How to train your dragon, Gerry presta la voce ad un cartone

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nikuzzact
view post Posted on 25/11/2009, 12:18




ok...c'è la scheda nel sito del Warner Village e si chiamerà "Dragon Trainer"
http://www.warnervillage.it/Prossimamente_...0314422278.aspx
uscita anche in Italia per il 26 marzo 2010...uno dei pochi film cn Gerry ke esce decentemente,ma sarà xkè mette solo la voce!?! bah... <_<
 
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gra70
view post Posted on 25/11/2009, 13:59




CITAZIONE (nikuzzact @ 25/11/2009, 12:18)
uscita anche in Italia per il 26 marzo 2010...uno dei pochi film cn Gerry ke esce decentemente,ma sarà xkè mette solo la voce!?! bah... <_<

non voglio neanche prendere in considerazione questa ipotesi anche perchè sarà ovviamente doppiato!!! :bash: :bash: :bash:
 
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nikuzzact
view post Posted on 25/11/2009, 20:36




grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr... <_< veramente...ci toccherà aspettare ke esca in dvd x vederlo in lingua originale -.-'
 
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gemini78
view post Posted on 2/1/2010, 14:05




The Butler did it
Posted By KEVIN WILLIAMSON, QMI AGENCY
Posted 51 mins ago

With the animatedHow to Train Your Dragon,has Gerard Butler finally found a co-star he won't be romantically linked to?

"I wouldn't be surprised if I was linked to Jay Baruchel or Craig Ferguson," he tells QMI Agency, chuckling with the laugh of a man who has his own TMZ theme song.

"But maybe they'll come up with a way to say I had an affair with the dragon. Or that I had sex with all of them."

InHow to Train Your Dragon,which opens in March, the Scottish-born Butler supplies the voice of Stoick, one of the elder warriors in a village of Vikings at war with neighbouring dragons. Baruchel voices the film's unlikely hero, a would-be dragon slayer who discovers maybe the creatures aren't so terrible after all.

In addition to talk-show host Ferguson (the older Vikings all have Scottish accents while the younger ones speak with modern American ones), the cast includes America Ferrera, Jonah Hill, Kristen Wiig and Christopher Mintz-Plasse.

For Butler,Dragonmarks the latest in a seemingly nonstop string of projects. In 2009, he starred inThe Ugly Truth, GamerandLaw-Abiding Citizen.In the months ahead, in addition toDragon,he will also be seen inThe Bounty Hunteropposite -- cue those inevitable rumours -- Jennifer Aniston.

"The last nine years since I moved to Los Angeles have been a slog," he says on the phone from Hollywood. "It's been fun and exhilarating, but it's also been a lot of work. I break repeated promises to myself to work less."

But the offer to voice a Viking warrior in an animated movie was just too appealing to pass up, he says.

"There is validation when you're asked to do an animated voice because it's your voice they want, not how you look. It doesn't happen everyday -- hostingSaturday Night Livewas another time."

What animated movies does Butler remember growing up with?

"The Jungle Book-- that's the one that sticks in my memory, so much so it's blocking all the rest out. When it came out -- because we didn't have as many movie theatres in Scotland as we should have -- I went to the movies three times before I could get in because it was sold out every time. Then when I did get in, I watched it four times. It was a big thing for me.

"Now you've got me all sad because remembering those movies -- likeDumboorPinocchio-- brings up such emotions from my childhood. Because you don't just remember the movies -- you remember who you were, where you lived and what you were doing."

- - -

Gerard Butler voices Stoick, a Viking warrior, in the animated movie, How to Train Your Dragon.


http://www.thebarrieexaminer.com/ArticleDi....aspx?e=2243895
 
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view post Posted on 2/1/2010, 18:17
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CITAZIONE
"Now you've got me all sad because remembering those movies -- likeDumboorPinocchio-- brings up such emotions from my childhood. Because you don't just remember the movies -- you remember who you were, where you lived and what you were doing."

...può fare il cinico quanto vuole,ma sotto sotto è un tenerone!!!
 
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view post Posted on 4/1/2010, 10:15
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CITAZIONE (arielcips @ 2/1/2010, 18:17)
CITAZIONE
"Now you've got me all sad because remembering those movies -- likeDumboorPinocchio-- brings up such emotions from my childhood. Because you don't just remember the movies -- you remember who you were, where you lived and what you were doing."

