Belvision Tintin «Linux Top-Rated»
Belvision’s animators faced an impossible task: how to make those diagrams walk, talk, and punch. Their solution was pragmatic but brutal. They simplified Hergé’s intricate character models into rubbery, malleable shapes. Tintin’s iconic quiff became a stiff plastic wedge. Captain Haddock’s beard was reduced to a scribble. The backgrounds, once dense with architectural precision, became watercolor washes.
Belvision’s Tintin, voiced by the unknown child actor (who also voiced the French dub of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer ), is not a cipher. He is a stranger . His voice is too high, too earnest, devoid of Hergé’s subtle irony. His movements—arms flailing, legs kicking in a repetitive cycle—suggest a manic energy that Hergé’s still panels never implied. belvision tintin
Spielberg’s motion-capture film succeeded by doing the opposite: abandoning line altogether for volume, light, and shadow—a betrayal of Hergé’s surface to save his spirit. Belvision’s animators faced an impossible task: how to