The live-action remake of How to Train Your Dragon features significant progressive ideological intrusions primarily through race-swapping and forced diversity in casting that clash with the Viking source material, justified by contrived lore changes and defensive creator statements prioritizing inclusion over fidelity. Astrid, originally a blonde white Viking warrior girl, is played by mixed-race Black actress Nico Parker, prompting widespread backlash for lacking visual or cultural resemblance; director Dean DeBlois dismisses critics with 'not everyone needs to be white,' claiming Vikings' travels created a diverse Berk melting pot—a retconned backstory tweak absent from the animated originals that feels like a DEI mandate shoehorned to rationalize the choices. Other swaps like Maori Julian Dennison as the pale, awkward Fishlegs further diversify the cast in ways that undermine the homogeneous Viking island aesthetic, turning a fantasy rooted in Norse tradition into a modern identity politics showcase. DeBlois emphasizes casting for 'spirit' over appearance, auditioning lookalikes but opting for diversity, while Parker scoffs at fans as hating 'change.' Though the core friendship and anti-violence themes persist without overt lectures, these elements compromise the remake's authenticity, fueling 'woke' backlash across social media and YouTube despite box office success, serving as a cautionary example of how activist-driven changes alienate core audiences even if critics applaud the 'inclusivity.'