Dragons: 8 hidden details in the Dreamworks movie

Dragons: 8 hidden details in the Dreamworks movie

Let’s go back to the first part of the “Dragons” trilogy, produced by Dreamworks Studios in 2010, and all the Easter eggs hidden inside.

An adult little dragon, a flying hippopotamus, and a time convector “back to the future” … Review all the blinking, pointing, Easter egg or cameo that you should not miss when you (re) discover the perfect first part. Trilogy of Dragons.

In the light of the moon

From the very first seconds Dragons, Be vigilant! Before the movie starts, when the famous Dreamworks logo appears on the screen and provided you do not blink, you will be able to see the Toothless silhouette guarding the sky to the right of your screen, behind the little boy fishing. On the moon.

Family resemblance

Two large protruding eyes, ears raised on a skull, a koala nose and a cut mouth … Obviously, the little alien from the Disney studio and the dragon Toothless share a lot of physical features. Undoubtedly, this is due to the fact that Chris Sanders and Dean Deblu, two directors of Lilo & Stitch, are also present. Dragons.

Sound cameo

This impressive Viking warrior, the father of the young Snotlaut Jorgenson, no one voiced in the original version Dragons. Indeed, although his role in the film is relatively minor, this character is vocally portrayed by David Tennant, the famous translator of Dr. Huss or Bartemius Crupton Jr. in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.

Temporary convector

This three-dimensional symbol, which hung between the sketches of Harold’s studio, could ring the bell, the name of Zeus!

Indeed, it looks strangely like the one painted by the doctor Go back to the future, The day he hit his toilet. The incident then allowed him to encounter a temporary convector, which made it possible to travel in time. Is this a conscious reference to the famous trilogy by Robert Zemeckis? It is quite possible.

Runes

While you’ll probably need a magnifying glass and a bit of imagination to decipher them, the characters that appear in the Dragon Guide provided by Harold are not real runes. If they are really inspired by the calligraphy used by the Vikings, they actually correspond to encrypted English words.

Little Dragons

Called the Terrible Terrors, these funny little specimens who awkwardly try to steal the dinner of two heroes could have played a much more important role in the film. Indeed, in Cressida Cowell’s original work How to Make a Dragon Who inspired the animated film – it’s just a little scary horror (and not night rage) to make friends with Hipp, giving him the nickname Toothless.

Substituting with a much more impressive pattern that we know to offer viewers the perfect flight sequence, the terrible horror was still retained in the film, but in a more secondary role.

Hippopotamus for dinner!

Among the many animal carcasses that dragons carry to present their leader, fans may have noticed the presence of another Dreamworks character: the Hippopotamus Gloria, from the Madagascar trilogy!

A little Easter egg confirmed by the directors in the audio commentary of the film and a very sad fate for our friend Gloria.

First

Harold, the young hero of the trilogy Dragons, Unusual in more than one sense. Indeed, he is one of the rare left-wing protagonists in animation and even becomes the first to have a limb amputated at the end of the film.

Source: allocine

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