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Spielberg to Produce Live-Action Tintin Movie(s) 336

jtauber writes "Looks like the Adventures of Tintin may be the next series of books to be turned into a film franchise with Spielberg in talks to acquire the rights. See the Marlinspike for more information." Tintin was one of my favorite "book" type comics growing up - and they've released collections.
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Spielberg to Produce Live-Action Tintin Movie(s)

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  • Spielberg? (Score:5, Funny)

    by I Am The Owl ( 531076 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @08:25PM (#4755669) Homepage Journal
    I'm not at all familiar with the "Tintin" series, but I have a bad feeling about it already. Does anybody remember the end of AI? Yeah. I thought so.
    • by Jeremiah Cornelius ( 137 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @09:25PM (#4756055) Homepage Journal
      TinTin will be like Indiana Jones, only with the Nazi-collaborrators as the heroes!
    • by b0r0din ( 304712 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @10:04PM (#4756249)
      Ahh, tintin. Who can forget the years and years of MUD-based carnage done with tintin, or its later predecessor, tintin++.

      Spielberg could not do such text adventure justice.

      I can only imagine such a script:

      # T I N T I N + + v1.5pl9 FINAL
      # (T)he k(I)cki(N) (T)ickin d(I)kumud clie(N)t
      # a DIKU-mud client
      #
      > #se 1 generic.dikumud.com 9999

      FADE IN: Gorath
      password: *********

      > You are in a dark alley. Two muggers are here, their knives flashing at you. An exit lies north.

      #alias {runaway} {n;n;n;n;n;n;n;n;};runaway

      You run like a little girl for the exit. They block you.

      #read ItsWeaponTime;weaponsup
      #OK. 43 ALIASES LOADED.
      #OK. 2 ACTIONS LOADED.
      #OK. 0 ANTISUBS LOADED.
      #OK. 10 SUBSTITUTES LOADED.
      #OK. 13 VARIABLES LOADED.
      #OK. 45 HIGHLIGHTS LOADED.
      You load the uzi.
      You load the minigun.
      You wield the Hammer of Thor.
      You load the rocket launcher.
      You wield the rocket launcher. Mugger #1 begins to piss his pants.
      shoot;shoot
      You aim for Mugger #1.
      You fire. Direct hit. Body parts ooze off the wall.
      You aim for Mugger #2.
      You fire. Direct hit. A blackened spot is all that remains of Mugger #2. You are victorious. But Steven Spielberg shows up with a flak cannon. He aims for your heart.
      look
      You cannot look when you're dead.
      #end
      TINTIN suffers from bloodlack, and the lack of a beating heart...
      TINTIN is dead! R.I.P.
      Your blood freezes as you hear TINTIN's death cry.
      % sniff
    • Re:Spielberg? (Score:3, Informative)

      by Bonker ( 243350 )
      Tintin is much more of an episodic adventure story, similar to cliffhangers. The posters who state that it's like 'Indiana Jones' are fairly correct. Tintin is told on a much more juvenille scale.
    • Re:Spielberg? (Score:2, Informative)

      by wattersa ( 629338 )
      Does anybody remember the end of AI? Yeah. I thought so.
      AI?! How about 1941 [imdb.com]? Let's hope his adaptation of Tintin is less whimsical.
    • Didn't Tin Tin end with aliens already? I only saw the cartoon dubbed in English. Nick would show them in the very early morning when I was in college. I loved the show, but it was hard for me to catch them. One day I was wandering through a comic store and found 2 issues. I bought them both hoping to find more later, but alas I never did (I don't visit comic store much).
  • ...I hope Spielberg doesnot produce one more of his Lost-world series of movies, starring Tintin this time ;)))

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 25, 2002 @08:27PM (#4755682)
    I'm still waiting for the "Choose Your Own Adventure" series to be put to film...
    • Like Wing Commander III?

      Under a killing moon?
    • It isn't a movie, but it's sort of like an adventure [albartus.com].

      burning off the karma...
    • I'm still waiting for the "Choose Your Own Adventure" series to be put to film...

