Category Archives: How Tintin influences the WORLD

Tintin’s favorite tunes. (Just what is on his iPod?)

I love this idea. Flavorwire’s Literary Mixtapes, determining the imagined playlists of famous figures like our friend Tintin.

“Our dear Tintin, unlike many heroes in the modern canon, is utterly, completely, almost absurdly pure at heart. He will always do the right thing, will always tell the truth, and will always leap to the aid of the downtrodden, helpless or harassed. He is dedicated to exposing lies, cheats and tyranny, even in situations that don’t involve him in the slightest. He doesn’t drink, smoke, or covet the ladies. He is so good that he is almost without personality — a pictorial stand-in for the adventurous do-gooder we all secretly wish to be. However, Tintin isn’t a total blank slate. He is calculating, cheeky, and almost ironic at times — picture him walking away whistling from a trap he’s just set, impish smile on his face. Plus, he has the influence of his much less angelic friends (Captain Haddock and Snowy, we’re looking at you), so we’re pretty sure he’d listen to more than just Christmas carols and Mozart. Though, let’s be honest, Tintin’s parents definitely played baby Tintin some Mozart. Or fed him lots of spinach, or something. Because for a terminal goody-two-shoes, he’s kind of a badass. Here are the songs he might explore, sneak around, and outsmart the enemy to.”

When it comes to The List, I admit that there are some songs I’ve never heard of, but I’m willing to give them a try.

“On the Road Again” – Willie Nelson

Over the course of Hergé’s 24 books, Tintin travels through something like 40 countries, both real and invented. Which is impressive, but since we only recently found out Syldavia isn’t a real country, possibly misleading for children.

“What the Snowman Learned About Love” – Stars

Just in case our intrepid reporter needs some time to contemplate what happened with Chang and the yeti in the cave in Tintin in Tibet.

“Ce N’est Pas Bon” – Amadou & Mariam

A blind Malinese couple playing Syrian violins, Egyptian ney, Cuban trumpets, American guitars and Indian tablas? We just found Tintin’s favorite band.

“Chinese Children” – Devendra Banhart

We’re pretty sure that if you’d let him, Tintin would have been a Belgian Angelina.

“The Times They Are a-Changin’” – Bob Dylan

Dylan may have been talking about slightly different changes than the ones that went down in Tintin in America, but the idea’s the same. Our country, she’s ever changing.

“Zig Zag Wanderer” – Captain Beefheart

You can’t blow this kid’s house down.

“Geography” – Thao with the Get Down Stay Down

“Oh, geography is gonna make a mess of me..”

“Wild World” – Cat Stevens

Poison, chloroform, torture and firing squads? Poor Tintin’s mom.

“The Rocky Road to Dublin” – The Dubliners

Okay, we know Tintin’s never had an adventure in Ireland — that we know of — but this song is perfect for drinking, sailing and fist fighting all, and would definitely wake anyone up from a chloroform-induced sleep.

“A Horse with No Name” – America

The perfect soundtrack for all of Tintin’s desert exploring. Although he’s usually riding a camel.

“The Killing Moon” – Echo and the Bunnymen

This is what we hear when we picture Tintin and Snowy floating over the surface of the moon in those bizarre orange space suits. See Explorers on the Moon, which by the way predated the Apollo 11 moon landing by more than a decade. We can’t say we’re surprised they didn’t take style tips from Tintin.

“One Night in Bangkok” – Murray Head

Thailand is clearly next, Tintin. “Get Thai’d! You’re talking to a tourist / Whose every move’s among the purest / I get my kicks above the waistline, sunshine”

“Talking Shit About A Pretty Sunset” – Modest Mouse

Sure, when you’re imprisoned by Incan priests who worship the sun and plan to let it burn you alive in the morning (see Prisoners of the Sun). Predict that eclipse, Tintin!

“Shanti Mantra” – Ravi Shankar

It’s the hymn of peace, after all. The ultimate goal.

Anything we missed that you think Tintin would have on repeat? Let us know in the comments!

Tintin and the Apocalypse

As you know, recently, I’ve been interested in writers who love Tintin. Writer Charles Burns loves Tintin enough to base his entire recent work on the lovable boy reporter. (via)

In X’ed, Burns “draws heavily on an obvious love of Tintin to create an incredible post-apocalyptic dreamscape, integrated into the usual Burnsian world of teenage angst, illness and ennui.

The hero, Doug, is a typical Burns protagonist – a young man trying to chart a course through his late adolescence. He finds it difficult to relate to others, wishing his circumstances were better but seemingly incapable of escaping a genetic cycle of dysfunctionality he shares with his father.

Doug doesn’t help himself though, being obsessed with taking Polaroid self-portraits, reading Tintin books and performing dreary Burroughs-inspired poetry at open-mike sessions in front of teen audiences – cool, wannabe punks who’d rather listen to bands than watch naive teenage poets.

Then, in his dreams and hallucinations Doug becomes a Tintin-inspired character called Nitnit. Here he explores an ugly, post-catastrophic flood world, peopled by lizard-faced humanoids and assorted malformed and mutated creatures.” (Thanks Grovel.org)

Oh there is so much more-but I think you will have to wait until we get this in the store.

Writers who read Tintin

Both in our stores, and on our websites, Tintin fans always lament the lack of more and more and more Tintin books..

Perhaps Tom McCarthy’s new book, C, will satiate part of the need for more. According to Forbidden Planet UK, on a recent radio interview, McCarthy acknowledged that Tintin does play a role in this work.

Tintin is a big presence in this book.  In Tintin you have these two great houses : the family estate of Marlinspike, where Captain Haddock lives, which also has a family secret buried underneath it, and on the other hands you have the pyramids, the Inca temples, and crypts that he digs up.  They’re both flipsides of each other.   Tintin is also a radio-operator.  He’s meant to be a journalist, but he only ever files one article.  What he does repeatedly throughout the books, is tune in to these mysterious wireless messages, hunt them down and decode them.  And also, Tintin is neutral; he’s blank : whereas all the other characters are colourful and full of personality, Tintin is this Candide-type, neutral, passive character who, like a prism, defracts his whole era” (via)

McCarthy is also the author of Tintin and the Secret of Literature so he certainly knows his stuff. Wonder if this book will be as much fun as Herge’s.