Train, Dragon and Box Office
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From the original 2010 animated movie to the 2025 live-action remake, here's where to watch the films and shows
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It’s a PG box office boon as two live-action remakes are notching impressive theatrical milestones. Universal and DreamWorks Animation’s “How to Train Your Dragon” is flying to $200 million globally in its debut,
It’s not even just that which made this good – the characters' mannerisms were there, the dragons were there – Toothless looked so good, and I literally felt tears come to my eyes when John Powell’s score swelled as he and Hiccup took their first real flight together. It was like a blast to the past.
"How to Train Your Dragon" is a beloved tale of a boy and a flying beast. But is the live-action movie (in theaters June 13) OK for all youngsters?
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SYFY on MSNDid You Spot How to Train Your Dragon Director Dean DeBlois' Cameo In the Movie? [Exclusive]But arguably the most fun catch we made is the inclusion of director DeBlois in the actual Isle of Berk. Actor Mason Thames (Hiccup) and Nico Parker (Astrid) confirmed the cameo to NBC Insider when we spoke to them for the film's junket.
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How To Train Your Dragon is the latest animated film, and first from DreamWorks, to be given the live-action remake treatment. However, unlike many of
As Hiccup, the 17-year-old actor is shouldering the weight of Universal’s new live-action franchise — and living out his childhood fantasy.
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On the set of the live-action movie, Toothless and the other dragons existed as large puppets with simple functions, operated by a team of master puppeteers led by Tom Wilton, a performer who had worked on the “War Horse” stage play.