‘How to Train Your Dragon’ was fire-tested during whirlwind production
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The March 26 release of ‘How to Train Your Dragon’ is getting strong early reviews (like the one in Entertainment Weekly and another in Variety), and Los Angeles Times film reporter John Horn has an interesting look at the making of the film. This is a longer version of his cover story in this coming Sunday’s Calendar section.
Animated movies can take forever to make — three or four years is well within the ordinary. “How To Train Your Dragon,” which tells the story of a scrawny kid destined to prove his hecklers wrong through an unusual relationship with a dragon, moved at a radically different pace: the two filmmakers behind March 26’s 3-D adventure had just 12 months to make their film, inheriting a project needing a top-to-bottom overhaul.
Pressed for time, writer-directors Dean DeBlois and Chris Sanders (the team behind 2002’s “Lilo & Stitch”) tried to avoid some of the pitfalls — such as polishing a joke to within an inch of its life — that an unhurried production schedule often engenders. “It’s a model that allows for too much indecision,” DeBlois says of the often endless stops and starts that are part of the timetable for most animated movies. “You can get into a situation where the only thing that 30 people in a room can agree on is a cliché.”
While reviewers have yet to weigh in on the artistic merits of the DreamWorks Animation production, “How to Train Your Dragon” feels unlike some of the studio’s previous animated movies, particularly a few of its star-driven movies (Jerry Seinfeld’s “Bee Movie,” Will Smith’s “Shark Tale,” Brad Pitt’s “Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas”) that were critically battered for having more concept and celebrity than originality and heart. “How to Train Your Dragon,” in other words, plays like a director’s movie, not a committee’s.
“Chris and Dean,” says Bill Damaschke, co-president of production for DreamWorks animation, “are part of an overall shift in what we’re trying to do.”
Loosely based on Cressida Cowell’s children’s book, the approximately $165-million “Dragon” is the first release in a potentially landmark year for the animation studio, which will introduce two other features before 2010 is over: May 21’s “Shrek Forever After” and Nov. 5’s “Megamind.” It’s the first time Jeffrey Katzenberg’s studio has released three movies in a year (having only one film, “Monsters vs. Aliens,” in 2009), as DreamWorks increases its output to five movies every two years.
Extensive story and character renovations and director replacements are scarcely unique to animated movies at DreamWorks. Brad Bird was not the original director of Pixar’s “Ratatouille” (he took over from Jan Pinkava), John Lasseter replaced Ash Brannon on Pixar’s “Toy Story 2,” Glen Keane left Disney’s upcoming “Tangled” and was replaced by Nathan Greno and Byron Howard, and Sanders was the original director of Disney’s “American Dog,” the movie that became Howard and Chris Williams’ “Bolt.”
But rarely has the clock been ticking as fast as it was on “How to Train Your Dragon.”
Walt Disney’s creative vision was that there is a child inside everyone no matter his or her age. Particularly in its modern classic animated titles, the studio he founded packed films with youthful protagonists: Simba in “The Lion King,” Ariel in “The Little Mermaid,” Jasmine in “Aladdin” to name but a few. Under Katzenberg, the 16-year-old DreamWorks (whose animation division went public in 2004) turned Disney’s notion on its head, populating its animated movies with adults (Shrek being the prime example) who might appeal to children.
Cowell’s novel about Vikings and their complicated relationship with dragons, however, is filled with pre-pubescent kids, a perfect book for second-graders. In the studio’s efforts to remain true to her reluctant hero story, original director Peter Hastings (who made “The Country Bears” and has TV credits on “Pinky and the Brain” and “Animaniacs”) assembled a movie that in DreamWorks’ view played more to the “SpongeBob SquarePants” crowd than followers of “Harry Potter.”
In an era when more and more families attend sometimes intense movies together — “Avatar,” “Spider-Man” — the initial version of “How to Train Your Dragon” felt too young to the studio: the kind of movie for which parents drop off their kids but do not attend themselves.
“It was a little small and personal story, and I think that’s the way Cressida wrote it,” says Bonnie Arnold (“Toy Story,” “Over the Hedge”), the film’s producer. As the studio saw it, that faithfulness became a perceived liability: If “Dragon” didn’t have older characters and more ambitious action scenes, its audience would become limited and it would suffer at the box office. “It was not a universal story that everyone would love,” Damaschke says.
