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For fans of Tintin comics like yours truly, watching ace director Steven Spielberg’s animation debut The Adventures of Tintin turned out to be a rewarding experience.

There was a time in a distant era and a far off continent when we devoured Tintin comics like there was no tomorrow.

Blistering barnacles, we probably read the whole bunch over the span of a few weeks. And relished ‘em all.

So watching Tintin and his sidekicks Capt.Haddock and the smart white dog Snowy come to life on the big screen was an enjoyable moment for us this evening.

Not to forget the presence of the two bumbling detectives Thomson and Thompson.

Just in case you’re the curious sort, Tintin was the creation of Belgian comic writer Georges Prosper Remi, fondly known as Hergé.

A Performance Captured 3D Tintin

Like Avatar and Rise of the Planet of the Apes, The Adventures of Tintin too relies on performance capture techniques of film-making.

For the uninitiated, this means real actors like Daniel Craig (Sakharine), Andy Serkis (Capt.Haddock) and Jamie Bell (Tintin) enact the scenes and their movements and actions are captured by cameras and digitally transformed into animation.

Visually-speaking, Tintin is closer to a live action film than a regular animation picture.

In some scenes, you’d be forgiven for thinking you’re watching a live action film.

But The Adventures of Tintin is not in the same visual league as Avatar.

Perhaps, because lush green forests, gray suspended mountains shrouded in fog, gigantic colorful birds and bluish human-like creatures translate into better spectacles on the big screen compared to the antics of a funny-looking youngster (Tintin) and the crew aboard a ship rolling on high seas.

Still, there were some moments in Tintin that told a powerful visual story.

Like for instance, when in the middle of a sandy desert Capt.Haddock evokes the fierce 17th century fight between his ancestor Sir Francis Haddock and the villain Sakharine’s pirate forbear Red Rackham on the rolling sea we were spellbound by the rich imagery unfolding on the screen.

But the increasing use of 3D in movies is getting tiresome because it seems like no more than a ploy by movie-makers to dip their fingers deeper into your pocket. The extra ticket cost is rarely justified by the use of 3D effects.

A Treasure Chase – On Sea & Land

Tintin is a reporter who joins up with the drunken sailor Capt.Haddock and the intelligent dog snowy to divine the secret of a 17th century ship The Unicorn.

It all begins, however, when Tintin buys a small model of the Unicorn at a street corner. No sooner does Tintin acquire the small model, a mysterious buyer arrives on the scene asking him to name his price for parting with the model.

Of course, the model is a key to unlocking the secret of the original Unicorn ship that sank to the bottom of the sea following a fierce battle with pirates three centuries earlier. Continue reading »

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