The Adventures of Tintin (Steven Spielberg, 2011)

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Antoine Doinel
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Re: The Adventures of Tintin: Secret/Unicorn (Spielberg, 2011)

#51 Post by Antoine Doinel »

Banana #3 wrote:Just wondering here, but whatever happened to The Lovely Bones?
It's in post-production and currently has an Oscar ready release date of December 11th. There is a thread about the film here.
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Jeff
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Re: The Adventures of Tintin: Secret/Unicorn (Spielberg, 2011)

#53 Post by Jeff »

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Antoine Doinel
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2011)

#54 Post by Antoine Doinel »

The North American release date has been set for December 23, 2011, two months after it opens internationally.
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Matt
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2011)

#55 Post by Matt »

Antoine Doinel wrote:The North American release date has been set for December 23, 2011, two months after it opens internationally.
Which virtually guarantees a significantly depressed domestic box office thanks to piracy. Nice job, guys.
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kaujot
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2011)

#56 Post by kaujot »

Not to open up a can of worms, but that's a very debated argument.
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Antoine Doinel
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2011)

#57 Post by Antoine Doinel »

Well, with two years of hype before the release date, it's certainly going to make it tempting for someone involved to leak the film before it gets released stateside. It could really go two ways: DreamWorks can get a firm handle on everything and keep a lid on it like Warner did for The Dark Knight; or a finished copy of the film could end up on net like X-Men Origins: Wolverine. I would imagine a film of this caliber is going to have some serious security procedures in place, particularly during post-production, but leaving such a huge gap in release dates is only going to bait those who want to make a name for their avatars on pirate sites.
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kaujot
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2011)

#58 Post by kaujot »

Well, no doubt the film will be pirated, but the seemingly eternally debatable question is, will the people who download the movie (more than likely NOT the film's target audience) actually lead to a loss in profits?

The Wolverine was notable in that the film still did plenty of business, even with the workprint leak far in advance of the release date. Was it as profitable as Iron-Man? No. But something tells me that's more to do with the quality of the film, rather than pirates.
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Matt
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2011)

#59 Post by Matt »

kaujot wrote:Well, no doubt the film will be pirated, but the seemingly eternally debatable question is, will the people who download the movie (more than likely NOT the film's target audience) actually lead to a loss in profits?
That's kind of a weird assumption, though, isn't it? The people who are downloading it don't necessarily want to see the movie? But I was just being glib and, yes, probably a bit underinformed. This film is still going to make more money than any one of us on this forum will ever see in our lifetimes, even if those of us in the US have to wait two months longer than everyone else to see it just so Dreamworks can cram it into an already overstuffed holiday movie season.
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kaujot
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2011)

#60 Post by kaujot »

Well, perhaps I should've said that, if not available for free on the internet, the downloaders wouldn't bother spending money on it.
Cde.
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2

#62 Post by Cde. »

And it looks kinda creepy.
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Finch
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2

#63 Post by Finch »

Looks just as alienating as Polar Express. Beats me why Spielberg felt that it couldn't be plain live action.
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Alphonse Doinel
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2

#64 Post by Alphonse Doinel »

Looks like the combined wet dreams of the members of Blu-ray.com.
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JAP
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2

#65 Post by JAP »

Great looking claymation! :wink:
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Markson
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2

#66 Post by Markson »

I'm neither appalled nor sold. Obviously, the key is how it will all look in motion. But if these Tintin films in any way resemble Zemeckis's recent motion capture abominations, then it'll be a damn shame. I figured the look would be more cartoon-like, like moving Herge on a big screen. Oh well.
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FerdinandGriffon
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2

#67 Post by FerdinandGriffon »

Lens flare is soooo Herge.

I'm disgusted.
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mfunk9786
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2

#68 Post by mfunk9786 »

Is that a live-action photograph of Colin Hanks?
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2

#70 Post by Cde. »

The desert scene and the Thompson twins look more encouraging.
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Finch
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2

#71 Post by Finch »

first teaser

Some shots do look quite impressive but I'm still not convinced that this had to be done as motion-capture.
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Doctor Sunshine
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2

#72 Post by Doctor Sunshine »

Wish they'd gotten some lipsync into the trailer but I think the motion in general is kept cartoonish enough that they might avoid the unreal valley this time around. And it's always enjoyable to see cartoon characters veiny, blemished and freckled. I've got a zero nostalgia factor for Tin Tin but I might check this out.
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domino harvey
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2

#73 Post by domino harvey »

Looks like bollocky wank shite
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Brian C
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2

#74 Post by Brian C »

It looks awful. I don't understand motion capture - there's not a human movement in this film that looks right at all. If you want the stylized look of animation, then do it as animation. If you want live action, do it that way. But it appears that trying to have it both ways is still folly at this point in time.

Plus it doesn't seem compelling anyway.
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Roger Ryan
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Re: Adventures of Tintin Secret of the Unicorn (Spielberg, 2

#75 Post by Roger Ryan »

Brian C wrote:It looks awful. I don't understand motion capture - there's not a human movement in this film that looks right at all. If you want the stylized look of animation, then do it as animation. If you want live action, do it that way. But it appears that trying to have it both ways is still folly at this point in time.

Plus it doesn't seem compelling anyway.
In all fairness, I thought Peter Jackson's use of motion-capture in LORD OF THE RINGS and KING KONG was excellent and a perfect effects choice for what was trying to be achieved in those films. Having said that, I agree that using motion-capture to recreate realistic humans seems like the wrong path to take; a compromise to shooting with live actors.
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