Category Archives: peter jackson

Tintin Trailer! Let the debating begin.

Yup. The Tintin Movie Trailer is here! Are you ready? What do you think??

Tintin Movie Sneak Peak

BREAKING TINTIN MOVIE NEWS!

This just in from Empire Magazine. Huzzah!

Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson have chosen Empire to reveal the first look at The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn. Headed our way next October, the film adapts the enormously popular books by Hergé in performance-captured, 3D form.

Our exclusive and specially-Weta-created cover is a riff on the iconic image of Tintin (Jamie Bell) and his dog Snowy picked out by a spotlight as they are running. Then we have a couple of stills from the film, one showing you Andy Serkis’ Captain Haddock and another with Haddock and Tintin adrift at sea and signalling for help.

“With live action you’re going to have actors pretending to be Captain Haddock and Tintin,” says Peter Jackson. “You’d be casting people to look like them. It’s not really going to feel like the Tintin Hergé drew. It’s going to be somewhat different. With CGI we can bring Hergé’s world to life, keep the stylised caricatured faces, keep everything looking like Hergé’s artwork, but make it photo-real.”

Steven Spielberg on ‘Tintin’: ‘It made me more like a painter than ever before’

Here’s an excerpt from a really fun piece in the LA Times Blog from February 2010. Don’t know how I missed this when it came out…. Read the entire article here.

Steven Spielberg says there was only one reason to make his new “The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn” with the cutting-edge performance-capture technology that James Cameron used on “Avatar.

“It was based on my respect for the art of Hergé and wanting to get as close to that art as I could,” says the director, referring to Tintin’s author-illustrator, who created the international blockbuster graphic novel series (200 million copies in print) starring intrepid cub reporter Tintin, and his irrepressible canine companion, Snowy, as they venture through the pre-WWII world.

“Hergé wrote about fictional people in a real world, not in a fantasy universe,” Spielberg said. “It was the real universe he was working with, and he used National Geographic to research his adventure stories. It just seemed that live action would be too stylized for an audience to relate to. You’d have to have costumes that are a little outrageous when you see actors wearing them. The costumes seem to fit better when the medium chosen is a digital one.”

For the director of such films as “E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial,” “Jurassic Park” and “Schindler’s List,” the new experience was transporting.“I just adored it,“ he says. “It made me more like a painter than ever before. I got a chance to do so many jobs that I don’t often do as a director. You get to paint with this device that puts you into a virtual world, and allows you to make your shots and block all the actors with a small hand-held device only three times as large as an Xbox game controller.”

Peter Jackson talks Tintin sequels

Tintin goes to the Moon

Tintin goes to the Moon

According to ComingSoon.net, Peter Jackson has several ideas for additional Tintin movies after the first film, The Adventures of Tintin: Secret of the Unicorn, hits theaters.

“I’ve got several favorite stories,” says Jackson, “I like ‘Seven Crystal Balls’ and ‘Prisoners of the Sun.’ I like ‘The Black Island.’ I like ‘The Calculus Affair.’ I haven’t made a final decision yet.”

Jackson confirmed that work on the follow-up won’t start until he’s completely done with writing duties on The Hobbit. He did, however, say that he has a neat idea of where he’d like to take Tintin after the first sequel: all the way to the moon.

Published in 1953, Tintin actually beat Apollo 11 by 16 years in a famously retro red and white checkered rocketship. Like the adventure chosen for the first film (“Secret of the Unicorn” and “Red Rackham’s Treasure”), Tintin’s moon adventures (“Destination Moon” and “Explorers on the Moon”) represent only a few stories that span multiple books. Though one of the most recognizable stories, the thought had been that Tintin’s moon adventures would be too offbeat for mainstream audiences.

“No moon for the second one,” agrees Jackson, “But I think the moon one[s] would be great to do as a third or fourth one. But I think we should stay on Earth for the second one.”

For more information on the upcoming Tintin movies, visit: the Tintin Examiner, or click here.

Peter Jackson and Steven Spielberg Tintin Video

Just found this video (which is now a little old) on the French side of the official Tintin website. While it is a little odd and Jackson and Spielberg are a little stiff, it is nonetheless pretty cool to hear them talk about the Tintin movie in their own words. Click here to be taken to the video.

jackson-spielberg-video