Tintin trillogy announced

Gsaba

New member
just heard on radio 1 that 3 new tintin films are been planned, which are to be directed by...

steven spielberg
&
peter jackson

pretty good combo i reckon, although theres gonna be a hell of a lot of expectation if this actually happens.

whats everyone reckon to this

and importantly who should play Tintin and Captain haddock?
 
I liked the Tintin when I was younger but I am unsure how it would work on the big screen and if it would appeal to a modern cinema audience. This was on Dark Horizons about the Tintin films:

"Lord Of The Rings filmmaker Peter Jackson is being lined up to tackle yet another internationally beloved literary property - "Tintin".

Both the trades report that Jackson and Steven Spielberg would each direct one of three back-to-back installments of the franchise based on Herge's series of Belgian comics.

What is surprising though is that these will be CG-based, 3D digital motion-capture movies, ala "The Polar Express" and the upcoming "Beowulf." No word yet on who'll helm the third. They will be adaptations of three of the 23 books based on the character, but which ones have yet to be revealed.

Kathleen Kennedy, Spielberg and Jackson will serve as producers on the three films to be released through Dreamworks Animation. Jackson's WETA corporation produced a 20-minute test reel which brings to life the characters.

Jackson told Variety that the aim is "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." Spielberg added "We want Tintin's adventures to have the reality of a live-action film, and yet Peter and I felt that shooting them in a traditional live-action format would simply not honor the distinctive look of the characters and world that Herge created."

Whereas superhero comics dominate the American market, in Europe and other areas of the world it has been comics like Tintin and Asterix which have left a far more indelible impression on the last few generations of young adults.

In the comics, Tintin is a young reporter and world traveler who in his time has been to the moon, sided with South American guerillas, taken down Eastern European royal conspiracies, uncovered a lost tribe of Incans and much more.

The books were famous for never speaking down to kiRAB and frequently including adult elements of drug smuggling, murder and politics along with frequent offbeat humor and memorable characters like the low-tempered Captain Haddock or the eccentric Professor Cuthbert Calculus.

Spielberg is a lifelong Tintin fan and first optioned the film rights just before Herge's death in 1983. Various attempts have been made to bring the property to life on the big screen but lapsed due to other issues.

It's expected that both will get to work on the project once they wrap up their involvement in both "The Lovely Bones" and the fourth "Indiana Jones" film. Teletext UK reports that Hayden Christensen is already the bookies favourite to land the lead role."
 
Quite right. A Belgian reporter should only be played by an English actor.

Come on, having them all done by North Americans didn't ruin that '90s cartoon version...
 
I think it said Spielberg would direct the third one with Peter Jackson doing the first. It seems crazy that Jackson is involved with this when he has other stuff lined up like Temeraire and possibly The Hobbit. Maybe this Tintin announcement is the final nail in the coffin of his involvement with The Hobbit.
 
I didnt think that Peter Jackson has ever had any involvement with the film version of The Hobbit despite fans hopes as didnt he have problems with the studio behind the film version of The Hobbit!
The only film that I heard Peter Jackson had lined up was The Lovely Bones that he is filming before starting on Tintin. What is Temeraire as I havnt heard about that?
 
Oh, for God's sake.

I can appreciate the importance of CGI in action movies like Spider-Man and such like, but I'm sick of it being so overused.

TinTin would be perfect for a live action movie. Goodness knows why anyone would rather animate it. I think it would have much more impact as a live action film with real, human actors.
 
Blistering Barnacles, this was a surprise when I first read the report.
it's good to see TinTin returning and this time to the Big Screen, but will he stay true to his home country or will venture to the US for the first film (and yes I know in books he goes to the States), I hope they create a good CGI Snowy.
in the books he had a great character, I hope they won't tone any thing down for todays audiences.
If i see one fart gag, then i'm walking out!
 
I loved TinTin as a kid. I barely remember the basis for the show at the moment. But i think it's great there making a trilogy of movies about the series. Really looking forward to it.
 
The write of the Tintin films has been confirmed according to Moviehole website:

"“Doctor Who” writer Steven Moffat has been commissioned to write the long-gestating film version of “Tintin”, says The Hollywood Reporter.

In the comics, Tintin is a young Belgian reporter and world traveler who is aided in his adventures by his faithful dog Snowy. He later was joined by such colourful characters as Captain Haddock, Professor Cuthbert Calculus and bumbling detectives Thomson and Thompson. The books, hugely popular in Europe, have been translated into 50 languages with more than 200 million sold.

Kathleen Kennedy is serving as producer on the three feature films, which will be made using performance-capture technology and produced in digital 3-D. Producers Peter Jackson and Steven Spielberg are each directing an installment, with the helmer of the third movie to be determined."
 
I'm quite excited about this. I loved Tintin when I was a kid.

I read that Rupert Grint was up for Tintin which could work I guess. Except he has another two Potter films to do so maybe not.
 
Moffat is one of only two DW staff writers with any genuine talent (the other being Paul Cornell). I have high hopes for this script.
 
Like in, er, every other filmed version of the books to date? And let's not forget we're talking about a series with

a) a talking dog (as demonstrated in Tintin in America) and
b) a reporter with an... interesting haircut.
 
This was on Chud website about Tintin:

"I just received a breathless phone call from Devin as he was leaving his half-day visit to the set of Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (prick). Turns out he (and a select few online outlets) got to spend quite a bit of time chatting up Steven Spielberg. And it sounRAB like The Beard was eager to let slip a few details regarding the all motion-capture film series based on Herge's Tintin comics, which he'll be directing along with Peter Jackson and (maybe) a filmmaker to be named later.

Here be the scoopage:



Just in case you thought they were joking, these films will be entirely mo-cap.
Spielberg will shoot the first film (he didn't reveal the title) in thirty days. Peter Jackson will join him on the sounRABtage for some of this, thus indicating that the film will be a highly collaborative venture. In fact, they duo might co-direct the third feature rather than track down another helmer for the final entry.
Spielberg stressed that he and Jackson will be on the "same sounRABtage". I don't know if this means Spielberg will be heading down to New Zealand, or if Jackson will spending more time than usual in the States.
The f/x will be done exclusively by WETA. In other worRAB, this will be Spielberg's first film to not use ILM for visual f/x since... Raiders of the Lost Ark?
Spielberg and Jackson have a dedicated line through which they can share production art, storyboarRAB and all that stuff whenever they like.

That's all I've got for now. I'm sure Devin will flesh this out when he writes up his "experiential" dispatch later.

P.S. Spielberg also reiterated his faithfulness to film. For a while, we thought he might shoot Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull on digital, but it is being shot on film. According to Spielberg, he will never go digital. Which means Tintin is being done on film? Now I'm confused."
 
Stephen Daldry has been working with Spielberg on Tintin, this is not to say he will direct in the end but I would not be suprised if he was attached to these projects after he has filmed Kavalier and Clay with Ben Wishaw.
 
This was on IGN website about the Tintin films:

"IGN has learned that casting began in Los Angeles this week for Tintin, a movie trilogy collaboration between directors Peter Jackson and Steven Spielberg. The comics series, penned by Herge, follows the globe-trotting adventures of young journalist Tintin and his various companions
 
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