"The Adventures of Tintin" is the "Raiders of the Lost Ark" sequel Steven Spielberg might have made if he hadn't felt the need to keep Shia LaBeouf on the payroll. A rollicking, breezy motion-capture ...
The animation technique used for “The Adventures of Tintin” is called “motion capture,” and it sure does capture a lot of motion. “Tintin” is based on the Belgian comics about a mystery-solving, ...
Adventure has a new name: Tintin. Steven Spielberg’s animated directorial debut “The Adventures of Tintin” is visually triumphant and chock-full of classic Spielberg-isms -- both good and bad. Adapted ...
Steven Spielberg turned 65 this past Sunday, closing out one of the busiest years of his long and storied career. In 2011 alone he produced "Super 8" and was the executive producer on "Transformers: ...
The directors of "Winnie the Pooh," "Cars 2," "Puss in Boots," "Kung Fu Panda 2," "Rio," "Rango" and "Tintin's" animation supervisor also discuss their influences and 3D. By Matthew Belloni, Noela ...
It's what Tintin does: He saves the day. Tintin is on the case in the Spielberg-directed 'The Adventures of Tintin.' He's been doing it for decades in Europe, where the comic-book adventurer created ...
There is always controversy about what is true animation, particularly with the motion capture process which uses real performances by actors and then essentially animates the scenes. I’m told that ...
“The Adventures of Tintin” is the “Raiders of the Lost Ark” sequel Steven Spielberg might have made if he hadn’t felt the need to keep Shia LaBeouf on the payroll. A rollicking, breezy, motion-capture ...
THR chief film critic Todd McCarthy dissects 2011's good, bad, and downright excruciating toons. By Todd McCarthy Steve Spielberg's "The Adventures of Tintin" captures a spirit of adventure and ...
Seven months after "Mars Needs Moms" led to questions about the future of motion-capture animation, Steven Spielberg is showing that audiences might not have totally rejected the technique, after all.
The French may hold animation, graphic novels, comic books and comic strips in higher regard than Americans do, if the crowds at two museum exhibitions here are any indication. “Hergé,” a survey of ...
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