My son loves dragons and heroism which this movie delivered. He like it enough to ask for a rewatch the next day. It never became too scary despite having a good villain and actual stakes. The story isn't full of plot holes though it is an obvious Christian allegory; but kids don't know that unless you explain it to them. Overall its very family friendly promoting faith, tolerance and charity. Suitable for everyone but the most militant atheists. I would describe the animation as stylized and economic but its very much watchable. The character designs are great, I really like how the evil is portrayed as dark and cold. The strongest elements are the sound design and music, which are punching above their weight. Considering that it is a relatively low budget production free on various platforms it really knocks it out of the park.
Ice Dragon: Legend of the Blue Daisies
2018
Action / Adventure / Animation / Family / Fantasy
Ice Dragon: Legend of the Blue Daisies
2018
Action / Adventure / Animation / Family / Fantasy
Plot summary
A young girl and an old man are the only ones in a village who believe the old stories about dragons, and then a dragon arrives.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
July 05, 2019 at 03:42 AM
Director
Top cast
Tech specs
720p.BLU 1080p.BLUMovie Reviews
My toddlers loved the action, comedy and songs
more like fantasy plot holes and ultimately christian allegory
Summary: little indication that this is not just an indie fantasy animation, that it's a Christian tale. This movie does a good job at being a Christian production with a Christian message but it fails on the promise of fantasy or adventure.
writing (assuming all indications that it's fantasy for kids): 2/10.
writing (target audience being Christian-interested families and children): 9/10.
writing (as a person who cares about plots, structures, details that make good fiction): 0/10
art and animation: really not a fan 4/10.
music and voice talent: great job 9/10.
kid friendly: 10/10 if you tell your kids this movie is about God/Christ and Satan first.
The plot is thinly veiled Judeo-Christian allegory to the dragon being Satan and if the people don't keep faith in their hearts, somehow that gives power to the ice dragon. I gave this a watch because it seemed like it could be some good fantasy, even if meant for children, but it reads to me as content meant to predispose children to evangelical ideologies. There is basically no fantasy here either, it's just a skin for the allegory.
I was about to give the allegory the benefit of the doubt (no pun intended), as the old man Nicolai tells the male protagonist Leif when he says he still has doubts: "that's excellent! A man without a doubt never had a thought. Faith always begins with questions." But instead of making the vocabulary about said questions, the script centered its verbiage around faith and belief. If this movie had actually labeled itself as religious or Christian-related media, I feel that is fine, redressing Christian stories in alternative settings such as fantasy can be creative and fun. Sure, I should have known if I looked into the director and seen that the one critic review in English was made by somebody from a Christian film website. But kids or parents or the layman (like me) aren't going to research that much into a movie - so please at least indicate there is religious content in the summary or anywhere else that is obvious.
So, basically, I came here for possible fantasy and was disappointed to only find... there's a dragon, unexplained people with wings (hmmmmmmmm can't be angels right), and a magic sword. There's absolutely no world-building or anything essential to fantasy... like, where do these characters come from? Does Nicolai and Melody have a heritage (in their family) for the song? Who built the sanctuary (church) or created the murals on the wall? How did they know what would happen? How do the humans on the ground have any knowledge or contact with the gift-giver(s)? Why do some of the people have wings and live in the sky? What do they have to do with the characters in the story who live in a village on the ground? Is there any social strata or political network (no kingdom, just a town)? The last bit of the movie mentions other villages, like they suddenly exist? Why would villages further away have to care about singing the dragon underground if this village is the one closest to the dragon and keeping him at bay? Does their village have a name? Well-written fantasy with Christian values or cores exist, but this isn't it.
As for the art and animation style, the animation is somewhat stiff and reminiscent of flash animation of the early 2000s -- not that having such an animation style prevents you from being popular with the children (like many Chinese animations for kids such as Pleasant Sheep and Big Big Wolf). I found that I wished the art director used flat shading or no shading at all instead of the strange and sometimes pillow-shaded gradient shading. And lastly, I'm just not a fan of the strange cartooning decision to enunciate human nose bridge and eyebrow area.
That said, the voice talent is pretty good and the songs are well made.