Film Review
It was presumably the phenomenal success of
Les Aventures de Tintin animated
television series (first broadcast in France between 1957 and 1959, but
repeated on a regular basis ever since) which led to this first
live-action adaptation of Hergé's world popular comic
books. Hergé himself gave his blessing to the
production and was reputedly pleased with the end result, as well he
might.
Tintin et le
mystère de la Toison d'Or is such a perfect evocation of
the world of Tintin that anyone who grew up learning to read through
the exploits of Tintin and his friends can hardly escape being swept
away on a tide of nostalgia whilst watching it. The film's
popularity resulted in a sequel
Tintin et les oranges bleues
(1964) which, whilst good entertainment for the younger ones, doesn't
quite have the magic and broad appeal of this first wonderful offering.
All of the familiar cartoon characters are instantly recognisable in
human (and canine) form, particularly Jean-Pierre Talbot as the oddly
quiffed androgynous reporter Tintin, who looks as if he might well have
been the model for the original Hergé creation. Georges
Wilson, a distinguished French character actor, is hilarious as the lugubrious,
whisky-swigging Captain Haddock, renowned as much for his comically
irate spleen-venting (
Mille sabords!
/
Blistering Barnacles!) as
for his propensity for getting himself into trouble. Professeur
Tournesol (a.k.a. Professor Calculus) is there, looking so like his
strip cartoon equivalent that you wonder whether he is played by a real
actor, along with Tintin's faithful pooch Milou / Snowy. It's
really quite uncanny how close all of the characters in this film are
to the ones in the original comic books.
Tintin et le mystère de la
Toison d'Or is not only a well-made production, beautifully
filmed in Turkey on what appears to be quite a substantial budget, it
has a strong storyline which more than does justice to Hergé's
original stories, and holds up pretty well against more adult-oriented
action thrillers of the era. The film is well-paced, stylish,
funny and appeals just as much to adults as it does to children,
particularly adults who have many happy memories of time spent
following the exploits of Tintin and his colourful entourage as they
take on the world's great criminal masterminds with cunning instead of
the obligatory firearms. It may lack the sophisticated special effects and
modern cinematic gimmickry that Steven Spielberg employed on his
The Adventures of Tintin (2011),
made exactly half a century later, but this first live-action outing
for Hergé's happy crime-fighting ensemble is closer
in spirit to the original Tintin stories and is simply a magical piece of escapist cinema,
whether you are 5 or 105.
© James Travers 2000
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Captain Haddock can hardly believe his good fortune when he receives a letter
notifying him that he has inherited a ship named
The Golden Fleece from
an old friend of his, Paparanic. Without a moment's delay, the good
captain sets off to Istanbul to claim his inheritance, in the company of
his friends Tintin and Milou. Haddock's dreams of a new round of adventures
at sea crumble to dust when he finds that his ship is nothing more than a
run-down cargo vessel, one that is more than ready for the breaker's yard.
Convinced that the boat is worthless, the captain is understandably taken
by surprise when a stranger, Anton Karabine, approaches him and offers him
a large sum of money for it.
Their curiosity piqued, Tintin and Haddock undertake some research into the
latter's unlikely benefactor and discover that, many years ago, he was involved
in a coup d'état in a South American country named Tetaragua.
It seems that Paparanic even ended up as the country's leader for a few days,
before being driven out of the country. In his escape, Paparanic ran
off with all the gold held in the vaults of the country's main bank.
Pursued by Karabine and his murderous henchmen, Tintin and his friends set
out to uncover the whereabouts of the lost gold, but soon come to realise
that they may have embarked on a wild goose chase. Just when the adventure
appears to have run its course Professor Tournesol makes a remarkable
discovery...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.