Sanders, having left Disney after 2006’s Pixar deal (which put his “American Dog” under new bosses), already was at DreamWorks and had spent a year directing the prehistoric story “The Croods.” Damaschke, thought Sanders would be a good choice to replace Hastings (whose talent agency did not return a call seeking comment). “I didn’t know anything specific about the story,” Sanders says. “I just had a good feeling about it.” He set aside “The Croods,” which will now come out a year later than originally scheduled, in March 2012.
It was October 2008, and although “How to Train Your Dragon” previously had been moved from November 2009 to March 2010 (largely to steer clear of “Avatar”), Sanders didn’t have a minute to lose; DreamWorks, confident it made good sense to release three movies this year, worried that if the film wasn’t ready by March it would slip all the way to 2011. Even when every scene in an animated movie is written, storyboarded and animated, it takes months more to finish the film’s lighting, scoring and sound mixing, meaning that Sanders had just a year to remake it.
One of Sanders’ first calls was to DeBlois, his “Lilo & Stitch” collaborator, who was in Seattle, trying to kick-start several live-action movies that he would write and direct. “Chris said, ‘What are you doing right now?’” DeBlois recalls. “I bought a plane ticket. And we started that week.”
In tracking the book, the original version of the film not only featured younger characters (led by a far-from-fearless boy named Hiccup) but also followed very different rules of engagement between the 8th century occupants of the Island of Berk and the neighboring fire-breathing reptiles.
The novel and the early movie version had the North Sea residents and the dragons intermingling; in place of warfare was cooperation. “We felt there wasn’t enough peril,” DeBlois says. In Hastings’ movie, the young children collect dragon eggs and raise them to do tricks. In Sanders and DeBlois’ version, Berk is under attack from the dragons, who steal the remote village’s livestock and burn its homes.
“We had to decide that they were enemies. It’s a deadly relationship. And Hiccup would be the first one to cross that line,” Sanders says. While Sanders and DeBlois retained many of the original movie version’s characters and the actors who played them, they made substantive changes to their ages and size. Hiccup (voiced by “Tropic Thunder’s” Jay Baruchel) and his romantic interest, Astrid (“Ugly Betty’s” America Ferrera), matured from about 10 years old to nearly 17.
Also, the movie was first set in a land so bleak and so cold no one would want to pick as a vacation destination. “Jeffrey said, ‘This has to be a place you want to go visit,’” Arnold says.
The story’s central dragon, Toothless, also grew exponentially, from a small and cuddly pet into a formidable, flyable beast. (Rather than dispatch the original incarnations to the animation scrap heap, Sanders and DeBlois instead gave the three characters as first animated a couple of cameos. Toothless as he was initially envisioned is now a small dragon who appears early in the film, trying to steal food from the new Toothless, only to be sent away with a blast of fire.
The first Hiccup and Astrid are now small children in a woman’s arms who turn up late in the film as Toothless leaves in a boat.) At the same time, the relationship between Hiccup and his disappointed warrior father, Stoick the Vast (Gerard Butler) grew more central to the plot.
(For viewers who are reminded of James Cameron’s Pandora during some of the sequences: Sanders and DeBlois says that even though the films were made totally independent of each other they were struck by how similar some of the how-to-train-your-banshee sequences in “Avatar” were to a number of dragon-flying scenes in “How to Train Your Dragon.” “Isn’t that funny?” Sanders says.)
Required to make decisions and never second-guess them (“Everyone knew that time was running out,” Sanders says), the filmmakers put together a large poster laying out storytelling themes that could not be violated as they rewrote and reshot the film: “At its core, this is a story about a son and his father.” “A story where the son’s weakness becomes his greatest strength.” “A story where the littlest guy will defeat the biggest thing the Vikings have ever seen.”
The filmmakers made any number of small changes — patterning the dragons’ flying on fighter planes, bringing in cinematographer Roger Deakins (impressed by his work on “The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford” and other films) as a consultant to give the film more cinematic lighting — as they raced toward their release date.
“You’re making a leap of faith when you have so little time,” producer Arnold says. “We let them run with it.”
-- John Horn
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