After ten years on and off, it's finally time to say goodbye. Although many movie series will come to an end at the time of the trilogy, but this time, goodbye has another meaning - Hiccup and Night Fury, who have been miraculously together, will also be separated, and they will each return to their own ethnic groups.
This story that takes place in northern Europe is born with the sturdy Viking and the mysterious blessing of flying dragons, but these are just icing on the cake. What really fascinates the audience is the story of two species moving from confrontation to unity, and then assisting each other to survive in harmony. The two who held the hand of friendship between the two species were the two original aliens in their respective ethnic groups. They may have hurt each other because of their youth and reckless, and they once stood up to turn the tide when the ethnic group was in danger. In the process of gradually growing into ethnic leaders, they actually filled each other's shortcomings and relied on them to mature.
But maturity also means independence and responsibility. A competent chief cannot rely solely on the strength of the mount to gain a foothold. The real dragon king should not be willing to let the tribe live under the fence of aliens forever, which means that they must learn to let go. No matter how much they are reluctant to part, Hiccup and Yesha can't replace each other's lives after all (Longsheng?), learning to say goodbye and watching each other's shadows go away, may not help but cry, but that should be gratifying flash.
From shaking hands to letting go, to passing on this legendary friendship to the next generation, watching the slideshow at the end of the film revisiting the entire series, I think DreamWorks has told the story quite well.
Ten years ago, "How to Train Your Dragon" made the most brilliant stroke for DreamWorks. With its advanced 3D rendering and full script, it swept the animation overlord Disney in one fell swoop. Looking back ten years later, Disney is still strong, and the most recognized classic of DreamWorks is still the "How to Train Your Dragon" series. We are all grateful to the latter for leaving us with classic memories, but we also hope that it can be drawn by the story. When it becomes a closed loop, the classics will be sealed, and the fearless will continue.
Not bad, not disappointing work, conservative recommendation, not collection.
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