2008 August
Translating Tintin
I was just browsing for some information on who did the lettering in the Tintin albums and came across this article on the history of the English versions and the translation process.
The Land of Black Gold also presented problems. The translators felt that children would not understand the original allusions to the Irgun in nascent Israel at the end of the British Palestine Mandate. (Hergé started the book in 1939, was interrupted by the war, and completed it in 1948-50.) In the original version, Tintin was arrested by the British authorities in Haifa, and subsequently kidnapped by Jews and then by Arabs. Hergé reillustrated and rewrote part of the book, eliminating all references to the British and Jews, and setting the story instead in his imaginary emirate of the Khemed. The result was a simplified plot with which he was even more pleased. The delay in publishing this volume forced British readers to wait ten years for an explanation to the Thompsons’ strange growth of multicolored hair during the lunar adventure, which stemmed from a mishap in the Arabian desert.
From: A History of the Anglo-American Editions. Note: The actual page seems to be down at the moment but you can find it in Google’s Cache.
Tintin To Save Belgium
A quiet week for Tintin titbits:
- Let’s bin Belgium - How Belgium is in danger of falling part
- Found on Deviant Art:

Mii Tintin by Smideroo (whose Tintin dolls we have blogged before). In fact there is a whole bunch Tintin related art on DeviantArt
Possible Legal Problems for the Tintin Movie
The Tintin Trilogy is being made by Dreamworks, Spielberg’s production company, which is owned by Viacom via its subsidiary Paramount. However Spielberg is in the process of buying back Dreamworks from Viacom for $1.2 billion USD and there is uncertainty over projects that currently in production. Will those joint Paramount/Dreamwork’s productions be able to continue or will they go on hold until Spielberg and Viacom have decided who owns what?
Source: Viacom Boss Dauman Looking Forward To Losing Dreamworks
Moffat Denies Quitting Tintin
It appears that when Moffat Walked Away From Tintin, he in fact didn’t. Not too surprisingly the Daily Mail over egged the story and in reality, the US Writer’s strike stopped him writing the second script.
BBC News: Dr Who writer denies Tintin row and
Moffat promises new Who monsters



