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Konnichiwa! Bonjour! прывітанне! こんにちは! Szia! здравей! Ahoj! سلام! Cześć! Hola! Alo! HAHAHA XD -- The Warlock. See You There!





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(yes the warlock xD not witch :)) ) 16 years of age. Happily born the 26th day of August. Dont care about EVERYTHING. Craves for (all of the delicious food out there exept veggies :))) Hates everyone who feels sad and hurt because of LOVE >.<. INTERESTS: ANIME,BLOOD,HORROR


Doing...
Feeling : Annoyed and Pissed
Eating : everything I see
Doing : NOTHING at all
Watching : No one
Listening to : Ash like snow


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►Become a human/superhuman
►To have powers
►Change the world
►GEASS I want it! (I will tell everyone to DIE! hoho Im just kiddin)
►Graduate with flying colors
►Perfect the final exams (including all the subjects) *how I wish LOL
►Never fell inlove
►Your heart I want to eat it :))
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How to train your dragon :D
Saturday, April 3, 2010

0 Gave Some Love



I just watched the movie "How to train your dragon", which was a very nice film. but to tell you honestly, the first 5 minutes I watched the movie, I was bored.. hehe XD Because the vikings are fighting the dragon and Hiccup is some kinda unsteady. But when I saw night fury, I become interested. :)

Perhaps more surprising than the human designs are the dragon faces. Not really what I was expecting at all - they’re looking rather short and humanoid, when the obvious route would have been longer and more lizardy. Is that the ‘bad’ dragon on the top left? Why’s that one getting the prime spot, with the other dragon off in the background?


Read more: Meet The Characters of How to Train Your Dragon | /Film http://www.slashfilm.com/2009/10/17/meet-the-characters-of-how-to-train-your-dragon/#ixzz0k2S9OpuY







The sheer exhilaration of flying along with our hero on the back of his new best friend, a dragon, is exceeded only by the exhilaration of top-notch film-making with a witty and heartwarming script, endearing characters, dazzling visuals, and a story worth cheering for. The movie is in stunning 3D but it is the 4th dimension -- heart -- where it truly excels.


Hiccup (voice of Jay Baruschel) is a puny misfit in his Viking village of Burke located "north of freezing to death," where burly warriors battle dragons. His father, Stoick (voice of Gerard Butler), a mountain of a man and the leader of the village, is confused and embarrassed by his son. Because he thinks Hiccup is not strong and brave enough to battle with fire-breathing dragons, Stoick has asked his closest friend Gobber (voice of Craig Ferguson) to take him as an apprentice. Gobber, who lost a hand and a leg to dragons in battle, is now in charge of forging weapons and training the next generation of dragon-fighters.


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Hiccup is something of an inventor and when a catapult he designs hits the fiercest and most terrifying breed of dragon, the Night Fury, he cautiously tracks it down. He discovers that it has been wounded and cannot fly. And he discovers that it is not fierce or violent but as scared of him as he is of it. He names the dragon "Toothless" and creates a prosthetic flap for its tail. As they get to know one another, they learn that Toothless can only fly with Hiccup's help. Meanwhile, Hiccup is accepted into Gobber's training program. So his days are spent learning to fight many different dragons and his nights are spent learning to tame -- and be tamed -- by one.

The screenplay by directors Dean DeBlois and Chris Sanders and others is exceptionally literate and witty (Night Furies are described as "the unholy offspring of lightning and death") and the visuals are intricate and imaginative. The stirring score by John Powell and first-rate voice work by an outstanding cast bring energy and spirit to the story. DeBlois and Sanders make excellent use of the 3D, not just in the soaring and vertiginous flying scenes and the battles but in the use of space and ability to make us feel included in the quietest moments. Those moments have a delicacy, a tenderness, even a grace that gives this film a power that resonates as only the best movies can.

Parents should know that this film has fantasy-style action with fire-breathing dragons and gladiator-style peril. Characters are injured and there are tense family confrontations, a kiss, and some brief mild words ("all hell is going to break loose," "screwed up," etc. A strength of the film is the portrayal of strong, capable disabled characters.

http://blog.beliefnet.com/moviemom/2010/03/how-to-train-your-dragon.html

I just saw this website of how to train your dragon and it is very cute! hehe :)

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