აირჩიეთ ენა

Belvision Tintin | [better]

On the surface, Belvision’s effort—producing over 100 minutes of animation across eight stories ( The Crab with the Golden Claws , The Black Island , etc.)—was a milestone: the first serious attempt to bring Tintin to the moving image. But beneath the surface, the Belvision Tintin is a fascinating case study in , industrial constraint , and the inherent tragedy of adapting a frozen, perfect world into a fluid, imperfect one. 1. The Heresy of Movement: Killing the "Ligne Claire" Hergé’s "clear line" is not just an art style; it is a theology. It relies on absolute stasis, uniform line weight, flat color, and the absence of shadow. The world is logical, ordered, and readable. Every panel is a diagram.

The result is what media theorist might call "motion-induced entropy." By adding frames, Belvision subtracted meaning. The ligne claire demands the viewer’s eye to complete the circuit; animation short-circuits that process. The Belvision Tintin moves less like a person and more like a marionette whose strings are being cut. It is the uncanny valley of simplicity . 2. The Poverty of Prosperity: Economic Subtext Hergé was a notorious perfectionist and control freak. He famously despised the 1947 stop-motion film The Crab with the Golden Claws (directed by Claude Misonne) because Tintin’s celluloid face "didn't look right." Yet, a decade later, he licensed his crown jewel to Belvision, a studio founded by Raymond Leblanc —the very publisher of Tintin magazine. belvision tintin

When we think of The Adventures of Tintin on screen, two polar opposites come to mind: Steven Spielberg’s motion-capture spectacle (2011) and the beloved, painstakingly faithful 1990s animated series by Nelvana. But between the pages of Hergé’s original ligne claire and Hollywood’s digital photorealism lies a strange, forgotten artifact: the 1957-1959 Les Aventures de Tintin by Belvision. The Heresy of Movement: Killing the "Ligne Claire"