5/22/2011

How to Train Your Dragon




How to Train Your Dragon, the new 3-D digital fable from DreamWorks Animation, has a kinetically dreamy, soaring-through-the-air effervescence. On some level, though, it's just the sweetly simple tale of a boy and his dog. The boy, Hiccup (Jay Baruchel), is the son of a toweringly gruff, red-bearded Viking named Stoick (Gerard Butler, in his teeth-gnashing element). The ''dog'' that Hiccup befriends is a fearsome dragon — a Night Fury, who in the film's fire-breather cosmology (there are a dozen breeds, each with its own funky look) bears the distinction of being so fast that it can be glimpsed only as a purplish streak against the night sky. No wonder the Vikings live in mortal fear of them.

Dragon slaying is the clan's primary career option, although Hiccup wants nothing to do with it. He's like an adolescent indie rocker who's been born into a village of rampaging middle linebackers. One night, while wielding a catapult slingshot, he ham-handedly slices off half a dragon's tail (which grounds it from flying), and then stumbles onto the creature nursing its wounds at a woodland crater lake. The place is visualized with an almost classical deep-focus fairy-tale beauty, and the dragon itself looks like a jet-black Gila monster with wings. The connection that develops between the two is no cloying, smiley-happy animal-human friendship. It's more like the stirring bond you remember from Old Yeller, with an added touch of King Kong.

At times, How to Train Your Dragon is like a Harry Potter film with less clutter. It has winningly Potteresque teen-dragon-slayer classes, a queen-bee dragon as grand as Godzilla, and a layer of age-of-terror allegory about the ignorance bred by jingoism. The Night Fury, named Toothless, is a voracious yet inwardly serene beastie whose trust must be won, which Hiccup does by feeding him slimy fish, building him an artificial tail, and saddling him up. How to Train Your Dragon rouses you in conventional ways, but it's also the rare animated film that uses 3-D for its breathtaking spatial and emotional possibilities. When Hiccup and Toothless take to the sky, we're free of constraint, aware of the space on all sides. At moments like those, the movie makes you feel in every way miles high.

Reviewed by Owen Gleiberman

Reel Lessons: How to train your dragon

A movie about Vikings and dragons or a modern parable about corporate strategy?


How to train your dragon... is that a euphemism?
Nope. It means exactly what it says. This is a 3-D animated flick about the son of a dragon-slaying Viking leader who is trying to live up to his father’s expectations by becoming a dragon-slayer himself.

Ah, I get it. The father-son story.
Exactly. This is the timeless tale of a young man trying to grow out of his father’s shadow.

Sounds like Richard Li’s efforts to live up to his daddy’s expectations.
True, the similarities are striking. Daddy Li has slain some of the biggest dragons in town and Little Richard is now following dutifully.

But isn’t he supposed to grow out of his father’s shadow?
That’s exactly why Richard should watch the movie. For those of you who haven’t been following the latest Li-family business moves, Hong Kong’s richest man, Li Ka-shing, recently spun off part of Hutchison Whampoa’s container port assets as a business trust on Singapore’s SGX in the world’s largest IPO so far this year. And now Richard wants to do the same thing: he wants PCCW, in which he holds a 27.1% stake, to consider a similar listing in Hong Kong for its telecommunications arm.

This is good for Li, but whether or not it’s good for shareholders is debatable. So, if Richard would just watch this movie, he might learn that sometimes the solution is not to follow in your father’s footsteps.

Well, then, do tell the story...
It’s about Hiccup, the son of the chief Viking, Stoick.

The kid’s name is Hiccup? Already I’m getting the parallel to Richard.
Yah, an unfortunate name for the scrawny, brainy kid who doesn’t fit in with the rest of the dragon-slaying community.

Brainy? The comparison does have its limits...
True. Anyway, the boy tries to live up to dad by building a dragon trap, in which he eventually catches a reclusive Night Fury, the most dangerous of all dragons. But in capturing the dragon, Hiccup damaged its tail wing, so it can’t fly. Unable to actually kill the dragon, he eschews all Viking tradition and befriends the beast, and even gives it a name: Toothless. Along the way, he learns that dragons aren’t the enemies his people had long thought, but are in fact terrorised themselves by an even more fearsome and monstrous beast.

So the lesson is to make friends with your enemies?
Kind of. What the Vikings learned from Hiccup was that the dragons weren’t even enemies at all — they were, in fact, natural allies.

Like Richard Li and his shareholders?
Sure. And his employees, and his customers. You don’t always have to kill every dragon — a business can exist for the mutual benefit of all its stakeholders when ego and greed are put to one side.

You’re starting to sound like a communist. Greed is good!
Fair enough. But bear in mind that Hiccup and his people were all much better off after learning to live with the dragons (except for a missing foot).

A missing foot?
Yes, Hiccup lost his foot. It’s quid pro quo. He hurt the dragon’s tail, he lost his foot. There are consequences in life.

A bit communist, but not a bad lesson for the kids...
My four-year-old got it. Maybe it’s not too late for Hong Kong’s elite to learn too.

 BY: FinanceAsia magazine

Hiccup a young Viking befriends Toothless, a young dragon.

Hiccup a young Viking befriends Toothless, a young dragon. This is the best movie I've seen since the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy. Virtually everything about it is wonderful. Rarely have I been so drawn in to an animated movie. The 3D aspects are thrilling and the movie has a great story, amazing animation, non stop action and a positive and constructive message. It made me want to go out and get a pet dragon. This movie is perfect for people of all ages. Now I know what a feel good movie is. This movie will make everyone feel good. Congratulations to all who contributed to this amazing film. It will make toy dragons a popular gift item. Hope to see it again and again. 3D at it's best.

 by : kevinkeanmurphy