...può fare il cinico quanto vuole,ma sotto sotto è un tenerone!!!

concordo pienamente :wub:
 
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view post Posted on 14/1/2010, 16:53
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intervista a Gerry e a Craig Ferguson per l'uscita del film...si prendono tanto in giro e nel rispondere alle domande parlano tra loro :D

Cosmotot's Green Room: Craig Ferguson and Gerard Butler
Monday, January 11, 2010

What do you get when you combine Craig Ferguson's comedic stylings with Gerard Butler's smoldering sexiness? Two hot Scotsmen that play off each other so well that the highly anticipated DreamWorks Animation picture, How To Train Your Dragon, is this year's must watch children's movie.

Set in the mythical world of horn-hatted Vikings and wild dragons, and based on the book by British author Cressida Cowell, the computer-animated action comedy tells the story of Hiccup, a Viking teenager who doesn't fit in with his tribe's longstanding tradition of dragon slaying. The unlikely hero's world is turned upside down when he meets a dragon that challenges him and his fellow Vikings to see the world from an entirely different point of view.

I had the thrill of being invited to interview both Craig and Gerry (so many Americans can't say his name properly, that he prefers the shortened version) in tandem, which made for an interview so irreverent and hilarious, there's nothing more to say than READ ON.

Do you think you make good Vikings?

Ferguson: I'm great at fighting and Gerry's a drunk.

Butler: I think we're both big, burly, loud, obnoxious Scotsman.

Ferguson: Yes.

Butler: And that puts us in a perfect position to play big, burly, annoying, violent, drunken Vikings.

Are there any similarities between you and your characters?

Ferguson: Gerry plays a character who's sort of noble and dignified and has a sense of purpose, which is nothing like Gerry in real life. I play someone who's adorable and is missing bits of his body, which is exactly like me.

Butler: I think he just summed it up for me. No, I play a character who has a great warrior spirit and really feels responsible for his people and for the village. He's all about sticking to tradition and the values of the Vikings and then his best friend is Mr. Craig Ferguson here, who's Gobber.

Ferguson: Who's kind of his lackey. So in a way it's very like Gerry's the kind of main one and I'm his lackey.

What interested both of you about the storyline?

Butler: Well, I didn't know if I was going to do it until I heard that Craig Ferguson was in it and he was going to play my best friend and then I thought, you know what? Wild horses couldn't keep me away from the project. No, it just seemed like a lot of fun for me to get involved in this fantastic mythical world and to take on these great kind of charismatic Vikings and just to have a lot of fun with it. You know I've never done an animated movie before.

Ferguson: And I liked it because it's acting but without wearing makeup.

Were you able to improvise while recording?

Ferguson: We would give them [the directors] what they wanted from the script, and then we would do it properly ourselves, Gerry and I improvising. There's a kind of a mixture of both. It's an organic process doing these things.

Butler: I'd done a bit of work with the directors before we actually went into the studio so some of the dialogue had come from improvising that we'd done and just talking about the scenes. And then when you get in there, yes, sometimes you find yourself coming off book because it just feels right. But I would say I mostly stuck to the script. Because I'm not as talented as Craig when it comes to improvising.

Ferguson: I, on the other hand, didn't do any of the words in the script and that's why my character's nowhere near as interesting as Gerry's.

Butler: Oh, dear.

Craig, did your experience with puppetry help your process at all?

Ferguson: Yes. I have a process of motivation, I just keep talking and hope something happens that doesn't get me fired. See, Gerry's an actor, he can be different people in different movies, I can only be me with puppets or no puppets. And so it's a very different thing. I just show up and the reason I'm working in this movie is because I'm working with my friend Gerry who promised he would look after me. And that's really it. I don't have really a process - the process I have is put my pants on in the morning and that's it.

Gerry, how was playing an animated Viking different than playing a CG enhanced Spartan warrior?

Butler: I'm curious to know what part you thought was CG enhanced ...

Ferguson:
I think it was his abs, by the way. I've know this guy for a lot of years, I've never seen him do a sit up. I don't get that.

Butler: They were not CG enhanced, that was foam latex. That was a complete body suit. And you know what, there isn't a huge amount of difference because both roles require using your imagination a little bit, because you're not really in the world that you're supposed to be in. So, you use your imagination and then also, you just kind of let it go and trust that you're speaking to the person next to you or that what you're saying is just going to be interesting and appropriate. You just trust, and also I often just look to Craig and say, what's he doing? I'm going to try some of that.

