He is the son of Annie Hughes and was voiced by Eli Marienthal in the 1999 animated science fiction film, The Iron Giant . Contents 1 Official Warner Bros. Website 2 Personality 3 Physical Description 4 Role in the Film 5 Quotes 6 Gallery 7 Trivia Official Warner Bros. Website SUBSCRIBE to Warner Bros. Entertainment: https://youtube.com/channel/UCz3YSxKgpKrGyrcPD4jlVpwConnect with The Iron Giant:Like The Iron Giant on FACEBOOK: htt.
Iron Giant Hogarth Telegraph
Quotes [as the Giant flies toward the missle] Hogarth Hughes : [in the Giant's mind] You are who you choose to be. The Iron Giant : Superman. Hogarth Hughes : [to the Giant, in battle mode] It's bad to kill. Guns kill. And you don't have to be a gun. You are what you choose to be. You choose. Choose. Directed by Brad Bird Writing Credits Cast (in credits order) complete, awaiting verification Produced by Music by Michael Kamen Cinematography by Steven Wilzbach Editing by Darren T. Holmes Casting By Marci Liroff Production Design by Mark Whiting Art Direction by Alan Bodner Production Management Art Department Sound Department Special Effects by Origin The Iron Giant Occupation Student Powers / Skills Able to tame Iron Giant Cunning Hobby Watching late-night sci-fi fantasy on TV Playing with Iron Giant Goals Protect and shield Iron Giant from potentially bad people. Family Hogarth Ted Hughes Sr. (father, deceased) Annie Hughes (mother) Dean McCoppin (Possible Stepfather) Friends / Allies The Iron Giant is a 1999 American animated science fiction film produced by Warner Bros. Feature Animation and directed by Brad Bird in his directorial debut. It is based on the 1968 novel The Iron Man by Ted Hughes (which was published in the United States as The Iron Giant ), and was written by Tim McCanlies from a story treatment by Bird.
'The Iron Giant' Returns The Movie Blog
99+ Photos Animation Action Adventure A young boy befriends a giant robot from outer space that a paranoid government agent wants to destroy. Director Brad Bird Writers Tim McCanlies Brad Bird Ted Hughes Stars Eli Marienthal Harry Connick Jr. Jennifer Aniston See production info at IMDbPro RENT/BUY from $3.99 search Amazon Add to Watchlist Summaries A young boy befriends a giant robot from outer space that a paranoid government agent wants to destroy. This is the story of a nine-year-old boy named Hogarth Hughes who makes friends with an innocent alien giant robot that came from outer space. Eli Marienthal Character information Personality Lovable, curious, intelligent, talkative, childlike, quirky, headstrong, kind. Appearance Slender, short, fair skin, blue eyes, short auburn hair, blue turtleneck, red and black jacket, navy blue jeans, red and white sneakers Alignment Good Nationality American Goal The Iron Giant A giant metal machine falls to Earth and frightens the residents of a small town in Maine in 1958, until it befriends a nine-year-old boy named Hogarth and ultimately finds its humanity by unselfishly saving people from their own fears and prejudices. movie 1999 16 Fans
Hogarth Hughes Original and Limited Edition Art artinsights character
From The Iron Giant 1999 Hogarth William Hughes is the protagonist of the 1999 animated science fiction film The Iron Giant, voiced by Eli Marienthal. He is the autistic boy who acts as The Iron Giant's friend and mentor, while trying to protect him from the authorities until they killed the Giant and ends up being a Once Upon a Wintertime fan. Growing up in 1957, in Rockwell, Maine, Hogarth is the autistic kid.
The Iron Giant is a 50-foot tall autonomous "Metal Man" from another world that crash lands on Earth before becoming friends with a young boy named Hogarth who rescues him from his own internal defensive mechanism in the Warner Bros. 1999 animated science fiction film of the same name, voiced by Vin Diesel. The Iron Giant is loosely based on the title character of The Iron Man, a 1968 novel by. Hogarth is a 9-year-old who lives with his single mom ( Jennifer Aniston) and dreams of having a pet. She says they make too much of a mess around the house, little dreaming what a 100-foot robot can get up to.
ArtStation Hogarth Hughes Iron Giant
From The Iron Giant 1999 The Iron Giant truly is one of our best children's features about death. One scene, in particular, seems to demonstrate this best: When the Giant sees a pair of hunters shoot and kill a docile.