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How to Train Your Dragon Poster

How to Train Your Dragon

The legend is real.
2025 | 125m | English

(104146 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 68 (history)

Details

On the rugged isle of Berk, where Vikings and dragons have been bitter enemies for generations, Hiccup stands apart, defying centuries of tradition when he befriends Toothless, a feared Night Fury dragon. Their unlikely bond reveals the true nature of dragons, challenging the very foundations of Viking society.
Release Date: Jun 06, 2025
Director: Dean DeBlois
Writer: Dean DeBlois, Cressida Cowell
Genres: Family, Fantasy, Adventure, Action
Keywords flying, vikings (norsemen), remake, dragon, battle, warrior, live action remake, based on young adult novel
Production Companies DreamWorks Animation, Marc Platt Productions
Box Office Revenue: $628,789,364
Budget: $150,000,000
Updates Updated: Sep 03, 2025
Entered: Apr 20, 2024
Trailers and Extras

No trailers or extras available.

Full Credits

Name Character
Mason Thames Hiccup
Nico Parker Astrid
Gerard Butler Stoick
Nick Frost Gobber
Gabriel Howell Snoutlout
Julian Dennison Fishlegs
Bronwyn James Ruffnut
Harry Trevaldwyn Tuffnut
Murray McArthur Hoark
Peter Serafinowicz Spitelout
Naomi Wirthner Gothi
Ruth Codd Phlegma
Andrea Ware Burnheart
Anna Leong Brophy Retcha
Marcus Onilude Snorti
Pete Selwood Drül
Daniel-John Williams Fungi
Kate Kennedy Flatula
Selina Jones Loogi
Nick Cornwall Hürl
Name Job
John Powell Original Music Composer
Bill Pope Director of Photography
Mike Stallion Art Direction
Lucy Bevan Casting Director
Wyatt Smith Editor
Dean DeBlois Director, Writer
Cressida Cowell Book
Daniel Birt Set Decoration
Lindsay Pugh Costume Design
Dominic Watkins Production Design
Oleg Podobin Stunts
Randy Thom Sound Designer
Thomas Brown Art Direction
David Doran Art Direction
Til Frohlich Art Direction
Fraser Fennell-Ball First Assistant Director
Ben Wright Stunts
Archie Campbell-Baldwin Assistant Art Director
Kerry-Ellen Maxwell Standby Art Director
Paul Massey Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Brian Chumney Supervising Sound Editor
Leff Lefferts Supervising Sound Editor, Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Ryan Kearney Textile Artist
Lizzie Pritchard Script Supervisor
Christian Manz Visual Effects Supervisor
Christopher Raimo Visual Effects Producer
François Lambert Visual Effects Supervisor
Andy Kind Visual Effects Supervisor
Glenn Melenhorst Visual Effects Supervisor
David Farmer Sound Effects Editor
Jonathan Spencer Chief Lighting Technician
Tom Hannibal Visual Effects Editor
Alessandro Bertolazzi Hair Designer, Makeup Designer
Benoît Chieusse Compositing Artist
Glen McIntosh Animation Supervisor
Heikki Kossi Foley Artist
Nikita Mitchell Stunts
Batu Sener Additional Music
Karsten Jacobsen Steadicam Operator, "A" Camera Operator
Leonard Woodcock Stunts
Chris Mylordos Production Coordinator
Name Title
Dean DeBlois Producer
Adam Siegel Producer
Marc Platt Producer
Chris Sanders Executive Producer
David Cain Executive Producer
Michael A. Connolly Executive Producer
Roy Lee Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 5 10 2
2024 5 8 12 4
2024 6 9 18 4
2024 7 11 39 4
2024 8 10 18 6
2024 9 9 12 6
2024 10 11 21 6
2024 11 55 120 8
2024 12 68 121 46
2025 1 56 73 40
2025 2 79 148 16
2025 3 16 71 0
2025 4 14 16 10
2025 5 24 44 18
2025 6 231 377 46
2025 7 567 1206 169
2025 8 359 613 198
2025 9 160 326 123
2025 10 95 123 68

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 10 12 76
Year Month High Avg
2025 9 7 36
Year Month High Avg
2025 8 3 13
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 1 14
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 2 8
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 9 42
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 7 117
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 25 421
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 25 376
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 197 565
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 202 653
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 6 178

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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

Whatever happened to Brenton Thwaites? For some reason that crossed my mind as this thoroughly entertaining fantasy adventure gets off to a rollicking start and keeps going. Now if you are the “Hagar”-esque Viking chief (Gerard Butler) expecting your son to take over as fearless dragon-chaser after ... you, why would you call him “Hiccup”? Might as well call him “Buttercup”? Anyway, that hapless lad (Mason Thames) maybe isn’t the most adept on the muscle front but cerebrally he has something of the Leonardo Da Vinci to him as he determines to set about devising a weapon that will tackle the most formidable of their foes - the “Night Fury”. Well, would you believe it - his contraption actually works, but instead of slaying the thing this young man decides that the decades of combat between the species has accomplished nothing, so he decides a bit of co-operation might be in order instead. Of course, he has to be fairly clandestine about this as his dad will go ape if he finds out and fellow, and competitive, student “Astrid” (Nico Parker) - on whom he has a terrible crush - might decide to take her axe to both him and his new friend. There are a few slight modifications from the animation (2010) but otherwise it largely sticks to the story with a lovely hammy effort from Butler, an enjoyably mischievous one from his multi-appendage sidekick “Gobber” (Nick Frost) and two solid performances from the leads. It’s Thames who really steals the show amongst the humans, with a cheeky and personable effort which must have been quite a task as he spent much of the filming dangling in front of a green screen. As to the visuals, they are great. A combination of dragons galore, huge scale pyrotechnics and loads of imagination immerses you into a story of family and friendship without even the vaguest hint of the moralising that often peppers this genre. They say that, aerodynamically, a bee ought never to be able to fly: well I think that could be said of almost all of the critters here as they dart about menacingly and colourfully for a couple of hours of what is really good fun. It’s well worth a cinema outing as the whole thing looks and sounds great on a big screen and dare I say it, I might quite like a sequel if they can keep the standard of storytelling up to that of the imagery.

