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Showing posts with label enters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label enters. Show all posts

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Tintin enters the third dimension

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
23 October 2011 Last updated at 23:01 GMT By Michael Osborn Entertainment reporter, BBC News A still from Tintin and the Secret of the Unicorn (l) and a Herge drawing (copyright Herge-Moulinsart 2010 Tintin and Snowy's new Hollywood look (left) and one of Herge's line drawings of the boy reporter More than 80 years since Tintin first appeared in print in Belgium, the roving boy reporter has been transformed for the big screen by Steven Spielberg.

Creator and illustrator Herge's pen lines have been brought to life by 3D and performance capture techniques, in an animated movie that takes the comic book hero firmly off the page.

The young adventurer's famous quiff is lustrous and red and his face full of expression, as up-to-the-minute technology brings him alive and makes him eerily human.

But will traditional fans accept this new guise?

Continue reading the main story Russell Tovey as Tintin in the Old Vic's 2006 production Two animated cartoon series made in Belgium (1956) and France (1991/2)Live action films including Tintin and the Golden Fleece in 1961BBC radio dramatisations in 1992/3Stage play at London's Old Vic in 2006, starring Russell Tovey as Tintin (pictured)Actor Jamie Bell, who provides the voice and human movement for the Belgian icon, is adamant that Tintin "deserves" such treatment and calls Spielberg "the only guy who could have made this movie".

"In the comic books he's not a living, breathing person. In the film, every strand of his quiff moves," explains the British star, who has given Tintin a standard English accent and says an American twang would have been "criminal".

"I've never seen such a realistic Tintin in my life. In the comics the characters don't look like people - they're surrealist drawings," he adds.

The 25-year-old says that the film - which is produced by Peter Jackson - can be "paused at any moment and put back into a comic".

The Billy Elliot star reveals that while performing the actors, including Andy Serkis and Daniel Craig, had frames from the original cartoons pasted around their studio "so we could look directly at the source".

Bell believes that Tintin's transformation will draw in a fresh wave of fans - on their own terms.

"To try and bring Tintin to a new generation of children, you have to present it to them in a way they understand. Steven Spielberg they understand; they understand 3D.

"I hope they see this film and decide to go back to the source material," says the actor, adding that "this movie will hopefully branch out from Tintin's exclusive fanbase".

Bell also maintains that he will return for further Tintin movies, should they be made, so long as the character is "represented in the right way".

Michael Farr is a leading light on Tintin who knew Herge and has written extensively on the subject. MAP HERE

"Herge was terribly interested in new technology and a film buff. I think he would have been very excited by the new film.

"When I was writing his biography I found among his papers a note he had written three months before he died [in 1983] which said if there's one person who can bring Tintin successfully to the screen, it's this young American director - and he meant Steven Spielberg," Mr Farr explains.

As for fans with an expert knowledge, who are also known as Tintinologists, he thinks there will be a "mixed" reaction to the new movie, given the visual familiarity with Herge's enduring image of Tintin.

But he adds: "Nobody has said to me it is a disastrous development. Not one fan I have met has said they would rather it hadn't been done. It's an endorsement of their enthusiasm."

'Tintin for morons'

Mr Farr also believes that the film will draw new converts to the original Tintin comic books, which he calls a "running success story".

His note of caution concerns the US, which has maintained its own cartoon-strip superhero tradition.

"American audiences may find the film a bit difficult. Some have known him and loved him, like Spielberg, but not the audience at large."

While US audiences must wait until Christmas to see Tintin, UK critics have delivered early verdicts, including The Guardian's Nicolas Lezard, a lifelong devotee of the comic books.

Jamie Bell Jamie Bell says his job was to bring Tintin to life

"As it is, the film has turned a subtle, intricate and beautiful work of art into the typical bombast of the modern blockbuster, Tintin for morons," he writes.

The Telegraph's Robbie Collin also draws comparisons with the original comic books.

"As a family-friendly adventure romp," he says, "it ticks every box, but the unique appeal of the Tintin books does not lie in seeing boxes being ticked."

Empire magazine's Ian Nathan, meanwhile, says: "No room is found for Herge's political satire, or his more becalmed, intuitive moments, to gaze, incredulous, at the world."

