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That makes the popularity, success, and staying power of How to Train Your Dragon all the more impressive. The original animated movie, which debuted on March 26, 2010, began as a 2003 book of the same name, written by Cressida Cowell. Not only was that movie a success both in terms of the box office and reception, but also, it has brought about a larger franchise that continues to find success today. In fact, How to Train Your Dragon has since had a great, largely well-received remake, which is a big ask for a popular animated movie.
How To Train Your Dragon Was A Near-Perfect Fantasy Movie

How to Train Your Dragon was widely seen as a box office success when it debuted in 2010, grossing a very respectable $494 million worldwide after costing approximately $165 million to make. Perhaps even more impressive than those numbers, however, is the fact that How to Train Your Dragon quite literally has a near-perfect score with critics. Even 16 years later, the movie is holding steady at a 99% critic score on Rotten Tomatoes. The audience score isn’t far behind at 91%. Among other things, the movie was praised for its animation, storytelling, performances, and heart.
The latter is perhaps what has made How to Train Your Dragon the standout that it is—not to discredit the other factors, which also hold true. Yet, what really sets this movie apart is its story, which centers on the young unlikely hero Hiccup, a Viking and the son of Stoick the Vast, the chief of their tribe. Hiccup (who isn’t exactly what one would expect of a Viking, physically) has been raised to both hate and fear dragons, and at the beginning of the movie, he’s mostly bought into that ideology.
However, that changes when he meets the Night Fury dragon he names Toothless, who is effectively a puppy dressed up like a dragon. If that premise didn’t sound charming and touching enough, How to Train Your Dragon goes on to explore themes of family, trauma, heritage, morality, and love, all in a one hour and 33 minute run time. That solid foundation is precisely what subsequent spinoffs, sequels, and remakes of How to Train Your Dragon—of which there have been many—have built upon, and thus far, they’ve largely found comparable success.