Ferguson: And trust me, what I'm doing is not a sit up. Yes, it took a long time to put on the weight for this character. And that was definitely digitally enhanced, I'll admit that.

Why do you think the directors chose to make the Vikings Scottish?

Ferguson: I think they cast two Scottish people because they wanted Gerry because he's a movie star and I was inexpensive. And I think that's how it came about. It was a creative decision that arrived through money. That never happens in Hollywood usually. We do have a big kind of history in literate tradition of Vikings and we have a lot of Viking blood in Scotland, I mean especially up north wherever you go you see a plastic Viking sitting outside a shop and Viking calendars and - because they - you know they came down and stole all our chicks and then some of them didn't quite get back and ended up settling down here. So there's a lot of Viking blood in Scotland and Sean Connery played a dragon in that movie and he was awesome so ...

Butler: Yes. And I already played a Viking in a movie called Beowulf and did a dragon movie.

Was it difficult to get into character with Craig by your side?

Butler: Oh, dear. So for me it's not difficult being appropriate, except when I'm sitting next to Craig Ferguson, then it's a big problem.

Does the movie deliver a particular moral or message to the audience?

Butler: I think it's a great message of truth and courage for kids and sticking to what they believe in and learning to trust their own intuition and talents. There's more to it than that, but I'm going to let Craig answer the next one.

Ferguson: I think that the idea of that which you initially are frightened of may become something that is of value and a friend to you. Initially the young boy is frightened of the dragon and terrified of it, and then as he gets closer to it he makes friends with it and so that perhaps a fearful response to something new is not always accurate, and I think that might be a useful message for young people too.

What will kids find most memorable about the movie?

Butler: It's a great fun story with some lovely messages lying behind it there and I think that visually it is stunning and it's just a ride when you take a trip on the dragon with little Hiccup and you go through into the clouds and down over the sea and up over the mountains. Then just the story itself, it's really touching, his relationship with this dragon and his courage to stand up for what he believes in despite you know going against all the kind of traditions and beliefs of where he comes from and I think that the message is for kids, the message is for parents, and you know you come out having learned something and also having had a huge visual treat.

Ferguson: Yes.

The Vikings in this movie have a tradition of slaying dragons. What kinds of family traditions do both of you have?

Ferguson: We always, in my family, call each other every Sunday and catch up on the week, because we're all spread out through the world.

Butler: Yes, we live all live all over the world, so you know for us Christmas is obviously a big tradition, we go back and we eat turkey and stuffing and …

Ferguson:
Trifle.

Butler:
And with Craig and his family.

Craig, how do you teach the young Vikings to slay dragons at your school in the movie?

Ferguson: They fight them. There's no molly coddling, there's no talking about feelings, it's you start fighting dragons on day one and if you survive then you do well. It's not unlike the schooling that Gerry and I received in Scotland.

Do you two pal around outside the studio?

Butler: Well, he runs six miles around Lake Hollywood and then …

Ferguson: And then flies a plane.

Butler: And has been promising to take me up flying for ages.

Ferguson:
I'll take you up.

Butler: Yes?

Ferguson: Yes, yes, yes, I'll take you up.

Butler: My free time is spent chasing Craig Ferguson around, trying to get a shot in his plane.

Ferguson: I think what he means by that is girls.

Butler: My free time is girls.

Ferguson: Yes.

What was your favorite part of playing a Viking?

Ferguson: I think for me, wearing a hat with horns on it.

Final thoughts on the movie?

Ferguson: I think other animated movies can offer things for families and I think this one adds to it. This movie has an epic cinematic quality. But it also has a fun kind of very young visual aspect to it as well. So it covers a broad age range so that parents won't get bored and young children will enjoy it as much as older children. But I think a lot of films - well a lot of the animated films coming out do that. It's not - it's not that the other ones can't, it's just that we can do it better.


http://www.chicagoparent.com/community/cos...d-gerard-butler
 
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view post Posted on 14/1/2010, 17:04
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...non so se Craig sia peggio di Gerry o meno... entrambi sono molto simpatici!!!
 