      Translating a Choose Your Own Adventure book into the format closest to a movie produces laserdisc/DVD games similar to "Dragon's Lair" [dragons-lair-project.com].

  • Oh, please... No! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by girl_geek_antinomy ( 626942 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @08:27PM (#4755683)
    You can't! No! They're sacred, damn it!

    Adaptations of Asterix have been bad enough, especially those dreadful live-action ones with Depardieu...

    I grew up on French comics, which I guess is some excuse, but... You just -can't- live action adapt Tintin. It'll be awful! Or at least, if they have to, in the name of all that is Holy -please- adapt them as cartoons...

    ... Please...?
    • Astérix : Mission Cléopâtre is the best movie I saw.
      Funny, sexy, with a lot of flash for adult and children.
    • by xyzzy ( 10685 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @08:32PM (#4755722) Homepage
      I must admit, I have every bit as much trepidation as you. Tintin is quite literally my childhood -- I read my first one while visting France with my parents when I was 8, in 1976. When Speilberg is good, he's very good... but when he is bad...!

      I actually thought the animated series was quite good -- does anyone know if they will EVER be released on DVD???
      • Re:Oh, please... No! (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward
        Most, if not all have been released on DVD in France; i.e. amazon.fr [amazon.fr]

        Plus, they come with English and Spanish audio tracks and subtitles! The only "problem" is their region (if you don't live in Europe, Japan, South Africa, or the Middle East).
    • These can't be worse than the Asterix live-action movies.
    • Re:Oh, please... No! (Score:3, Informative)

      by Giraldus ( 617589 )
      Tintin has already made it to the screen a looong
      time ago; there were a couple of movies if I
      remember correctly -- twas in the early 70s -- not
      adaptations of existing books, but new stories
      written for that purpose by Herge ("Tintin et la
      toison d'or" is one of the title I remember,
      it was taking place in Greece); it was not too
      bad precisely because it was a purpose made story
      and not an attempt at adapting existing books;
      and there was at least one long cartoon which
      title I don't remember -- a story about Tournesol
      inventing a Startrek like replicator, with
      underwater scene at the bottom of an artificial
      lake, anyone remembers? (twas not these short
      low quality cartoons one see occasionaly on
      French tv these days);

      --Giraldus
      • Tintin et le Lac aux Requins. (no idea on the english name is any)

        This movie made it back into a book. Not a comic book strictly speaking (although the size and format of the book is the same) since it looks like pictures from the movie with the bubbles on top.
    • Re:Oh, please... No! (Score:5, Informative)

      by DennisZeMenace ( 131127 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @08:40PM (#4755765) Homepage
      I grew up on French comics, which I guess is some excuse, but...

      Tintin is not a French comic, it's from Belgium. Herge (Tinin's belgian author) laid down the foundation of an entire school of belgian comic writers.

      DZM
      • by unfortunateson ( 527551 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @09:05PM (#4755931) Journal
        The adventures of Tintin established the visual language now standard in comic strips and books: word and thought balloons, moving to the right to signify 'progress' and the left to signify failure, etc.

        See Scott McCloud's history of comics for further praise.

        What Spielberg will do to it, I have no idea. It is cited by him as an influence on Raiders.
      • Tintin is not a French comic, it's from Belgium.

        Er, Tintin *is* a French comic -- it's in French! Just because it's from Belgium doesn't change that. If the Americans can speak English, the francophone Belgians certainly speak French.
        • Stop me if I am wrong (and I could, english is not my native language), but when you put a "French" adjective (with a capital letter) you mean "from France" and not "in french".

          • Re:French Comics (Score:3, Informative)

            by Jonathan ( 5011 )
            Stop me if I am wrong (and I could, english is not my native language), but when you put a "French" adjective (with a capital letter) you mean "from France" and not "in french".

            Actually, in English, all references to names of languages are capitalized. One speaks in English or French (and not in english or french)
      • Tintin is not a French comic, it's from Belgium. Herge (Tinin's belgian author) laid down the foundation of an entire school of belgian comic writers.

