#toothless

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doxiequeen1:The minky spikes for the back and and cuffs of the Toothless PJ set have been made anddoxiequeen1:The minky spikes for the back and and cuffs of the Toothless PJ set have been made anddoxiequeen1:The minky spikes for the back and and cuffs of the Toothless PJ set have been made anddoxiequeen1:The minky spikes for the back and and cuffs of the Toothless PJ set have been made and

doxiequeen1:

The minky spikes for the back and and cuffs of the Toothless PJ set have been made and sewn on! I’m really pleased with how this is coming along so far. My little Toothless figure has been watching over me throughout the process. 

I have to get started on the hood now, and I think that will be the most difficult part. So i’m not going to get my hopes about the end result too high until that’s done.

Also this might not be the best design for people who sleep on their back…

TOOoTHLESSSs PJS WHAAATTTT


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This post is an excerpt from Maim Your Characters: How Injuries Work in Fiction. It’s one of nine injury analyses that appear in the book, but this one is near and dear to my heart, especially because you all helped pick it. I asked a couple of months ago for injuries to analyze in fiction, and this one was suggested above all others. I hope it doesn’t disappoint! 

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(Image courtesy of Dreamworks) 

Format:Feature Film (animated)
Genre: Action-Adventure / Kids
ealism: Fantasy (high fantasy)

It’s funny. When I put out a call to my readers asking what injuries I should take a look at for this book, I got this kid’s movie as an overwhelmingly popular arc to take a look at. It’s a great representation of disability!

It’s just that everyone suggested specifically the back half of the movie, where a human gets injured.

But I say let’s start from the front and look at both of the arcs in this movie, shall we?

I think everyone forgot the first injury because it happened to a dragon.

How To Train Your Dragon is a Dreamworks movie about a Viking named Hiccup, a chief’s son who’s very… “un-Viking.” As in, he doesn’t want to kill dragons.

Dragons are initially presented as “pests,” but it turns out they’re more than that, they’re a menace: the town of Brunk gets raided, set on fire, all the time.


So here’s an interesting start: the beginning of the movie finds Hiccup working for a disabled blacksmith, who has interchangeable prostheses for his left hand and a peg leg for his right leg. His hand can become anything: a hammer, tongs, even a saw or a battle-axe. Yet his prosthetic leg is just that: a leg, something for him to stand on.

As the blacksmith’s protégé, Hiccup is shown to be a very handy inventor. He makes a mean catapult, and the opening of the movie has him trying to take out a special kind of dragon called a Night Fury. Scary!

To the excitement of all, Hiccup shoots one down! His homemade catapult launches a set of stone balls on a cord, which brings down a Night Fury — a feat no one’s ever accomplished before.

Of course, no one sees him do it, so no one believes him.

But when he goes over to check on the dragon he shot down, it turns out the Night Fury isn’t so tough after all. The beast is tied up in the cords from the weapon Hiccup launched.

In a moment Blake Snyder’s kickass book on storytelling (Save the Cat!) would approve of… Hiccup sets him free!

…and almost gets eaten for his troubles.

But the dragon doesn’tkill him, which is perplexing to Hiccup. After his relief washes away, the ever-curious Hiccup keeps coming back to find out why the dragon hasn’t killed him.

It turns out the dragon — who’s later dubbed Toothless — has an Inciting Injury: one of his tail fins has been ripped off by the accident.

Hiccup has already given him his only Immediate Treatment: he’s cut the ropes that are holding him captive.

But that doesn’t solve Toothless’s flying problems. Toothless is pretty miserable. He has fallen into a ravine he can’t get out of, because his flight trajectories are all messed up by his damaged tail.

The two form a friendship, over fish, over drawings, and Hiccup decides to build him a prosthesis to fix his tail.

This is the first analysis we’ve looked at where the protagonist gives the Definitive Treatment to another character. It’s unconventional, and it’s a risky move on Hiccup’s part, but it gets Toothless back in the air.

Cue the training montage! Hiccup builds a saddle to ride Toothless, and their training forms a Rocky Road to Recovery as they learn to fly together. They train, and Hiccup works through various incarnations of the dragon tail and harness system. They crash, they fly, they crash again, until they get it right.

