How to Train Your Dragon 2

Opens Friday

The first How to Train Your Dragon movie stood out from the mass of CGI animated films, creating a genuine sense of wonder and excitement without overdoing the rapid-fire jokes that often bog down such would-be crowd-pleasers.

HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2 is another pleasant surprise, deepening the originalโ€™s story and raising the emotional stakes. While it lacks the sheer fun of the first film, it creates a darker universe with a real sense of consequences, and is surprisingly ambitious for a childrenโ€™s movie.

Unusually for an animated film, Dragon 2 has allowed its characters to age between installments (the intervening years have been chronicled on the awkwardly-titled Cartoon Network series DreamWorks Dragons: Riders of Berk). The once-gawky brainiac Hiccup (voiced by Jay Baruchel) is now a strapping 20-year-old and the pride of his villagethough heโ€™d rather be exploring remote islands astride his retractable-fanged dragon Toothless than taking over as chief from his father (Gerard Butler).

But the discovery of a band of dragon-trappers (led by a character voiced by Game of Thronesโ€˜ Kit Harrington, who knows a thing or two about dragons) leads to threats from a new enemy (Djimon Hounsou) and a woman living among dragons in a sort of preserve (Cate Blanchett), who has secrets of her own.

A few plot twists that compose a major part of the story shouldnโ€™t be revealed here, but writer-director Dean DeBloistaking over solo duties after co-writing and co-directing the first filmsucceeds in opening up the previously established universe, creating a world where major characters arenโ€™t safe and seemingly small-scale conflicts in the beginning gain major import by the end.

The visuals remain spectacular, from the Quidditch-style game played in the opening to a stunning ice-breathing โ€œAlphaโ€ dragon called a โ€œBewilderbeast,โ€ which could go toe-to-toe with Godzilla in its size and scale. The sheer color and variety of the dragons and their environs inspire awe.

The movie isnโ€™t perfect. At times, Hiccupโ€™s actions seem irrational, and the final battle feels rushed after a startling second-act climax, which might be traumatic for very small children. But itโ€™s never dull, and unlike most animated sequels, youโ€™ll be ready for How to Train Your Dragon 3 by the end.

This article appeared in print with the headline โ€œCreature feature.โ€

Link: http://zacksmithwriter.wordpress.comTwitter: http://twitter.com/thezacksmith