

I had more doubts about the transition from Hergé's "Ligne Claire" type of drawing to CGI's and even more so to the use of 3D.

It was only obvious they wouldn't touch the spirit of what's considered a classic worldwide. It will be held against them, but that will be coming from people who don't know the original material.īut I somehow had little worries about that, honestly.
#The adventures of tintin torrent movie
Hergé never needed more, kudos for the guys behind this movie for keeping true to that. Tintin just finds himself where adventure is. I don't think he ever used a typewriter, he has no boss, no workplace. None of them ever showed Tintin doing actual reporter work. That's all the comics ever told us about him. Tintin is a reporter, that's all you need to know. The movie also deftly skips what could have been a typically Hollywoodish mistake of giving Tintin exposition. The movie has the intelligence of starting off the big screen adventures of Tintin with the two meeting up and becoming friends, a real turning point in the continued adventures of Tintin. Far from a being just a comical sidekick, Haddock is the human counterpart to the flawless hero that Tintin is (remember, this is a comic, originally aimed at kids and older kids). Haddock is the dark side of Tintin, prone to anger and shouting insults, hard drinker, natural born loser. It is actually the reason for the appearance of Captain Haddock after a few albums. Tintin as a character has his limits, dramatically speaking, and even Hergé knew that. He is brave, always gets out of the tangles he gets in, he is a good guy, he doesn't know doubts. To kill a double controversy in the making, and like I've already read in a couple critics: Tintin has always been a "bland" character in the comics. While it could seem like a lot of material for a whole movie, the choice of blending those three (two and a half) stories together turns out giving the movie a rather perfect pacing. Its beginning takes root in "Le Crabe aux Pinces D'or", while the rest of the movie revolves around the two-albums story of the hunt for Rakham the Red's treasure, "Le Secret de la Licorne" and "Le Trésor de Rakham le Rouge". To clarify the origins of the story itself, you have to know that it isn't the adaptation of one, but three Tintin comics. Spielberg and Jackson and all the team behind the adaptation obviously gave the original material the love and respect it deserved, while making it their own. Thankfully, after having the chance to see it before most people out here in Belgium and everywhere else thanks to a journalist buddy, I found out I can to be none of the above. I could take the role of the harcore comics fan who despises the adaptation, or the rabid Spielby fan forgiving everything. I also happen to be a fan of Spielberg's, probably since seeing E.T. because I'm Belgian and grew up on a steady Tintin diet, like most Belgians my age and older. For once, I felt compelled to do it because. Reviewed by creepysammich N/A An intrepid report on The Adventures of Tintinįirst off, this is the first time I ever write a review in here. Tintin and Sakharine have one each and the villain intends to use the glass-shattering top Cs of operatic soprano the. Haddock tells Tintin that over three hundred years earlier his ancestor Sir Francis Haddock was forced to scuttle the original Unicorn when attacked by a piratical forebear of Sakharine but he managed to save his treasure and provide clues to its location in three separate scrolls, all of which were secreted in models of the Unicorn. Sakharine has bribed the crew to revolt against the ship's master, drunken Captain Haddock, but Tintin, Snowy and Haddock escape, arriving in Morocco at the court of a sheikh, who also has a model of the Unicorn. Sakharine should be so eager to buy it from him, resorting to murder and kidnapping Tintin - accompanied by his marvellous dog Snowy - to join him and his gang as they sail to Morocco on an old cargo ship. Having bought a model ship, the Unicorn, for a pound off a market stall Tintin is initially puzzled that the sinister Mr.
