Posts Tagged ‘Nico Parker’
Taming the Night Fury
How to Train Your Dragon

Director: Dean DeBlois
Cast: Gerard Butler, Mason Thames, Nico Parker, Nick Frost, Gabriel Howell, Peter Serafinowicz, Bronwyn James, Julian Dennison
Running Time: 2 hours and 5 minutes
Film Rating: 7.5 out of 10
Canadian director Dean DeBlois directed the animated film How to Train Your Dragon in 2010 and it was nominated for two Oscars – best achievement in Musical score by John Powell and Best Animated Feature Film.
DeBlois makes the bold and impressive leap to remaking the film as a live action version retaining the excellent services of John Powell for musical score in the visually appealing new film How to Train Your Dragon starring Scottish action hunk Gerard Butler as a menacing Viking Stoick whose wayward son Hiccup played by Mason Thames does not believe all the Viking hype about how evil the dastardly dragons are that keep attacking their remote village on the stark isle of Berk.

The reluctant hero, Hiccup who at the start of this film does not impress his strong and overbearing father is told to join the dragon fighting academy along with a rag tag group of teenagers including Snotlout played by Gabriel Howell who is having the same trouble trying to impress his father Spitelout played by Peter Serafinowicz.

Joining the gang of misfits is the determined and fiercely beautiful Astrid played by Nico Parker (Dumbo) who immediately becomes a source of attraction for the mysteriously naïve Hiccup.
Obviously any narrative containing dragons and Vikings is pure fantasy and in this genre, director Dean DeBlois excels expanding on the success of the original animated version.

How To Train Your Dragon is an action packed fantasy made more interesting by Hiccup’s unlikely friendship with a baby Nightfury dragon forcing him to challenge the long standing village attitude that all dragons are evil. In Stoic’s quest to find the Dragon’s Nest, Hiccup with the help of Toothless, the Nightfury dragon discovers the real source of these mythical creature’s true discontentment.

The visual effects are brilliant and John Powell’s musical score is superb along with the supporting cast including Nick Frost as Gobbler who offers sage parenting advice to Stoick. It’s refreshing to see Gerard Butler take a break from his action roles and star in a fantasy film.

The storyline is essentially how sons can find innovative ways to impress their fathers as Hiccup decides to challenge prejudices against dragons and his father’s stubbornness, changing the village completely.
How to Train Your Dragon is a fun filled fantasy adventure film with fantastic performances by Mason Thames, Nico Parker and Gerard Butler and is definitely worth seeing.
While some of the fight scenes could have been edited, How to Train Your Dragon gets a film rating of 7.5 out of 10 and is a suitable film for the whole family. Recommended viewing.
The Circus has Come to Town
Dumbo

Director: Tim Burton
Cast: Colin Farrell, Michael Keaton, Danny DeVito, Eva Green, Alan Arkin, Nico Parker, Finley Hobbins, Roshan Seth, Lars Eidinger
Director Tim Burton reunites his stars Michael Keaton and Danny DeVito from the 1992 smash hit sequel Batman Returns in Disney’s live action remake of Dumbo also starring Colin Farrell and Eva Green.

The setting is a travelling circus in post-war Missouri where Dumbo is born to a mother elephant and whose long ears enable the baby elephant to fly at the coaxing of a feather with the help of children Milly and Joe Farrier played by Nico Parker and Finley Hobbins.

The children’s father and returning World War I hero Holt Farrier is played by Colin Farrell (Roman J. Israel Esq, The Beguiled, Widows).

Danny DeVito (Big Fish, The War of the Roses, Get Shorty) stars as Max Medici who comically runs the travelling circus. Screenwriter Ehren Kruger does take a while to get the story of Dumbo off the ground and the first half of the film does appear to be slightly unexciting.

Luckily, the moment Michael Keaton and Eva Green appear on screen, Dumbo becomes a fascinating tale of intrigue, dreams dashed, benevolent dictatorships and corporate greed which allows for the wholesale exploitation of animals for circus tricks which naturally is an overarching theme in this Disney tale of reunions, captivity, animal cruelty and entertainment.
In any case, what is a Disney movie without a moral cause and Dumbo is no exception.
Visually, Dumbo is fascinating and the production design and costumes are brilliant and slightly garish which is what to expect in a Tim Burton film who directed such classics as Sweeney Todd, The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, Ed Wood, Big Eyes and Alice in Wonderland.
As the action moves swiftly from the Missouri plains to New York where Keaton’s flamboyant entrepreneur V. A. Vandevere played with a chilling panache by Oscar nominee Michael Keaton (Birdman) buys Medici’s circus to be supposedly incorporated into Vandevere’s lavish amusement park Dreamland financed by a ruthless banker J. Griffin Remington played by Oscar winner Alan Arkin (Little Miss Sunshine) .
It’s at Dreamland where Dumbo has to perform daring circus tricks which prompts him to fly around the tent with precarious set pieces collapsing all around the poor elephant. It’s also at Dreamland that Vendevere’s wicked intentions are revealed much to the horror of Medici and the one armed Holt Farrier.

Eva Green’s sympathetic Parisian acrobat is a breath of fresh air amidst the CGI heavy retelling of Dumbo which is entertaining and certainly spectacular but does fall short of the mark.
Unfortunately director Tim Burton misses the mark with Dumbo but the gorgeous production design outshines the lacklustre story line which might not produce tears in viewers’ eyes.
Dumbo gets a film rating of 7 out of 10 but as a lavish post-war circus film it could have been absolutely phenomenal but remains adequately entertaining. Ideal viewing for children and is definitely a film worth seeing on the Big Screen.