        Slashdot: News about Herge, stuff that matters
    • Nobody could say that with a straight face.. so Capt. Haddock can't be cast. Relax, man :)
    • by kzinti ( 9651 )
      You can't! No! They're sacred, damn it!

      I couldn't agree more. I read a lot of Tintin when I was young - in English translations - and I just loved them. I can't imagine any actor acting quite like I imagined the characters did, nor will their voices sound like I imagined them sounding. I don't want Mr. Spielberg messing around with Herge's creations, and I won't go to see the movies. There are some things you don't want to see "live-action".

      --Jim (Thompson, not Thomson)
    • Re:Oh, please... No! (Score:4, Informative)

      by Scrameustache ( 459504 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @10:32PM (#4756349) Homepage Journal
      Too late...

      There was one already in 1961 [imdb.com], and another in '64 [imdb.com].

      in the name of all that is Holy -please- adapt them as cartoons...


      Hmmm...that would be 1969 [imdb.com] and 1972 [imdb.com]

      Adaptations of Asterix have been bad enough, especially those dreadful live-action ones with Depardieu...

      Shut up, the first one was rather lame, but the one with Cleopatra totally captured the comic's feel, and was so close to the animated version too (wich I'll just assume you haven't seen).

  • by Jinxo ( 587898 )
    Tintin is a classic series. Many people, myself included, view it with a romantic eye as a classic. I wasn't pleased when they made Asterix films, and I feel the same way for Tintin. Have they totally ran out of ideas??
    • Yes they have totally run out of ideas. Have you seen the preview for that new movie Dare Devil? I mean can you think of a more obscure comic character to make a movie out of? Sure it has Ben Afleck, but it is going to bomb. So to answer your question, YES, they are totally running out of ideas. The ratio of the number of good movies to the number of bad movies has been steadily declining, ever since I started watching lots of movies, when I was young, around 1985 let's say. Although the good movies are getting more and more spectacular. But still if you go by sheer numbers, the ratio I defined above is still doing down. If the pace of movie releases was slowed down a bit, perhaps some of these BAD ideas (like a Tintin movie) could be filtered out before they go into production.
  • by tgrotvedt ( 542393 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @08:28PM (#4755690) Journal
    Any ideas for the stars of the movie?

    Maybe...

    Ben Afleck for Tintin?

    Oh, and that boat guy has to be Sean Connery.

  • by EverStoned ( 620906 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @08:28PM (#4755691) Homepage
    1)Come up with a crappy idea for a movie.
    2)Add Speilburg
    3)Profit!
  • by samgrover ( 102843 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @08:29PM (#4755703) Homepage
    bilious blue blistering barnacles!

    About time :-)
    • Bashi Bazouks, Kleptomaniacs, filibusters!
    • complete list... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by avdp ( 22065 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @09:20PM (#4756028)
      Accapareur, amiral de bateau-lavoir, amphitryon, anacoluthe, analphabète, analphabète diplômé, anthropophage, anthropopitèque, apache, apprenti-dictateur à la noix de coco, arlequin, astronaute d'eau douce, athlète complet, autocrate,...

      Here is a complete list of "insults [wanadoo.fr]" (in french). He has quite a collection of them, each more entertaining than the other, and none are even remotely like f*ck, *ss, etc. All banal words from the dictionary, used creatively :)

      Ahhh... I love Tintin. Being Belgian I grew up on these "comics" (a term that really doesn't do justice to the art, at least not the Begian/French kind of "comics"). Aside from owning the whole collection, I have several older copies with my dad's dedication in them (got them for birthday gifts, etc) which makes them even more valuable to me.

      I am also a fairly big fan of Spielberg - with E.T. being the first major movie I have ever seen, and I still remember going to see it (in Belgium) when I was 11 like it was yesterday! I just hope he doesn't screw this up!
      • Re:complete list... (Score:4, Informative)

        by Floyd Turbo ( 84609 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @11:07PM (#4756477) Journal
        There's a list in English available here [sympatico.ca].

