The Los Angeles Times:
He turns 80 this year but still looks 18, with the same fair-haired quiff. Like Madonna and Sting, two other famous blonds, he goes by one name. Mention him and a European is likely to cheer, while an American is more apt to go, “Huh?” But that’s destined to change now that Steven Spielberg is making a movie based on his life.
He is Tintin, intrepid cub reporter and nemesis of evildoers, whose long career in numerous cartoon strips and comic books, with faithful dog Snowy at his side, has made him one of Belgium’s most celebrated exports (up there with chocolate and waffles).
… Just in case you hadn’t yet heard about the $130 million dollar project, which just wrapped.
Spielberg’s had the long-running Tintin comic series optioned and under development for decades, and it was announced in 2007 that he would partner with Peter Jackson to produce a trilogy of films featuring the young reporter – with the two trading off as directors, Steven directing the first, Peter the second, and then them co-directing the third. They’re using an innovative motion-capture method – similar to what was used to create Gollum in “Lord of the Rings,” as well as to make Robert Zemeckis’ “The Polar Express” and “Monster House,” and even to age Brad Pitt in David Fincher’s “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button” – which will allow them to hopefully replicate the original style of Georges ‘Hergé’ Remi’s comic books.
From the sounds of it, though, Tintin will mark a fairly revolutionary advance in this kind of movie-making. I’m picturing something of a stylized, film noir-like mix between the 2004 “Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow” and maybe a more two-dimensional and alive-looking (i.e. sans creepy, glass-eyed Santa Claus) “The Polar Express”, though I could be completely off. Here’s what Jackson said to Variety about the film’s look in 2007:
Jackson said WETA will stay true to Remi’s original designs in bringing the cast of Tintin to life, but that the characters won’t look cartoonish. “Instead,” Jackson said, “we’re making them look photorealistic; the fibers of their clothing, the pores of their skin and each individual hair. They look exactly like real people — but real Herge people!”
Daniel Craig, Andy Serkis, Simon Pegg, and Nick Frost are among the cast, and Jamie Bell stars in the title role. (Though I much preferred the first casting choice: Thomas Sangster. That kid has just got it.)
“The Adventures of Tintin: Secret of the Unicorn” is set to release in 2011.
May 25, 2009 :: Tagged under: adaptations, comics, jamiebell, kids culture, kids media, kids movies, movies, peterjackson, stevenspielberg, tintin :: #
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