Interview: My Father’s Dragon director Nora Twomey on bringing a classic to the screen

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With just a handful of features to its name – but multiple award nominations to go with them – Irish animation house Cartoon Saloon has a huge following and any film with their name on it is hotly anticipated. Their fifth movie, My Father’s Dragon, released this week on Netflix, is no different.

Based on the 1948 children’s novel of the same name, it starts in the depression-hit 1930s with young Elmer (voiced by Jacob Tremblay) struggling to cope with a move to the city. He eventually runs away in search of Wild Island, where he’s told that a young dragon is waiting to be rescued and, as well as finding that dragon, who rejoices in the name of Boris (the voice of Gaten Matarazzo), he encounters even more magical beasts, a sinking island and discovers the friendship of a lifetime.

In the interview below, director and company co-founder Nora Twomey talks about the five years it took to make the film and how the original book had resonated with her “as a child, as an adult and as a filmmaker.” She also describes how she sought guidance from the book’s author, Ruth Stiles Gannett, on developing the story into a film and looks forward to possible future projects – “wherever my heart takes me.”

My Father’s Dragon is released on Netflix on Friday, 11 November.

Read our review of the film


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