        Great stuff. (Anacoluthons! Hydrocarbon! Technocrat! Odd-toed ungulate!)
      • Being Belgian I grew up on these "comics" (a term that really doesn't do justice to the art, at least not the Begian/French kind of "comics").

        A term has been coined which, IMHO, does accurately describe the art form which includes Tintin.

        "Graphic Novel"

        (It has the same relation to a written novel that a stage play or feature movie has to an oral storyteller's story or radio drama.)
      • One year ago there was a Tintin expo in Paris' Musée de la Marine. The expo was about "Tintin and the sea". My favorite part of it was a display of objects which some of Haddock's insults actually refer to, such as an authentic moule à gaufres...
    • bilious blue blistering barnacles!

      Well, the good news is that they won't have trouble finding a set for Captain Haddock's Chateau de Moulinsarart-- it already exists [lycos.fr]. Of course, in real life it's known as the Chateau Cheverny [wikipedia.org] and has a couple of large additions on the sides.

      But I'm sure a little digital editing magic and they'll have a great set.

  • by Doctor Sbaitso ( 605467 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @08:32PM (#4755723) Journal
    Haddock should be played by Steven Spielberg himself. Look at the uncanny resemblance [no-ip.com].
  • TinTin is a french cartoon that has been published for years. I remember reading it as a kid back in the 60's. It's even older than that and it shows.

    I have seen a few TinTin movies later and I just can't deal with it. There is something un-funny about the whole thing.

    Let's just hope that Spielberg can breath some new air into the old cartoon.
    • Not all cartoons are supposed to be funny. Tintin has plenty of humor, but its woven into a larger narrative. He's the world-famous Tintin, reporter. He has wild adventures that take him around the world (and to the moon), solving crimes and foiling plots. For someone who wants to sound like they understand Tintin, you sure missed the boat.
  • This is wrong. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by jericho4.0 ( 565125 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @08:38PM (#4755758)
    Nooooooooooooooo!!!!! Don't let this happen. Tintin is attractive for two reasons. The gourgeous art, and the european feel.

    Speilberg is going to produce some stupid action film that glosses over all the subelties and ruins Tintin for the next generation.

    Man I sound old.

    • by Theodore Logan ( 139352 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @09:13PM (#4755984)
      Tintin is attractive for two reasons. The gourgeous art, and the european feel.

      Actually, there are some tintin mags that are attractive for quite different reasons [tintin-in-thailand.com]. Oh, would I love to see Spielberg do that movie!
    • Re:This is wrong. (Score:2, Interesting)

      by b0r1s ( 170449 )
      I saw the subject of your post, and expected something totally different. Nobody else has said it yet, so here it goes:

      So far this week, everyone's complained about the RIAA and the MPAA attempting to enforce their copyrights. The clear example of this is http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/11/24/20 10223&mode=nested&tid=103 [slashdot.org]. Every time the MPAA and RIAA attempt to enforce their copyrights, the slashdot crew criticizes both: they're evil, monopolistic, capitalistic entities who care only for money rather than the art their businesses are founded on.

      Then a movie comes out, and everything changes. The MPAA is evil, until they release Lord of the Rings, and then movies are great. Then the MPAA is evil again, until Harry Potter comes out, and then movies are the best thing ever. Then the MPAA enforces its copyrights, and they're evil. Now another movie comes out, and everyone flip-flops again.

      I suppose consistency is too much to ask for on a site dominated by group think.
      • I suppose consistency is too much to ask for on a site dominated by group think.

        So you're angry at Slashdot because people posting here all feel the same way about things, but you're also angry because people posting here all have completely different opinions on those same topics?

        I guess internal consistency is too much to ask from your argument.

        Clue: Slashdot is not a gestalt entity. We are all individuals.

    • Re:This is wrong. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Elwood P Dowd ( 16933 ) <judgmentalist@gmail.com> on Monday November 25, 2002 @10:11PM (#4756279) Journal
      I'm glad someone understands.

      A lot of the stuff that kids liked about tintin was just the Hardy Boys + James Bond story line. Which really wasn't so special.

