Spielberg, Jackson, together on Tintin

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SharekhaN

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HOLLYWOOD heavyweights Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson are to join forces to direct and produce a series of three films based on the Belgian comic-strip hero Tintin.

Entertainment journal Daily Variety reported today that the film-makers would direct at least one of the films each, and serve as producers on all three.

The report said Tintin had been a long-time pet project for Spielberg, who finally secured the film rights to the comic series in the past 12 months.

Jackson, the Oscar-winning director of The Lord of the Rings trilogy, had already developed a test film which had brought the characters created by George Remi, better known by his pen name Herge, to life, the report said.

Spielberg said the computer animation technology used for the films would be unlike anything ever seen.

"Herge's characters have been reborn as living beings, expressing emotion and a soul which goes far beyond anything we've seen to date with computer animated characters," Spielberg said.

"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 honour the distinctive look of the characters and world that Herge created."

Jackson said although the movies would be computer-generated, the characters would not look cartoonish.

"Instead we're making them look photorealistic," Jackson said.

"The fibres of their clothing, the pores of their skin and each individual hair. They look exactly like real people - but real Herge people."

Spielberg and Jackson have chosen three stories from the 23 Tintin books published between 1929 and 1976.

The announcement of an alliance between Spielberg and Jackson - two of the modern masters of cinematic story-telling - comes after news that the two would work on Jackson's next film, the thriller The Lovely Bones.

The film is based on Alice Sebold's 2002 novel which tells the story of a 14-year-old girl who watches her family from heaven after she is raped and murdered.

---source The Australian

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Tintin has been realized on screen ... i seen some posters of it ... bt the language wasnt english .. so didn bothered mch .. bt lukin frwrd to this... Spielberg shd do some justice..

i wd wanna see some Jonny Quest action too.. Questworld wd be smthing to watchout for ..
 
SharekhaN said:
Spielberg and Jackson have chosen three stories from the 23 Tintin books published between 1929 and 1976.

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Which three i wonder ?

Tintin is timeless, Herge spent quite a lot of time researching his stuff.

but i'm bit sceptical about actors in it, comics/cartoons sure, but they have already done that.
 
i went for Asterix and Obelix - Mission Cleopatra..

telling u .. if it wasnt for Monica Bellucci .. i wd hv left within 20 mins..

and as i went only for that Italian Siren .. i wasnt complaining too mch .. bt the movie barring her scenes wasnt too interesting ..

Realisation of the characters was good.. bt seemed to miss the punch.. i hope Tintin scores over the missing areas.. and we get some super fine animated movie.. :)
 
Reading them again after all these years, I've come to realise Asterix comics weren't that much good in the first place.
And the animated movies are weird, there's this profound lack of a background score :lol:
 
Tintin unlike asterix will have greater mass appeal . With his sleuth like skills , the drunkardness of captain haddock , and the bumbling Thompson and Thomson . not to mention cuteness of Snowy .
 
RiO said:
I bet you Asterix will thrash the hell out of Tintin if you put them in a ring :rofl:
True.. I used to read both asterix and tintin when I was a kid and I always preferred asterix over the other. Though I think the movies suck primarily becoz they were dubbed and they could have used a better director.
 
Everything hinges on who voices for Captain Haddock. :D Blistering Barnacles! Bodysnatchers! Baazibazouks! :rofl:
 
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