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gra70
view post Posted on 15/1/2010, 08:06




CITAZIONE (arielcips @ 14/1/2010, 17:04)
...non so se Craig sia peggio di Gerry o meno... entrambi sono molto simpatici!!!

Quei due insieme mi fanno morire... :eheh: :eheh:
 
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view post Posted on 15/1/2010, 10:59
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http://www.hitfix.com/blogs/2008-12-11-awa...ght-controversy



DreamWorks Animation had a very entertaining show and tell for its 2010 slate today. The animation powerhouse showed extended scenes of the Will Ferrell and Brad Pitt voiced "Megamind," a nice chunk of "Shrek Forever After" and an almost completed full cut of this March's "How To Train Your Dragon." And while all three were entertaining and fun to watch, the best part of the event came when "Dragon" stars Gerard Butler and Craig Ferguson sat down to chat during a reception afterward.

Friends for 25 years, the Scottish duo met when they both met while studying at the University of Glasgow. Ferguson joked that Butler used to listen to his stand up act while they were in college and now he plays his sidekick in movies. "He's the real star," Ferguson says humbly.

"Dragon" centers around Hiccup, a young Viking voiced by Jay Baruchel who can't live up to the warrior mantle of his father and village leader Stoick (Butler). Ferguson plays Gobber, Stoick's longtime friend who runs the weapons armory where Buttercup works. The Viking's village is regularly attacked by numerous different kinds of dragons and they have learned to stop all of them except for one in particular -- the night fury. Hiccup eventually captures a fury -- soon named toothless -- and learns they might not be as vicious as his fellow Vikings believe.

Butler and Ferguson said they had the chance to record with Baruchel at one time, but that overall it's been a pretty long process. Butler has been recording and re-recording every month or six weeks since "300" debuted in March 2007 and Ferguson has been on board for a year and a half. Needless to say the results are pretty impressive. The movie is embargoed from a full review at the moment and some shots were not completed, but its certainly up there with "Kung Fu Panda" as one of DreamWorks Ani's best films. "Dragon" features beautiful character animation (gorgeously lit by none other than Roger Deakins), some genuinely perilous moments and this pundit may have been close to being a tad verklempt at the end. In fact, while the movie is clearly it's own animal, er, dragon, it feels closer in town to a Pixar film than of DreamWorks previous releases. That's not to say it's trying to be one, but there is an artistic seriousness here the filmmakers pull off that takes it to another level (you could say the same for the stop-motion "Coraline" for instance).

The rest of the conversation with Butler and Ferguson was a bit to bawdry to be repeated here (perhaps due to the fact it wasn't being recorded), but I was able to ask Ferguson his thoughts on the current Jay Leno/Conan O'Brien fiasco.

Ferguson, who has hosted "The Late, Late Show with Craig Ferguson" since 2005, finds it ironic that he and Letterman are being lauded for their stability, but overall seems to be over the whole mess. "I feel like an AIG executive," Ferguson joked. He added that there's something wrong about all these white millionaires complaining about their shows and money.

We couldn't agree more...it appears many in the industry are getting sick of it. So, with that in mind, back to the movies. Here are some quick thoughts on the other two projects DreamWorks previewed.
 
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view post Posted on 6/3/2010, 17:57
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Questa sembrerebbe la trascrizione dell'intervista che abbiamo postato nei video,parola più parola meno...

http://ow.ly/1eRz0

Hilarious. Outlandish. Scottish. Gerard Butler and Craig Ferguson, friends for over two decades, finally come together (well, sort of) on the big screen through Dreamworks’ latest animated adventure, How to Train Your Dragon, opening March 26.

Their vocal stylings--accompanied by Jay Baruchel, America Ferrera and Jonah Hill, among others--bring life to burly Vikings who battle wild dragons in a mythical land originally dreamed up by British author Cressida Cowell, who penned the eponymous book.

The action comedy follows Hiccup, a Viking teen voiced by Baruchel, who doesn’t exactly fit in with his tribe’s longstanding tradition of heroic dragon slayers. When he befriends a dragon named Toothless, Hiccup’s world and everything his fellow Vikings—including his father, Stoik the Vast, voiced by Butler, and his dragon-fighting instructor, Gobber the Belch, voiced by Ferguson—have ever known is turned upside down.

