Tintin and Snowy

Tintin Nuggets

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

Herge’s other comic creations, Quick & Flupke, have been launched in India.

“Even worse will be the Tintin Purists…” is a blog post looking at purists reactions to the Lord of the Rings films. Even if the Tintin Movie is as good an adaptation as Jackson’s LotR then a lot of Tintin fans will complain because their favourite bit has been cut. Personally, I’m going to take the films on their own merit and their general feel. If they are well made films, with good scripts and stick to the general tone of the books, then I will be a very happy Tintin fan.

From The Guardian:

In Tintin’s last-but-one-adventure, Flight 714, our intrepid boy reporter and his friends find themselves on a small and deserted Indonesian island. The first intimation that things may not quite be as they seem comes when a rather bemused-looking but undeniably giant lizard ambles out of the bushes.


“What on earth’s that?” exclaims Captain Haddock. “A monitor,” replies Tintin. “What’s it doing here, pestilential pachyderm?” demands Haddock, displaying his usual grasp of alliteration (and absence of scientific knowledge). “It looks like it’s escaped from the ice age!”

Into the dragon’s den

A Smattering of Tintin

Sunday, June 8th, 2008

Not a lot happening on the Tintin Movie front at the moment. Filming due to start in September, cast not yet announced sums it all up. However, Tintin remains a cultural force, cropping up all over the place.

Bartholome Marquez, the new manager of the Espanyol football team has joined a long list of people, including politicians, to be nick-named Tintin: New adventure for Tintin

On the Tintinologist forum, Pharaoh spotted an interesting plot twist that was lost in the translation into English: Tintin in America: Bad News :-(

Finally, blogger Jordan Hurder, explores his own fascination with Tintin and makes a few pointed observations.

4. In German, Tintin is called “Tim.” Why do they have to be so efficient?



7. Tintin is supposed to live in the real world, yet he does things that are clearly impossible. In one adventure, he’s stranded in the jungle with only elephants as his company (elephants to whom he relates with polite detachment). To communicate with them, he picks up a tree branch and handily uses a pocketknife to carve it into a giant trumpet that he then uses to approximate the sound of elephant speech. (Aside from the impossibility of approximating elephant speech, there is also the obvious difficulty of hollowing out a 4-foot solid branch of wood using a two inch pocketknife.) The scene where he asks the elephant to spout water out of its trunk so he can shower under it has to be seen to be believed. Also, he showers in his boxers, presumably because Herge didn’t want to show nudity. But is there a bigger secret being hidden here? In another episode, he kills an ape, cuts off its head, and puts its skin on like a suit in order to blend in with the other apes. And it’s not supposed to be gross at all. Gross.

Source: Tintin, Your Flipped up Tuft of Hair is the Least Curious Thing About You

Tintin About To Whip a Prisoner?

Sunday, June 1st, 2008

Tintin And The Whip

Is Tintin really going to use a that cat-o’nine tails on someone? More importantly, where did this scene, created by Herge and longtime Tintin illustrator Bob De Moor, appear? Only The Ephemerist has the answer

Tintin Is Art!

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

The Pompidou Centre in Paris has accepted a Tintin strip to be part of its permanent collection. The first comic strip to be included in the gallery.

An original black and white strip, signed by Tintin’s Belgian creator Herge and donated by his widow Fanny Rodwell, comes from the 1956 story, The Calculus Affair, the 18th of the Tintin adventures.



Pompidou contemporary art museum curator Benoit Peers said that the donation could lead the way for the acquisition of more comic strips.



“One can say that Herge remains a pioneer and that Tintin, once again, has shown the way.” he told Le Figaro.

From: Tintin enters Pompidou Centre’s modern art collection in Paris

This is the page in question, I believe, though in black & white and presumably in French.
CalculusP12

The Creepy Shooting Star

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

Charles Burns, one of the most disturbing comic artists / illustrators has a portfolio of work out by United Dead Artists that includes this familiar image:
Charles Burns Tintin

For comparison I thought I would put up the original image and I was amazed at how close Charles Burns’ version is to the original. Try comparing the locations of the rocks. I then noticed something about The Shooting Star. The cover is a redrawn version of one of the panels.

Shooting Star Cover

The Shooting Star Cover Art Work

Shooting Star Page 51

Final Panel of Page 51

It makes sense for the artwork to be redrawn for the cover but my surprise is a naiveté left over from my childhood when I would look through the books finding the frame they had used for the cover. One more precious childhood memory destroyed by the bitter reality of adulthood.

Tintin Still A Strong Cultural Reference

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008


Belgian prime minister Yves Leterme, famous for his quiffed hair and Tintinesque earnestness (and lack of humor), is on adventure in South-America. - Vincent Rif via The Ephemerist.

Nice to see that the iconic Tintin is still a strong cultural reference in Belgium. I wonder if this cartoonist will get sued like Bill Leak did for his image of Aussie premier Kevin Rudd as Tintin (below)

Tintin On The Titanic / How to Draw Tintin

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

Check out Gazpachot’s blog for surreal imagery including this Tintin / Titanic comparison.

Meanwhile, On Jon’s Random Acts of Geekery, he has a a guide to drawing Tintin.
how to draw Tintin

Tintin versus Alien

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

Two of my favourite characters going face to face.
Alien versus Tintin
This fantastic image was created by Malcolm McClinton who does a lot of fantasy and SF based art.

Odd Tintin Cartoon

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

Kate Beaton is a comics creator with a very odd sense of humor and style. Check out her web site for lots more comics but this one jumped out.

Kate Beaton Tintin Comic

Thanks to the Repartee in the LJ Boy Reporter community for spotting this.

Review: Tintin and the Secret of Literature

Monday, April 28th, 2008

Tom McCarthy’s 2006 book, Tintin and the Secret of Literature is reviewed in the Los Angeles Times.

In France in particular, Tintin became a cottage industry, his exploits fodder for philosophers, psychoanalysts and literary critics, all of whom McCarthy leans on in asking, “Is ‘Tintin’ literature?” He notes the “huge irony . . . that the ‘Tintin’ books remain both unrivaled in their complexity and depth and so simple, even after more than half a century, that a child can read them with the same involvement as an adult.” But the question of whether they’re literature is not as interesting now, given the ascendance of pop culture. McCarthy seems to admit as much when he tweaks his query slightly: “As soon as we ask if ‘Tintin’ should be treated as literature, we raise another question: what is literature?”

From: ‘Tintin and the Secret of Literature’ by Tom McCarthy