Hiccup (Jay Baruchel) and Toothless follow the Light Fury deep into a glowing cavern where they witness the majestic Hidden World for the first time. Watch How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World ...
(from left) Night Fury dragon, Toothless, and Hiccup (Mason Thames) in Universal Pictures’ live-action How to Train Your Dragon, written and directed by Dean DeBlois. This How To Train Your Dragon ...
DreamWorks' How to Train Your Dragon live-action remake is now in theaters and introducing a new generation of viewers to Toothless and the other dragons of Berk. Though the adorable Night Fury gets ...
Dreamworks’ live-action How to Train Your Dragon has introduced the franchise and its lovable lead Toothless to a whole new generation of fans, and the film is still soaring at the box office. The ...
It seems almost impossible it took a live-action remake to get our first LEGO set from the Isle of Berk. Fifteen years and two sequels should have been enough to bring those beloved plastic bricks, ...
Disney isn’t the only studio raiding its animated IP for live-action remakes. DreamWorks has jumped into the fray with a remake of “How to Train Your Dragon.” The original introduced moviegoers to ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I cover Hollywood and entertainment. Directed by Dean DeBlois — the filmmaker behind the 2010 animated version of the tale — the ...
The director Dean DeBlois narrates a sequence from his live-action film, starring Mason Thames as Hiccup. By Mekado Murphy In “Anatomy of a Scene,” we ask directors to reveal the secrets that go into ...
The bet on live-action remakes has paid off for Universal’s How to Train Your Dragon, as the film soared to the top of the box office over the weekend. And while the original didn’t come out all that ...
Three animated movies, two animated series, a book series, and a live-action adaptation, How to Train Your Dragon took fans ...
As more animated classics are made into live-action films, the beloved “How to Train Your Dragon” takes its turn. The 2010 cartoon is DreamWorks Animation’s first to receive the live-action treatment.