Dragon Hill, la colina del dragón: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Spanish animated fantasy films]]

[[Category:Spanish animated fantasy films]]

[[Category:Spanish fantasy films]]

[[Category:Spanish fantasy films]]

[[Category:2000s Spanish films]]

[[Category: Spanish films]]

[[Category:Spanish fantasy adventure films]]

[[Category:Spanish fantasy adventure films]]

[[Category:2000s fantasy adventure films]]

[[Category:2000s fantasy adventure films]]


Latest revision as of 21:40, 27 December 2025

2002 Spanish animated film

Dragon Hill, la colina del dragón
Directed by Ángel Izquierdo
Written by Antonio Zurera Aragón
Produced by Antonio Zurera Aragón
Music by Emilio Alquézar

Production
company

Milimetros Feature Animation

Distributed by Universal Pictures (Spain)
All Rights Management (International)

Release date

  • 20 December 2002 (2002-12-20)[1]

Running time

80 minutes[2]
Country Spain
Language Spanish
Box office $916,335[3]

Dragon Hill, la colina del dragón is a 2002 Spanish animated adventure fantasy film directed by Ángel Izquierdo[1] and written and produced by Antonio Zurera Aragón.[4] It won the Goya Award for Best Animated Film at the 17th Goya Awards.[5]

  • Elvira García as Elfy
  • Esperanza García as Kevin
  • Antonio García Moral as Septimus
  • Carmen Capdet as Maud
  • Nuria Cepero as Gala
  • Vicente Gil as Ken
  • Ariana Jimenez as Vivien
  • Reinaldo Coello as Ethelbert
  • Gloria Gonzalez as Speaker
  • Joaquín Gómez as Newton / Cook 1 / Viking
  • Francesc Rocamora as Montesquieu
  • Ferran Calvo as Cook 2 and Bear
  • Juan Miguel Diez as Cook 3 and Captain
  • Robert Paterson as Director

The film was released theatrically on 20 December 2002 in Spain.[1] Released in the Netherlands on 9 October 2003, the film grossed $678,228. It was re-released in Poland on 26 January 2007 and grossed $238,107.[3]

At the 17th Goya Awards, Dragon Hill won Best Animated Film and the song “Un Lugar Más Allá” by Emilio Alquézar was nominated for Best Original Song, but lost to “Sevillana Para Carlos” by Roque Baños for Salomé.[5]

The film was followed by two sequels, El cubo mágico [ca] (The Magic Cube) in 2006[6] and El corazón del roble (The Heart of the Oak) in 2012.[7]

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