were a fearsome race of Americans and Scots? Oh, well!
Third, the plot and dialogue. You may not know the plot and I won’t spoil it now. It is straightforward stuff but the pace keeps it interesting for kids and the grown-ups. Younger children may be upset at times and I heard a sob or two at the emotional moments. Nothing too heavy here though, it’s just a well-written script with as many actual laughs as I have seen in a kids’ film.
This is one of the best films so far in this prolific genre and it has been made with passion rather than thrown together to cash-in on the thirst for these films, right now. I would urge all ages to see this film in 3D as the textures are extraordinary and you can’t help but be charmed by it all.
Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 38 min (98 min)
Budget 165000000
Revenue 494878759
Status Released
Rated PG
Genre Animation, Action, Adventure
Director Dean DeBlois, Chris Sanders
Writer Will Davies, Dean DeBlois, Chris Sanders
Actors Jay Baruchel, Gerard Butler, Christopher Mintz-Plasse
Country United States
Awards Nominated for 2 Oscars. 25 wins & 63 nominations total
Production Company N/A
Website N/A
Sound Mix Dolby Digital, DTS, SDDS
Aspect Ratio 2.39 : 1
Camera N/A
Laboratory DeLuxe, Technicolor
Film Length 2,700 m (Portugal, 35 mm)
Negative Format Digital
Cinematographic Process Digital 3-D
Printed Film Format 35 mm (anamorphic) (also Technicolor 3D) (Kodak Vision 2383), 70 mm (horizontal) (IMAX DMR blow-up) (dual-strip 3-D) (Kodak Vision 2383), D-Cinema (also 3-D version)