      The innovative thing about tintin was the art. An uncommon thing about tintin was the feel. If Speilberg just copies the plot of one of the comics, it'll be worthless trash. That won't bother me too much, even though I read plenty of them when I was a kid.

      However, if he uses some new digital process technique to reference the subtly different solid colors of the comic, and he lets it stay innocent, that'd be excellent.

      I hate Speilberg more than anyone I know. But he doesn't always make action movies, and sometimes he can do good things with the look of a movie. Compare AI to Minority Report to Private Ryan. Actually, the unifying characteristic of those three movies is the contrast and dark blacks. That would kindof kill any attempt to copy the look of Herge's art.

      Whatever. Tintin was one of my first experiences being disappointed by the fact that a storyteller was using formula. I felt ripped off. I'm more upset that those sons of bitches are destroying The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen [imdb.com]. Sure, it's not a classic, but it could make an excellent fucking movie. 'Scuse me.
  • Snowy (Score:3, Interesting)

    by ocie ( 6659 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @08:51PM (#4755832) Homepage
    As long as they don't pick a goofy voice for snowy. His thoughts were some of the funniest parts of the book, but he wasn't goofy. Closer to Brain than Scooby. He also found a lot of the clues, even if accidentally.

  • There is an older movie, Tintin and the Blue Oranges (1964) that was made for the big screen before...
    It was quite boring though, and didn't feel at all like the comics.

    My guess is that this new one will be an entertaining movie, but still miles away from the original Tintin envisionned by Hergé.
  • For those who are interested, a brief rundown of Tintin's history on the big (and small) screen can be found at http://www.tintin.qc.ca/english/cinema.htm [tintin.qc.ca]
    • The site mentioned above (tintin.qc.ca) gives indeed a good history of the Tintin movies. The series was adapted into several not-so-good movies already. I've seen them all. :-)

      The Spielberg aficionados will take comfort in knowing that Spielberg had been negociating to buy the Tintin movies. He declared in an interview that after the success of the 1st Indiana Jones, he had money for some old film projects he wanted to do, among which a Tintin movie. He has been a long-time admirer of Hergé. Unfortunately, after Hergé's death, the negociations went nowhere.

      The character of Chang in the "Temple of Doom" is a hommage to Hergé's homonymous character in "The Blue Lotus" [daimi.aau.dk]

      So one thing is sure. Spielberg is not doing this just because he's smelling money. He's taking Hergé's masterpiece as a work of art. That kind of approach generally gives decent results.

      As a footnote, the person who heads the company that manages Hergé's copyrights and derivative is an American who married Hergé's widow. That person has acquired a rather sinister reputation for being absolutely merciless, some kind of male Hilary Rosen, not even allowing basic fair use.

      --SysKoll
  • by jkitchel ( 615599 ) <<jacob_kitchel> <at> <hotmail.com>> on Monday November 25, 2002 @09:07PM (#4755943)

    I don't know what tintin is, but from the sounds of these posts, maybe we should send this one to "Steven Spielberg's non-union Mexican exquivalent" and keep it south of the border.

    [2F31] A Star is Burns [snpp.com]

    Burns: Get me Steven Spielberg!
    Smithers: He's unavailable.
    Burns: Then get me his non-union Mexican equivalent! [later] Listen, Senor Spielbergo, I want you to do for me what Spielberg did for Oskar Schindler.
    Spielbergo: Er, Schindler es bueno, Senor Burns es el diablo.
    Burns: Listen, Spielbergo, Schindler and I are like peas in a pod: we're both factory owners, we both made shells for the Nazis, but mine worked, dammit! Now go out there and win me that festival!

    -- Burns puts his foot down, "A Star is Burns"

  • by Mr. Khan ( 20014 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @09:30PM (#4756074) Homepage
    2 live action Tintin films have already been made a long time ago. They might be interesting to fans, but if memory serves they are pretty bland adaptations. Of course, we're talking movies made in 1961 and 1964 respectively. The special effects budget went to making the movies in color I'd wager. :) The movies are Tintin et le mystère de la toison d'or [imdb.com] and Tintin et les oranges bleues [imdb.com]. You can even find them in DVD on amazon.fr
  • by nigelc ( 528573 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @09:48PM (#4756184) Homepage
    So we'll get what?