But the writer adds that it is "an iconography so ingrained in the artist's style that it might be untranslatable".

Spielberg's latest venture would appear to be coming under close scrutiny, as a Belgian institution turns into Hollywood hot property.

Tintin and the Secret of the Unicorn opens in UK cinemas on Wednesday 26 October and is due for release in the US on 21 December.



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Friday, September 23, 2011

News : Economy enters 'dangerous phase'

20 September 2011 Last updated at 15:13 GMT Oliver Blanchard, director of research at the IMF, says economic recovery has "weakened sharply"
The global economy has entered a "dangerous new phase" of sharply lower growth, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
The organisation warned that continuing political and economic woes in the US and eurozone could force them back into recession.
The IMF says the prognosis for economies in the developed world is "weak and bumpy expansion".
It predicts their GDP will expand "at an anaemic pace of 1.5% in 2011".
The IMF believes global growth will shrink to 4% in 2012, from 5% last year, on factors such as "major financial turbulence in the eurozone".
It slashed its growth projections for the 17-nation eurozone to 1.6% in 2011, down from 2% predicted in June. Next year growth will be 1.1%, down from 1.7%, it forecast.
The US - the world's largest economy - is likely to have weak growth "for years to come".
UK worries Continue reading the main story
The Fund has moved one step closer to saying the downside scenario has arrived. But it has stopped short of saying it. This is entirely understandable at a time when confidence is at a premium”
End Quote Stephanie Flanders Economics editor, BBC News And the UK, the growth forecast for 2011 has also been revised downwards, from 1.5% to 1.1%, while the forecast for 2012 was cut to 1.6%, from 2.3%.
"It would be wise for both governments and businesses [in the UK] to develop contingency plans in case such a double dip scenario does emerge," said John Hawksworth, PwC's chief economist.
Among the major advanced economies, the IMF now thinks Germany and Canada will be the only countries to grow by more than 2% in 2011.
In 2012, none will grow that fast, except Japan, as its economy rebounds from this year after an earthquake and tsunami ravaged the country.
BBC economics editor Stephanie Flanders points out that the shorter-term growth forecast has been cut for every country listed - with particularly large downward revisions for the US and Italy.
Acting together
The IMF stressed strong leadership would crucial in staving off recession in the US and eurozone.
Continue reading the main story
We have the discipline and the determination to put right the huge deficit and debts we were left by the last government ”
End Quote William Hague MP UK Foreign Secretary IMF chief economist Olivier Blanchard said that eurozone countries were lagging in the race to solve the sovereign debt crisis.
He said: "There is a wide perception that policymakers are one step behind the action. Europe must get its act together."
The perceived weakness in eurozone governments' response is one of the main factors behind the recent market turmoil.
"Leaders must stand by their commitments to do whatever it takes to preserve trust in national policies and the euro," the report said.
The IMF's statements come after credit rating agency Standard and Poor's downgraded Italy's debt rating amid mounting concerns about the country's finances.
And on Monday, the IMF warned Greece to implement agreed reforms or miss an 8bn-euro bailout instalment set for October, viewed as vital to keeping state finances afloat.
"Fragile" financial institutions needed to get private cash to survive over funds from the public purse, or be "restructured or closed", said the IMF.
In a speech on Tuesday, European Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia also warned more banks in the region may need extra cash.
He said: "The worsening of the sovereign debt crisis, its impact on a fragile banking system and the continuing tensions in funding markets all point to the possible needs for further recapitalistion of banks on top of the nine that failed the stress tests earlier this year."
US concerns Greece must continue with unpopular spending cuts and tax rises, the IMF says
The IMF report also voices concerns about the US economic recovery and the chance it might "suffer further blows" including a weak housing market and worsening financial conditions.
It warns that either of the issues could drag both the US and the euro area into recession.
It suggests that the US needs to devise a plan to "put public debt on a sustainable path and implement policies to sustain the recovery".
The IMF has also voiced fears that the US is facing what it calls a "very sluggish recovery of employment".
"Although [US] unemployment is below post-World War II highs, job losses during the crisis were unprecedented and came on top of lacklustre employment performance during the preceding decade," the report said.
It added that news of the US housing market had been disappointing, with "no end in sight to the overhang of excess supply and declining prices".