TheirNew Normal is a great partnership! With Hiccup at the controls of Toothless’s prosthesis, they can fly together. The lessons Toothless teaches Hiccup about the way dragons work make Hiccup a celebrity in his town.

So Toothless’s arc is pretty straightforward…

Toothless’s Injury Arc

 Inciting Injury: Tail fin amputated when he’s shot down by Hiccup.

Immediate Treatment: Freed from the projectile, which had tied him down. (A few days later, but hey, he’s a dragon.)

Definitive Treatment: Prosthetic tail fin made by his human handler.

Rocks on the Rocky Road: Toothless and Hiccup almost fall from the sky a few times during the acclimation process, but the wound itself isn’t the issue that needs discussing.

The Big Test: None. By the time we need Toothless to fight, they’ve already reached the last stage.

And the New Normal? A lasting friendship and partnership, where the two can fly — but only together.

This isn’t the only injury arc the movie has in store for us, however. Later in the plot it’s Hiccup’s turn to be maimed.

In the story’s global climax, Toothless and Hiccup are taking out the mother dragon that’s made all the other dragons behave so badly. Their plan has worked — the other dragon’s gone down and exploded!

But up shoots a wall of fire, Toothless’s prosthesis has been burnt away, and Hiccup falls

And Toothless, ever the faithful dragon, follows him down.

When they hit the ground, there’s a horrifying moment when we think Toothless has been horribly hurt and Hiccup has been consumed by the flames, until Toothless reveals he’s had Hiccup nested inside his wings.

Hiccup has had an Inciting Injury, though we don’t know what it is until the next scene.

He wakes up at home to Toothless’s cheery face snuffling him like a puppy, and we discover when he tries to stand that his injury has been twofold: a head injury (which explains the time lapse) and a lower leg amputation. He’s got a steel prosthetic foot, a Definitive Treatment for an injury we didn’t know he had. (His Immediate Treatment for the burns and concussion was injury prevention: Toothless wrapped him in his wings so he wouldn’t burn to a crisp on the way down.)

Hiccup gets an absurdly short Rocky Road to Recovery as he tries to walk outside and stumbles — but Toothless lets himself be used as a crutch, and helps his friend learn to walk on his new leg.

However, the two get back to their New Normal pretty quickly. Turns out Hiccup’s blacksmith boss — owner of the peg leg and the prosthetic multitool hand — has built a special harness that will allow Hiccup’s new metal foot to lock in to Toothless’s saddle. They can fly again!

(All of this happens in the span of about two minutes of screen time, which is pretty impressive for a fully-told injury arc! However, this arc is abrupt even for a fantasy movie; the character goes from unconscious and unable to walk to flying a dragon in less time than it takes to brew coffee.)

Hiccup’s injury mirrors Toothless’s…

 

Hiccup’s Injury Arc

Inciting Injury: Falls through some fire. It’s never explained how, exactly, he comes by his leg amputation or his significant head injury which causes him to wake up at home probably weeks later.

Immediate Treatment: Injury prevention, by Toothless swaddling him as the two plummeted together.

Definitive Treatment: While he was unconscious, his blacksmith boss built him a prosthetic leg. His head injury is completely ignored here; it’s implied that he’s been allowed to rest.

Rocky Road to Recovery: Hiccup has some difficulty walking, but it quickly goes away — the magic of filmmaking! He literally stumbles twice.

(To be fair, we’re talking about a movie with Vikings riding dragons and talking with Scottish accents. Realism isn’t exactly their forte.)

The Big Test:None.

New Normal: Hiccup is back to total functional ability. Because his needs have been fully met, he can continue to walk, fly his dragon, and has no apparent significant changes to his life. This can technically be regarded as Total Disability for the foot, since the foot itself was lost, but as he shows no signs of problems walking or performing his activities, it’s almost a meaningless amputation. Functionally, this is No Disability.

What Can We Learn?

Well, first of all, the injury arc doesn’t have to be about the hero to be a meaningful arc for the audience.

The injured character doesn’t even have to be human.

Second of all… notice a theme?