Similarly, thirty minutes of my world were turned upside down, and filled with hilarity, when I had the opportunity to interview the two hot Scots. Here, Butler and Ferguson—who morph into giggling schoolboys when they’re together, playing off of each others’ blunt sarcasm and clever quips—dish on their upcoming Viking adventure…


Sacramento Parent: What about the script or story originally caught your eye?

Gerard Butler: I didn’t know I was going to do it until I heard that Craig was going to play my best friend, and then wild horses couldn’t keep me away from the project. Actually, it just seemed like a lot of fun to get involved in this fantastic mythical world and take on these great charismatic Vikings.

Craig Ferguson: And I liked it because it’s acting but without makeup.

SP: Tell me a little bit about your characters.

CF: I play Gobber the Belch, who is adorable, which is exactly like me. Gerry’s character is sort of noble and dignified, and has a sense of purpose, which is nothing like Gerry in real life.

GB: My character is a great warrior spirit who feels responsible for his people, for the village. He’s all about sticking to tradition and the values of the Vikings and his best friend is Mr. Craig Ferguson, who’s Gobber.

CF: Who’s kind of his lackey. So, it’s like Gerry’s the main one and I’m his lackey.

SP: Why do you think they decided to cast Scotsmen as the Vikings?

CF: I think they wanted Gerry because he’s a movie star, and I was inexpensive. But, we do have a big history in the literary tradition of Vikings. You know, they came down and stole our chicks and then some of them didn’t quite get back and ended up settling down here. So, there’s a lot of Viking blood in Scotland.

SP: Do you think you make good Vikings?

GB: I think we’re both big, burly, loud, obnoxious Scotsman. And that puts us in a perfect position to play big, burly, annoying Vikings.

SP: What aspect of Vikinghood do you wish you could get away with in everyday life?

CF: I think, for me, wearing a hat with horns on it.

SP: Gerard, how would you compare preparing to play a CG-enhanced Spartan warrior to voicing an animated Viking?

CF: You weren’t CG-enhanced, that was all…

GB: I’m curious about what part you thought was CG-enhanced.

CF: I think it was his abs. I’ve know this guy for a lot of years, and I’ve never seen him do a sit up. I don’t get that.

GB: That was a complete foam latex body suit. But, you know what? There isn’t a huge difference—both roles require using your imagination, because you’re not really in the world that you’re supposed to be in. You kind of let it go and trust that you’re speaking to the person next to you or that what you’re saying is just going to be interesting and appropriate.

SP: Speaking of, you’ve done some pretty mature and serious films. Was it easy or difficult to keep in mind that this was a family-friendly project?

GB: Oh, dear. For me, it’s not difficult being appropriate except when I’m sitting next to Craig Ferguson, then it’s a big problem.

SP: What do you think will be memorable for families? What will they walk away with?

CF: I think it has an epic cinematic quality. But it also has a fun, young visual aspect to it as well. So, it covers a broad age range so that parents won’t get bored and the young children will enjoy it as much as older children.

GB: It’s a fun story with some lovely messages behind it. Visually, it is stunning. It’s just a ride when you take a trip on the dragon with Hiccup, and you go through clouds, over the sea, up over the mountains. And then, just the story itself—it’s really touching: his relationship with this dragon and his courage to stand up for what he believes in, despite going up against all the traditions and beliefs of where he comes from... It’s a great message of truth and courage for kids. Learning to trust their own intuition and talents. There’s more to it than that, but I’m going to let Craig answer.

CF: Yes. That which you are initially frightened of may become something that is of value or a friend to you. Initially, the young boy is terrified of the dragon, and as he gets closer to it, he makes friends with it. Perhaps a fearful response to something new is not always accurate. I think that might be a very useful message for young people, too.

SP: Okay, final question. Obviously, you two naturally play off of each other so well. Were you able to improvise while recording?

CF: We would give the directors what they wanted from the script, and then we would do it properly for ourselves—Gerry and I improvising. There’s kind of a mixture of both. It’s an organic process doing these things.

GB: Yes. I’d done a bit of work with the directors before we went into the studio—some of the dialogue had come from just talking about the scenes and improvising we had done. And then, sometimes you get in there and you find yourself coming off the book because it just feels right. But, I mostly stuck to the script. Because I’m not as talented as Craig when it comes to improvising.

CF: I, on the other hand, didn’t do any of the words in the script, and that’s why my character is nowhere near as interesting as Gerry’s.