    Haley Joel Osment as Tin-Tin

    Robin Williams in a hilarious double casting as The Thompson Twins

    Harrison Ford as Captain Haddock

    Richard Attenborough as the Professor

    And of course, a CGI "Snowy".
    I can't wait!

  • I grew up on Herge's TinTin. The books (I decline to call them comics) were excellent, the large format and attention to detail in every frame was astounding, and the story-lines were remarkably mature for the audience they were supposedly aiming for at that time. And the animated cartoons that followed on were flawless reproductions of the books; if I close my eyes and concentrate I can still hear the opening theme... more than twenty years later.

    Spielberg can't top this; there are just some things that if you try to imitate them you will only screw them up because the original is beyond imitation. I have a feeling this will turn out like the Batman series.. the first one will be just semi-OK and the rest will be banal marketing tripe used solely to stock toy store shelves at Christmas time.

    He can film it if he wants, but I ain't gonna go see it.
  • Herge, the Belgian, (not French Belgian, "Je ne suis pas un maudit Francais madame, je suis un sale Belge,") who created Tintin must be turning in his grave.

    Hollywood/Spielberg will make some clap-trap dumbed-down gets-the-girl-in-the-end rendition of something which doesn't belong anywhere but on the printed page.

    Fuck, why does Hollywood insist on tearing the heads off all my memories and jerkin' off down the neck. I'm going to stay well away from this Anglofied doggerel.
  • by LMariachi ( 86077 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @10:13PM (#4756287) Journal
    Jim Belushi as Captain Haddock.
    Leonardo DiCaprio as Tintin, or, if Leo's too old, "Malcolm in the Middle."
    Jim Carrey as Professor Calculus.
    Robin Williams as Thompson & Thomson.
    Snowy will be CGI, voiced by Ahmed Best.
  • by v8interceptor ( 586130 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @10:22PM (#4756317)
    please please please let it be Bruce Willis...:)
  • it's not Disney.

    (I just hope Spielberg will do his best...)
  • A Tintin movie? Nah, that's just not going far enough. I want Tintin and Batman movie [memepool.com]! Get Arnold Schwarzenegger to play Rastapopulous, throw in a few explosions and a cool car... you're set!


    This may be karma-whoring but at least I'm giving credit where credit is due... :)

  • by Jaycatt ( 530986 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @11:21PM (#4756521) Journal
    I'm surprised I haven't seen this mentioned yet. Or maybe it has been mentioned by now. Anyway, there's this interesting text on the www.tintin.com website in the "At The Movies" section.

    "More than ever, Hergé was leaning toward live-action movies. "Because that's the way I see it" he said to a journalist from L'Express, "My Tintin is alive, my Captain Haddock as well. But such movies should be produced with budgets equivalent to those a James Bond movie". And isn't it a project of that sort that Steven Spielberg brought to the screen in 1980 with Raiders of the Lost Ark? Although Indiana Jones, embodied by Harrison Ford, does not resemble the young reporter and his golf knickers, many scenes of the movie look as if they come from the adventures of Tintin or Blake et Mortimer. Quite strangely though, it seems that the references to classic Belgian comics are not coming from Hergé's or Jacobs' stories but from a cinematographic intermediary. Indeed, while preparing his own movie, Spielberg screened L'Homme de Rio a dozen times.

