The Live-Action How To Train Your Dragon Is Already Beating Disney

The Live-Action How To Train Your Dragon Is Already Beating Disney
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Summary

  • Dreamworks’ live-action bet on How To Train Your Dragon includes original visionary Dean Deblois directing for a lasting effect.
  • Embracing subtle nuances in the live-action remake is key, as seen in Disney’s successful shot-for-shot adaptations.
  • Comparative analysis of Disney and Dreamworks’ critical reception shows promise for Dreamworks’ upcoming How To Train Your Dragon remake.

Dreamworks recently released the official live action How To Train Your Dragon trailer, and fans are noting its nearly one-to-one reproduction of the animated film. While some may find this off-putting, making real-life do-overs of classic cartoons has proven effective for Disney’s box office. Why not Dreamworks?

Bringing back original visionary Dean Deblois to direct 2025’s How To Train Your Dragon is a key factor for Dreamworks’ live-action bet. Disney’s been a force in the animation space since 1937’s Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs, so it’s impractical to think they could do the same with theirs. Still, they had the opportunity with this year’s upcoming remake of Lilo And Stitch, whose original was coincidentally directed by Deblois, and chose not to. Hopefully, Deblois’ new-ish Dreamworks film is successful in employing his original touch, and leaves the people at Disney asking “why not Disney?.”

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Dean DeBlois says that fans should expect only a few changes from the original animation.

Original Vs. Tribute

At a trailer-debut event, original How To Train Your Dragon writer-director Dean Deblois spoke about adding a bit more depth to his characters. He didn’t speak of different battles, new characters, or alternate endings. He mentioned an opportunity to explore the existing elements just a bit deeper. This is where bread is buttered with live action remakes. Nuance is what matters. Subtle riffs are where the magic lives when watching something adored reproduced by the artist who made it.

In a conversation with Empire, Deblois said he had 15 months to rewrite and produce the original How To Train Your Dragon. He said that while he definitely strove for a live-action aesthetic, he wasn’t able to fully realize it the first time around. These comments lend a sense of purpose and virtue to the new remake that simply isn’t found with Lilo And Stitch (2025), directed by Dean Fleischer Camp. Disney is opting to release a relatively unknown director’s remake of Deblois’ original film at the same time Deblois is renewing his vision with Dreamwork’s How To Train Your Dragon (2025).

When a legendary music act announces they’re playing the hits on a revival tour, that tour usually sells out. Those artists often amaze fans with their enduring capacity to impress, despite striking familiar notes. A person’s favorite artist playing their favorite songs will almost never betray their love for those tunes. Tribute Bands, on the other hand, just don’t hit the same way. Even when done well, there’s an element of karaoke that’s hard to shake when someone else sings the original song.

Critics Vs. Box Office

mason thames in universal's live action remake of how to train your dragon

Disney once made a couple of truly spectacular remakes of its classic films. Following the successful 2015 Cinderella film, which critics praised for being a shot-for-shot remake of the original, Disney presented fans with 2016’s The Jungle Book. The Jon Favreau-helmed movie was an overwhelming critical and box office success, scoring a certified fresh 94% on Rotten Tomatoes and earning just under $1 billion in theaters worldwide. This feature was a critical anomaly, though, being one of only three films out of Disney’s 22 live action remakes to earn a Rotten Tomatoes Score of over 80 percent. 2015’s Cinderella was one of those three at 84 percent.

A decade later, it’s clear Disney doesn’t value critical reception over box office winnings, with almost half its remakes earning rotten scores of less than 60 percent. How long will audiences support increasing assembly line fare from a studio that used to produce genuine wonders? We’ve seen what’s happened to Marvel’s declining box office of late.

Disney is betting on this year’s Lilo And Stitch, which was originally Dean Deblois’ vision over at Disney. Deblois’ is excited to be working on his Dreamworks live action project, while Disney is confident it can rest on brand recognition to attract audiences. Which film will come out on top?

Disney Vs. Dreamworks

Hiccup and Toothless How to Train Your Dragon live-action remake

For context when forecasting the best of Disney’s newest live action offering vs. Dreamworks’ remake, the two studios had a fairly comparable 2024 critically. Last year, Disney’s family releases were Moana 2 (61% on Rotten Tomatoes), Mufasa (57% on Rotten Tomatoes), and the Oscar-nominated Inside Out 2 (91% on Rotten Tomatoes.) Dreamworks served up Netflix’s Orion and the Dark (91% on Rotten Tomatoes), Kung Fu Panda 4 (71% on Rotten Tomatoes), and its own Oscar-nom The Wild Robot (97% on Rotten Tomatoes.)

Both studios boast Oscar nominees, while Dreamworks sees a higher critics average rating. That is only if Dreamworks’ Megamind 2 is omitted. Megamind 2 managed a paltry nine percent on Rotten Tomatoes, after initially seeing 0%. Dreamworks’ flop doesn’t fully discount their wins with three other films above 70% – a mark not reached by Disney last year.

Dreamworks’ track record thus far, paired with its commitment to getting the band back together for 2025’s How To Train Your Dragon, promises a more quality return between the two films. Dean Deblois is a proven innovator who is unlikely to disappoint with a modernized version of his own classic film. Disney should’ve jumped at the opportunity to get him back for Lilo And Stitch if they were going to remake it at all. For now, Dreamworks has the better direction moving forward.


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How to Train Your Dragon


Release Date

June 13, 2025

Director

Dean DeBlois


  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Mason Thames

    Hiccup Horrendous Haddock III

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    Nico Parker

    Astrid Hofferson

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    Gerard Butler

    Stoick the Vast

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    Nick Frost

    Gobber the Belch



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