Eragon 2006 Hindi Dubbed Movie Watch Online
Posted in English Movies in Hindi Dubbed, Hindi Movies, Hollywood MovieEragon 2006 Hindi Dubbed Movie Watch Online Informations :
Director : Stefen Fangmeier
Release Date : 15 December 2006
Genre : Action
Cast : Ed Speleers, Jeremy Irons, Sienna Guillory, Robert Carlyle, John Malkovich, Garrett Hedlund, Alun Armstrong, Christopher Egan, Gary Lewis, Djimon Hounsou
Eragon 2006 Hindi Dubbed Movie Watch Online : Megavideo :
Eragon is a 2006 fantasy-adventure film loosely based on the novel of the same name by author Christopher Paolini. The cast includes Edward Speleers in the title role, Jeremy Irons, Garrett Hedlund, Sienna Guillory, Robert Carlyle, John Malkovich, Djimon Hounsou, Alun Armstrong, Joss Stone, and the voice of Rachel Weisz as Saphira the dragon.
The film was directed by Stefen Fangmeier, a first-time director, who had previously worked as a visual effects director on Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events and Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World. The screenplay was written by Peter Buchman, who is best known for Jurassic Park III. Principal photography took place at the Mafilm Fót Studios in Hungary, starting on August 1, 2005. Special visual effects and animation were by Weta Digital and Industrial Light & Magic.
Eragon was released worldwide between December 13 and December 15, 2006 by 20th Century Fox. It was the 10th worst reviewed film of 2006 on Rotten Tomatoes, and the 31st highest grossing film of 2006 in the US. A DVD and Blu-ray of the film was released March 20, 2007.
Plot
Eragon (Edward Speelers) is a 17-year-old farm boy who lives in the small village of Carvahall in the fictional country of Alagaësia. Alagaësia contains dragons and other fictional creatures. While hunting, he finds a small dragon egg from which hatches a blue dragon named Saphira (voice of Rachel Weisz). Eragon decides to keep Saphira a secret, but a pair of magical creatures, the Ra’zac, are sent by Galbatorix (John Malkovich), the despotic King, to find Eragon and the dragon. This causes Eragon to flee his home but when he returns he finds his uncle Garrow (Alun Armstrong) has been killed by the Ra’zac and so sets out on a journey to avenge him. Accompanied by a sage storyteller named Brom (Jeremy Irons), Eragon, and Saphira take up the legacy of legendary Dragon Riders. He learns magic, swordfighting, and dragon-riding to fulfil his destiny: to overthrow the Empire and its king.
Cast
* Edward Speleers as Eragon
* Rachel Weisz as the voice of Saphira
* Jeremy Irons as Brom
* Sienna Guillory as Arya
* Robert Carlyle as Durza
* John Malkovich as Galbatorix
* Garrett Hedlund as Murtagh
* Alun Armstrong as Garrow
* Chris Egan as Roran
* Djimon Hounsou as Ajihad
* Caroline Chikezie as Nasuada
* Joss Stone as Angela
* Steven Spiers as Sloan
* Gary Lewis as Hrothgar
Production
Development
Plans to create a film based on Christopher Paolini’s best-selling novel were first announced in February 2004. 20th Century Fox purchased the rights to Eragon. Screenwriter Peter Buchman, whose credits included Jurassic Park III, wrote the screenplay. Buchman, a fan of fantasy and science fiction literature and films, says he was “blown away” by the author’s precociousness, his mastery of plot lines and characters, and his ability to create several completely imaginary worlds.
It was Buchman’s script that drew the attention of Stefen Fangmeier. “I found it to be an exciting read,” said the director. “With the book’s fantastical aspects, people would look at me in terms of the visual effects requirements. However, my first reaction to the material was that it was a great story that had an emotional arc.”
Casting
Edward Speleers was selected for the title role after a worldwide casting search. “Ed came in [to the casting session], and we just looked at each other and said, “That’s Eragon, that’s the guy from the book,” said director Stefen Fangmeier: “I got a strong sense of Ed’s sparkle, of his life. It’s the kind of thing where you just know he’s destined to become a movie star. Speleers won the role as he was trying to learn his lines for a school production of Hamlet. Others considered for the role included Alex Pettyfer but since production took place in the Czech Republic and Pettyfer is afraid of flying, he declined the role.
On July 15, 2005, in an official press release from 20th Century Fox, it was confirmed that Speleers had signed on to the project. Over the following months, Jeremy Irons, John Malkovich, Chris Egan, and Djimon Hounsou were all confirmed as joining the Eragon cast. Paolini, author of the original novel, had expressed his wishes to be featured in a cameo role in the film — specifically, as a warrior who is beheaded in the battle of Farthen Dûr. However, he was unable because of his European book tour.
Jeremy Irons, who welcomed the opportunity to reintroduce himself to younger audiences, took on the role although Dungeons & Dragons (a previous fantasy film he had acted in) had flopped, and he said that he thought that Eragon “had been better managed” than that film.