    In 1982, Spielberg went one step further by proposing to acquire the rights to adapt The Adventures of Tintin. While weakened by an illness which would take him a few months later, Hergé expressed a strong interest in the venture, hoping that Spielberg would be granted all necessary liberties. But the director of Duel, unconvinced by the first script written by Melissa Matheson, soon decided to take on a production role and leave the directing to Europeans. Many names came up and among them, Jean-Jacques Beineix. But soon, the choice turned to Roman Polanski who said that he always wanted to make a Tintin movie. Wasn't one of the characters of Pirates a sort of Captain Haddock? Polanski declared his preference for King Ottokar's Sceptre, a story full of personal meanings. Nevertheless this project never took off and in 1987, Spielberg abandoned his option on the rights (at about the same time the Franco-Vietnamese producer Lâm Lê abandoned the idea of adapting La Marque Jaune from Edgar Jacobs)."

  • No comment (Score:3, Funny)

    by Tintin ( 3789 ) on Monday November 25, 2002 @11:36PM (#4756601)
    I have no comment at this time.
  • A friend of mine has a very comprehensive Tintin site there: http://www.tintin.qc.ca/ . If you really want to get to know Tintin, this is the best place to see.
  • by abischof ( 255 ) <alex@NoSpAm.spamcop.net> on Tuesday November 26, 2002 @12:00AM (#4756693) Homepage

    So, apparently the books are available as a collection now [bfast.com], but does anyone know where I can find Tintin in the UK English translations? (seriously)

    Tintin has been translated into many languages, probably dozens. And, I can attest that there are both UK English editions and US English editions; however, the US English editions are horrible. I'm an American, so you can be assured that this isn't some wacky British pride clouding my judgement, but something was just not right in the US English versions.

    So, does anyone know where I can buy the UK English editions of Tintin? Part of my problem is that, even if I can find Tintin for sale online (not that hard, I suppose), I'm not sure how to be certain which edition I'd be buying.

  • oooh! is speilberg going to start at the series beginning with the deeply racist, pro-nazi, occupation-era 'tintin in the congo'? heh.
  • sans Women (Score:2, Interesting)

    by katalyst ( 618126 )
    The Tintin comics also explicitly left out women from its plots except for Bianca who was more of an ogre than a woman ! Also, the Tintin comics had an excellent sense of humour. Thomson and Thompson, Snowy ,Haddok.. its possible. The movies may end up being a lot like the Indiana Jones movies - exotic locations such as Nepal and India, the supernatural touch , the scifi touch. And as quite a few posts claim that Americans aren't familiar with Tintin, it might actually work regardless of the fact that it doen's even vaguely match the original Tintin. It would be looked upon as a new blockbuster... My opinion - go for it!
  • Unadaptable (Score:2, Interesting)

    by olrik666 ( 574545 )
    I'm French-Canadian and I've read the Tintin comic-books about 10-20 times each since I was a tike. When I re-read these books as an adult, I take great pleasure in them, but I also see their limitations. Adapting them for a modern movie audience as the books *are*, they'll bomb. They will have to be re-written for the most part, and all I can see is that they'll be "Indiana Jones" knock-offs. It does not matter who'll produce/direct/write those films. They'll be anything *but* what Tintin is/was. I would prefer if they simply bought the rights to the Tintin name and write completely new stuff. At least I'd be mildly interested.
  • Herge (Score:3, Insightful)

    by asciimonster ( 305672 ) on Tuesday November 26, 2002 @03:42AM (#4757375) Journal
    I hope they don't change the story of the comics too much... If you only knew how much effort and research Herge, the creator of Tin-Tin, put in to his comics. For instance, in the episode "On a Marche sur la Lune" (We have walked on the moon) captain Haddocks drink starts to float out of his cup when the artificial gravity is swithed off. The boose takes the form of a bubble. Nobody had ever seen that before in real life. When Haddock gets detached from the ship he floats alongside of the spaceship (and does not lag behind). Also, the characters hop over the moon in stead of walk. Remember, this was before Neal ever set foot on the moon. So if they do put the scissors into the story I know Herge is going to, as we say, turn around in his grave.

    P.S. In Flanders (Vlaanderen) and the Netherlands Tin-Tin is called "Kuifje" (cowlick,quiff) because of his unusual hairdo.

    P.S.2: Some years ago, there was a TV-series (cartoon) made from the Tin-Tin stories. Luckely they were smart and did not make any changes in the original storyline.

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