The system handed down from the ancestors: "kill the dragon when you see it" because the Vikings thought they were all ferocious animals, always robbing their sheep. When Hiccup discovered that the most terrifying, insidious, and most lethal rage dragons that adults had always thought had no sharp teeth and was very docile, he believed that his ancestors must be wrong. When he told all this to others, no one believed it, they would rather believe their grandparents than believe this little boy. They were born to kill dragons, but they did not verify whether what their ancestors said was correct, but just blindly obeyed. What is passed down from the ancestors is not necessarily the truth. The younger generations take it as the truth, and they will only make mistakes again and again. Such mistakes are not the fault of one person, but the fault of a tribe and even the whole world.
Two people quarreled and fought because of desire or misunderstanding, and the onlookers would be very clear about the right and wrong, but when these two people became a country, it would turn into a war that would bring disaster to the country and the people. Many things are very simple. When you look at everything simple, it can't be simpler. Many big principles actually come from our daily life, but the contradictions between people are magnified. . From Hayao Miyazaki's animated films to "Avatar" to "How to Train Your Dragon", we all begin to reflect. When the environment we live in makes us bruised and bruised, people begin to reflect on whether they are really doing something wrong, okay? In each of these movies there is a happy ending, there is always one unremarkable person who becomes the savior who points out all the people's mistakes and saves us in the end. And in reality, who is the savior, maybe every one of us.
This movie does feel good, but it still has some incomplete elements in it: training the dragon, not fighting with the dragon. This makes me feel a little sorry.
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