Jun 18, 2025
ChrisSawin
1.0

The How to Train Your Dragon live-action remake is a shot-for-shot remake of the original 2010 animated film. It is DreamWorks Animation's first foray into live-action and original screenwriter and director Dean DeBlois returns. The few highlights of the live-action version of the film are that t ... he majority of the dragons transition to live-action or are computer generated to extremely satisfying results. Monstrous Nightmare (the red dragon with the long snout that can ignite its entire body on fire) is exceptionally cool. Visually, How to Train Your Dragon is stunning. Many live-action shots are realistic copies of what was accomplished in the animated film which is a major accomplishment regardless of whether it was shot on location or required a green screen and various other visual effects. No one is taking away from the fact that the film looks incredible. Gerard Butler, the one returning actor from the animated films, acts his ass off as Stoick. Butler’s performance was already solid, but him embodying the character and dressing as him brings out more emotion and more passion in his acting. DeBlois claims that Universal Studios wanted to tell the same story with this film; to embellish what made the animated film great. DeBlois says that the live-action version enhances the original, but the only significant enhancement is Butler’s performance. All of the jokes and story points are the same, which don’t hit the same in live-action. It seems like an obvious fault to say that a live-action film just isn’t as animated or as energetic as an animated film but that is exactly the case here. Performances lack that cartoonish nature that made How to Train Your Dragon entertaining, funny, touching, and memorable. None of the humor works here as none of the other casting choices work like they’re supposed to. The only reason this was remade was to add people of color to the cast. This would be fine if it was done for a valid reason, but nearly all of the black actors are background characters or have one or two lines. Ruffnut and Tuffnut are no longer actual twins. Ruffnut is suddenly a BBW and both twins are redheads. Julian Dennison (The Hunt for the Wildepeople, Deadpool 2) is Fishlegs and his performance is mostly fine as he captures the same energy, but it’s just too brief to make much of an impact. Astrid is now portrayed by Nico Parker while Gothi, the town elder, is played by Naomi Wirthner. Both characters are now portrayed by biracial actors. Wirthner is fine as Gothi because Gothi doesn’t have any lines. Parker portrays Astrid as a super bitch. In the original film, Astrid was trying to prove she was the strongest despite being a girl. Hiccup’s unorthodox methods and seeming entitlement annoyed her and the ride on Toothless softened the character and represented the fact that Berk’s stance on dragons could be altered. Now Astrid stomps around like an entitled brat for what feels like a two-hour tantrum. Not to mention Hiccup (Mason Thames) looks 25 and Astrid (Parker) looks 12. Thames is younger than Parker in real life, but still. I revisited the first two How to Train Your Dragon films before seeing the live-action remake and watched How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World after. With a franchise, it’s usually a good idea to revisit the older films so major characters and story points can be fresh on your mind. Doing so before this film made it incredibly boring. This new version of the film is made for people who either haven’t seen the original film in a very long time or for a new generation of people who have never seen it. Revisiting the other films just made this one feel boring and long; the live-action film is both of those things but seeing the other films beforehand made it feel even more boring and long. At least with live-action Disney films the animated films are used as a base and new material is built around that. The live-action Lilo & Stitch at least had the balls to try a new ending and Jumba was turned into the film’s major villain with no redemption arc. An exact replication feels so unnecessary on all accounts and something worked along the way because a live-action sequel is already greenlit. Dean DeBlois and Universal Studios have somehow recreated an incredible film about dragons and the struggle to survive and turned it into this lifeless, carbon-copy shell of its former self. Hiccup’s initial riding of Toothless has this magical and tingle-inducing aura about it in the original film and here it just feels like retreaded terrain with no charisma. This is a film aimed to enhance the filmmakers and studio’s pockets and nothing more.

Jul 26, 2025
JPV852
6.0

Maybe some of the stellar reviews are based on some sort of nostalgia for the 2010 animated movie but I don't hold the same regard to that movie, although I did enjoy those movies. However, this live action version, like the ones Disney has been churning out, feels a bit pointless even though most o ... f the CGI wasn't bad. It is certainly watchable but I found myself a bit bored having seen most of this before in the 2010 version. That said, the cast was pretty good, and I did like Nico Parker as Astrid. Not sure there's really any reason to see this one, just re-watch the animated version... **3.0/5**

Aug 17, 2025