The Adventures of Tintin: Secret of the Unicorn Begins Filming

The cast is assembled and everyone is on hand while Principal Photography starts on TinTin.

Latino Review says:

Paramount Pictures and Sony Pictures Entertainment have announced the start of principal production in Los Angeles on the 3D Motion Capture Film “The Adventures of Tintin: Secret of the Unicorn,” directed by Steven Spielberg and starring Jamie Bell (“Billy Elliot,” “Defiance”) as Tintin, the intrepid young reporter whose relentless pursuit of a good story thrusts him into a world of high adventure, and Daniel Craig (“Quantum of Solace,” “Defiance”) as the nefarious Red Rackham.

Bell and Craig are joined by an international cast that includes Andy Serkis, Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Gad Elmaleh, Toby Jones and Mackenzie Crook.

I am waiting to see just how this is going to pan out. I was never a fan of the series (only vaguely knew it existed), and the cast intrigues me.

I imagine that the movie will be targeted at both the long time fan and those who have never see this character. Hopefully it works out well.

Comment with Facebook

13 thoughts on “The Adventures of Tintin: Secret of the Unicorn Begins Filming

  1. Louis vuitton sent their fall/winter 2012/2013 collection down the Milan Fashion Week runway today and it featured a much darker, more gothic and vampire-like color palette than what was shown by the iconic design house for fall 2011. One year ago <b><a href=”http://www.louisvuittonhandbagsol.net”>louis vuitton Handbags</a></b> showed bright colors and blocked them together, helping to explode the current color blocking trend. For fall 2012, Gucci moved away from the trend they started and let black rule the runway.

  2. I’ve heard the “this character isn’t known/ popular in the U.S., so the film is doomed…!” argument before, and I just don’t get it – if that held true, how do cartoons with *original* characters get sold/ made?? “Ohh, “Bolt”/ “Monsters Inc.”/ “Ice Age” are characters that are not known in the U.S., their films will flop…!” would be the order of the day.
    And look at the films that bomb, or limp along when the U.S. *does* know the character – Punisher, Hulk, Ghost Rider, Superman (Returning), Hulk again, The Spirit, even Watchmen…
    The movie will either work or it won’t, but give the audience a chance to see it, and work it out for themselves…

  3. I’m sorry, but I think this is the film-version of soccer… or maybe the metric system. The rest of the world may love it, but I don’t foresee Americans sharing the love. I don’t think it’s that popular here. And they’re planning a trilogy, right? Worldwide B.O. will save the studio, but an abysmal domestic tally will kill the franchise. From the other side… I have predicted it.

  4. Used to love Tintin as a child, read many of the comic/books and watched the TV series.

    Totally agree that they should bring back the same theme music, it really fitted the show and was great!

    look forward to this flick

  5. john,

    In a preview for the site redo, there was a small article titled something like “why did Bolt fail”.
    Is that a real blog post or just something done for the preview?

    1. yeah i thought so too, but looks like they changed!

      and anyways that kid from love actually was just so short, so ugly, so young to be tintin!

      it would suck balls man!

  6. I can’t wait to see what Spielberg does with this. The book alone works as it is, but I have a gut feeling a lot of creative liberties are being taken.

    I think it’d be great if they re-used the Tintin theme from the animated series. That music NAILED it.

Leave a Reply