Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Tintin enters the third dimension



A still from Tintin and the Secret of the Unicorn (l) and a Herge drawing (copyright Herge-Moulinsart 2010 Tintin and Snowy's new Hollywood look (left) and one of Herge's line drawings of the boy reporter

More than 80 years since Tintin first appeared in print in Belgium, the roving boy reporter has been transformed for the big screen by Steven Spielberg.
Creator and illustrator Herge's pen lines have been brought to life by 3D and performance capture techniques, in an animated movie that takes the comic book hero firmly off the page.
The young adventurer's famous quiff is lustrous and red and his face full of expression, as up-to-the-minute technology brings him alive and makes him eerily human.
But will traditional fans accept this new guise?

Actor Jamie Bell, who provides the voice and human movement for the Belgian icon, is adamant that Tintin "deserves" such treatment and calls Spielberg "the only guy who could have made this movie".

"In the comic books he's not a living, breathing person. In the film, every strand of his quiff moves," explains the British star, who has given Tintin a standard English accent and says an American twang would have been "criminal".
"I've never seen such a realistic Tintin in my life. In the comics the characters don't look like people - they're surrealist drawings," he adds.
The 25-year-old says that the film - which is produced by Peter Jackson - can be "paused at any moment and put back into a comic".
The Billy Elliot star reveals that while performing the actors, including Andy Serkis and Daniel Craig, had frames from the original cartoons pasted around their studio "so we could look directly at the source".
Bell believes that Tintin's transformation will draw in a fresh wave of fans - on their own terms.
"To try and bring Tintin to a new generation of children, you have to present it to them in a way they understand. Steven Spielberg they understand; they understand 3D.
"I hope they see this film and decide to go back to the source material," says the actor, adding that "this movie will hopefully branch out from Tintin's exclusive fanbase".
Bell also maintains that he will return for further Tintin movies, should they be made, so long as the character is "represented in the right way".
Michael Farr is a leading light on Tintin who knew Herge and has written extensively on the subject.
"Herge was terribly interested in new technology and a film buff. I think he would have been very excited by the new film.
"When I was writing his biography I found among his papers a note he had written three months before he died [in 1983] which said if there's one person who can bring Tintin successfully to the screen, it's this young American director - and he meant Steven Spielberg," Mr Farr explains.
More at BBC.

TINTIN ADAPTATIONS

Russell Tovey as Tintin in the Old Vic's 2006 production
  • Two animated cartoon series made in Belgium (1956) and France/Canada (1991/2)
  • Live action films including Tintin and the Golden Fleece in 1961
  • BBC radio dramatisations in 1992/3
  • Stage play at London's Young Vic in 2006, starring Russell Tovey as Tintin (pictured)
  • Related Stories

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