GB: Oh, dear.
 
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gemini78
view post Posted on 18/3/2010, 14:51




Una recensione

“Dragon trainer”, film pedagogico in 3D contro la paura del diverso

Mai come in questo periodo storico poteva uscire film migliore. Mai come oggi è importante affrontare la tematica del pregiudizio e la paura del diverso. La Dreamworks porta nelle sale una pellicola leggera ma allo stesso tempo importante per il tema che affronta.
Dai creatori di “Shrek”, “ Madagascar” e “Kung Fu Panda”, arriva “Dragon Trainer”, commedia d’animazione e d’avventura ambientata in un mondo fantastico abitato da vichinghi e draghi sputa fuoco. Il film narra la storia dell’adolescente Hick (Jay Baruchel), ragazzo magrolino, che cerca in modo personale di trovare un posto di prestigio nel mondo dei grandi e grossi vichinghi. Abitante dell’isola fantastica di Beck, dove combattere i draghi è diventato uno stile di vita e un’abitudine, il pensiero progressista del giovane vichingo e il suo senso dell’umorismo sottile e tagliente, non vanno d’accordo con gli ideali della sua tribù e del suo capo e padre, Stoick l’Immenso (Gerard Butler).

La vita e le convinzioni del ragazzo cambiano quando nel suo cammino incontra un drago ferito con il quale instaurerà subito un rapporto di profonda amicizia. Il suo mondo, da questo momento in poi, viene totalmente sconvolto e la conoscenza della vita di quello che aveva considerato un nemico, crea l’occasione di stabilire un futuro migliore per tutta la popolazione dell’isola.

Niente e nessuno potrà far cambiare visione delle cose a questo ragazzo così diverso dagli altri vichinghi, nemmeno il padre che lo inserisce nel “corso anti-drago”, dove si insegna a combattere e uccidere i mostri. Anzi Hic, in questo modo, intravede la possibilità di dimostrare le doti che servono per essere un combattente alternativo, indulgente e soprattutto capace di instaurare un rapporto con i draghi, visti ottusamente fino a quel momento.

“Dragon Trainer”, basato sul libro di Cressida Cowell e diretto da Chirs Sanders & Dean DeBlois, supera il pregiudizio e dimostra come dal diverso si impari.

http://www.dazebao.org/news/index.php?opti...atro&Itemid=280
 
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view post Posted on 1/4/2010, 11:59
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Il film è primo al box office!!!!

http://boxofficemojo.com/
 
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gemini78
view post Posted on 19/4/2010, 13:28




Con la perdita di un numero consistente di sale 3D crolla Dragon Trainer del 45% nel suo quarto weekend di programmazione e incassando 394.389 euro negli ultimi 3 giorni raggiunge il totale di 5.222.875 euro. Si fermerà intorno ai 6-6,5 milioni (mentre a livello internazionale è già a 320 milioni di dollari ed è pure tornato in testa alla classifica americana al suo quarto weekend
 
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gemini78
view post Posted on 30/4/2010, 10:30




Dragon Trainer torna nel 2013

DreamWorks Animation annuncia il sequel del cartoon 3D con protagonista il vichingo Hiccup

Dragon Trainer avrà un sequel nel 2013. Lo ha annunciato DreamWorks Animation, dopo gli ultimi exploit del cartoon 3D con protagonista un giovane vichingo, Hiccup, in grado di addestrare i draghi… Il film, che ha incassato più di 375 milioni di dollari nel mondo, è partito in sordina negli Usa, incassando 44 milioni di dollari il primo weekend, ma è stato in grado di reggere bene la concorrenza nelle settimane successive, riuscendo a riagguantare la vetta alla quinta settimana di programmazione.

Così, nelle ultime ore Jeffrey Katzenberg, CEO di DreamWorks Animation, ha annunciato: «Il 2010 è iniziato molto bene, anche grazie al successo di Dragon Trainer nel mondo. Per questo stiamo pianificandone un sequel per il 2013. Inoltre abbiamo potuto verificare che il 3D ha avuto un grosso impatto sugli spettatori negli ultimi mesi e siamo in attesa di vedere come sarà accolto Shrek e vissero felici e contenti, il quarto capitolo della saga e primo in 3D».

http://www.bestmovie.it/news/dragon-traine...campaign=100216
 
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