The blacksmith (the only one in the village who truly believes that Hiccup can become a great Viking, by the way) is disabled. His disability is played almost for laughs; he’s got an interchangeable hand (sometimes tongs, sometimes an axe), but his leg prosthesis is just a piece of wood.

Then Toothless gets hurt — by Hiccup’s hand, an emotional element that’s never fully explored. Should Hiccup feel guilty about shooting down what turns out to be a gentle, playful, kind creature?

But Toothless has an injury that’s a parallel to a leg amputation: one of his tail fins is missing, making his usual form of locomotion impossible.

While Toothless is canonically a dragon, he’s modeled very much like a dog in his actions and behaviors: his loyalty, his curiosity, his initial standoffishness that becomes a fierce friendship. Hiccup, seeing this metaphorical dog metaphorically limping, helps.

It’s through his kindness to his companion that Hiccup learns how to save his people — and does just that in the end. Seeing Hiccup’s example of kindness and understanding toward


the once-feared creatures causes a realization in his people: that humans and dragons can coexist peacefully, that each can benefit the other. Hiccup and the Vikings help rid the dragons of an evil overlord, and the dragons stop raiding the village and stealing the sheep.

Hiccup is himself injured near the end as a parallel injury. Thus, the blacksmith, Toothless, and Hiccup all find themselves depending on their prosthetics to move through the world as they once did. The parallelism is phenomenal!

There’s even a moment of kindness repaid: It’s Hiccup who’s taught Toothless to fly again, and it’s Toothless who helps Hiccup walk again.

Now, how can we all learn to incorporate that kind of parallelism into our stories?

It’s also a great example of the Big Battle having consequences — Hiccup’s wound isn’t timed so that his Big Event will coincide with the climax, but so that the climax will be his Inciting Injury.

My one criticism of the film (from an injury arc perspective) is the way in which Hiccup’s arc is shortened.

He remains unconscious for what must have been weeks of sailing home and fitting him for his prosthesis — his smithy mentor has even designed and built a wholly new flight apparatus for Toothless so they can fly again right away.

In terms of time, it takes weeks for a stump to heal enough to accept a prosthetic, and weeks again for the amputee to learn to walk, instead of literally seconds of film time. However, since this is in the denoument of the film, it’s much less irritating than it would be if, say, it had happened before the Big Battle and Hiccup had been on his feet again for the fight.

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This post is an excerpt from Maim Your Characters, out THIS WEEK from Even Keel Press. If you’d like to read a 100-page sample of the book, [click here]. If you’d like to order a print copy, it’s available [via Amazon.com], and digital copies are available from [a slew of retailers].

It’s not too late to receive the bonus content for Maim Your Characters!

With three extra injury analyses like this and the official ScriptMedic Character Injury Worksheet, plus a copy to keep of the 5 Biggest Mistakes Writers Make Approaching Injuries. Just email a copy of your receipt for the book to AuntScripty{at}gmail{dot}com and I’ll be happy to send your bonus content right along! 

xoxo, Aunt Scripty

kyloren: Kit Harington and Toothless’ Lost Audition Tapes | HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORkyloren: Kit Harington and Toothless’ Lost Audition Tapes | HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORkyloren: Kit Harington and Toothless’ Lost Audition Tapes | HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORkyloren: Kit Harington and Toothless’ Lost Audition Tapes | HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORkyloren: Kit Harington and Toothless’ Lost Audition Tapes | HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORkyloren: Kit Harington and Toothless’ Lost Audition Tapes | HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORkyloren: Kit Harington and Toothless’ Lost Audition Tapes | HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORkyloren: Kit Harington and Toothless’ Lost Audition Tapes | HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORkyloren: Kit Harington and Toothless’ Lost Audition Tapes | HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORkyloren: Kit Harington and Toothless’ Lost Audition Tapes | HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WOR

kyloren:

KitHarington and Toothless’ Lost Audition Tapes | HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORLD

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An selection of FanArt by Corinne RobertsFeatured: John Snow, The Last Unicorn, The Secret of Nimh, An selection of FanArt by Corinne RobertsFeatured: John Snow, The Last Unicorn, The Secret of Nimh, An selection of FanArt by Corinne RobertsFeatured: John Snow, The Last Unicorn, The Secret of Nimh, An selection of FanArt by Corinne RobertsFeatured: John Snow, The Last Unicorn, The Secret of Nimh, An selection of FanArt by Corinne RobertsFeatured: John Snow, The Last Unicorn, The Secret of Nimh, An selection of FanArt by Corinne RobertsFeatured: John Snow, The Last Unicorn, The Secret of Nimh,

An selection of FanArt by Corinne Roberts

Featured: John Snow, The Last Unicorn, The Secret of Nimh, How to Train Your Dragon, Jack Frost and TMNT


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Thinking about dragon…

In addition to my kickstarter, I’m planning on doing a few enamel pin pre-orders of some of my

In addition to my kickstarter, I’m planning on doing a few enamel pin pre-orders of some of my most popular designs (shown below). These would have a minimum purchase amount before pins are ordered (before I can purchase a large batch).
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$12 each
The more you buy, the more you save!!!
Free mystery sticker with every purchase!
FREE US SHIPPING!!
From production to shipping aprox. 6 to 8 weeks.
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Purchases can be made through my Etsy. Limited quantities!
I really want to bring these guys to life!
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➡️ Etsy.com/shop/sugarpoultry
Click on the “pins, buttons, and charms” tab. ☺️
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#enamelpins #fanart #httyd #toothless #uselessreptile #dragon #gargoyles #goliath #art #enamelpin #design #HowToTrainYourDragon #nightfury #dragons #dragon #fanart #mashup #crossovers #jurassicpark
https://www.instagram.com/p/B7WX1tBl1uQ/?igshid=2x5mju1ughgx


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 Finished! I’m kind of obsessed with all things #HTTYD again. It’s just SO good. Also de

Finished! I’m kind of obsessed with all things #HTTYD again. It’s just SO good.
Also decided to get out of my comfort zone and use some different brushes. I love KyleBrush’s paintbox brushes. I used the same brush for the entire piece. Has such a great traditional medium look even though it’s digital.


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My handmade lapel pins are now available on Etsy!

Featuring my most popular designs. Only $3 each! Glossy finish, super durable/waterproof. Wear them anywhere!

➡️ Etsy.com/shop/sugarpoultry ⬅️

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#lapelpins #handmade #pins #artistsoninstagram #fanart #parody #mashup #howtotrainyourdragon #toothless #nightfury

#lapelpins    #fanart    #nightfury    #parody    #mashup    #artistsoninstagram    #toothless    #howtotrainyourdragon    #handmade    
“OK Chip - (it’s Kit) - you’re auditioning with some big Hollywood star”“OK Chip - (it’s Kit) - you’re auditioning with some big Hollywood star”“OK Chip - (it’s Kit) - you’re auditioning with some big Hollywood star”“OK Chip - (it’s Kit) - you’re auditioning with some big Hollywood star”“OK Chip - (it’s Kit) - you’re auditioning with some big Hollywood star”“OK Chip - (it’s Kit) - you’re auditioning with some big Hollywood star”

“OK Chip - (it’s Kit) - you’re auditioning with some big Hollywood star”


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camarelic:

tootlet

infantyl:

Before he fell

joyfuldreamer95:

Legend says that when the ground quakes or lava spews from the earth, it’s the dragons letting us know that they’re still here, waiting for us to figure out how to get along. Yes, the world believes the dragons are gone, if they ever existed at all. But we Berkians know otherwise. And we’ll guard this secret until the time comes when dragons can return in peace~

Preview of my piece for the @oncethereweredragonszine  I love these movies with all my heart.You can

Preview of my piece for the @oncethereweredragonszine  I love these movies with all my heart
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You can order a digital or physical copy now, here is the link All profits will be donated to charity
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Reblog so more people get to know about this amazing zine


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How to trainy your quiet place #howtotrainyourdragon3 #quietplace #johnkrasinski #hickup #toothless

How to trainy your quiet place #howtotrainyourdragon3 #quietplace #johnkrasinski #hickup #toothless (em Vila Formosa)


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look who is here!! my dear Tate, say hello again to tumbr

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