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How To Train Your Dragon 2 MOVIE REVIEW
One great advantage that animated sequels
have over live-action ones is simply the benefit of time. Studios will
rush to put out follow-ups to their biggest action blockbusters, but the
simple nature of computer-generated animation is that projects take
years and years to make. Had 2010’s How To Train Your Dragon
been made with cameras, film, and practical sets, we probably would have
already seen at least one sequel by now. Instead, the medium allowed
writer/director Dean DeBlois and the folks at Dreamworks Animation
precious time to create a worthy sequel… and that’s exactly what they’ve
done in How To Train Your Dragon 2.
Set a full five years after the events of the first film, the movie
begins as the Viking town of Berk has managed to completely change its
national pastime -- its residents no longer hunting dragons, but instead
riding on their backs for sport. It’s a peace that not many have ever
seen, and it has provided a terrific environment for Hiccup (Jay
Baruchel) to mature in, flying with his dragon, Toothless, to places
unknown in hopes of discovering and learning more about the fantastical
world in which they live.
Growing up also means a growth in responsibilities, however, and while
it’s not something that Hiccup wants, his father, Stoick (Gerard
Butler), has told him that he will be the next chief. As much as this is
to take in, though, the news couldn’t have come at a worse time: Drago
Bludvist (Djimon Hounsou), a blood-thirsty, insane dragon hunter, has
mysteriously reappeared with the intent of creating a dragon army to
control the world; and an incredibly important person has returned to
Hiccup’s life after decades of being presumed dead.
In addition to the time jump making it so that young fans of the first
movie have aged almost exactly parallel to Hiccup, it also makes How To Train Your Dragon 2
shift and adapt to tell a different kind of story about growing up –
and it accomplishes this in splendid fashion. The journey of
self-discovery remains similar, though the sequel raises the stakes for
its lead character by both continuing his independent growth while also
giving him a better, truer understanding of where he actually comes from
and how it has had a deep effect on him. While this is mixed in between
fun action scenes and comically overdone “love at first sight”
sequences (which are clearly done for the youngest members of the
audience), it doesn’t take away from the film’s real emotional honesty,
which comes through in an impressively powerful way for a family movie. As visually impressive as the first film was for its time, How To Train Your Dragon 2
is a stunning example of just how much technology and
computer-generated animation has progressed in a short four years. Not
only is the setting regularly breathtaking, filling the Viking world
with stunning, diverse landscapes of both green and ice, but the
character design is something to behold, as well. Both the humans and
dragons alike remain delightfully cartoonish, while also having been
smartly physically developed and aged, allowing their evolved
personalities shine through their outward appearance. (The strongest
example, of course, being Hiccup, who is clearly no longer a child and
is suited up in an armor packed with all kinds of cool gadgets and tools
that best allow him to communicate with Toothless and any other dragons
he might happen upon). In the same vein, the sequel’s action sequences stack up against all of
the rival action blockbusters that are hitting theaters this summer,
featuring cinematography that would be practically impossible in the
world of live action and capturing every fine detail along the way.
How To Train Your Dragon 2 has some structural problems that do
lead into some pacing issues (the most notable trouble area coming
between the falling action and denouement), and with such an extremely
talented voice cast it’s not hard to wish that the supporting characters
had a bit more presence and were fleshed out more, but these are
relatively minor glitches within what is overall a very worthy
follow-up. With How To Train Your Dragon 3 already in the works
and scheduled to arrive in just two years, I hope we soon a fitting
conclusion to what is already two-thirds of a fantastic trilogy.
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