The Adventures of Tintin: Secret of the Unicorn

Now this is truly bittersweet news to report. While in London for The Lovely Bones, Peter Jackson updated the BBC on the status of Steven Spielberg’s Tintin and confirmed that filming is complete. The kicker? It’ll take about two years for the computer animation to be completed (remember this is a 3D motion-captured CG film).

I suppose we shouldn’t have expected any better when they announced that the film would be released on December 23, 2011—but I was still hoping that through some miracle we’d see the film earlier.

Jackson’s full comments on Tintin:

Tintin is great. It’s made. The movie is cut together and now [we] are turning it into a fully-rendered film… So the movie, to some degree, exists in a very rough state.

While improvements in computer processing may eventually allow them to complete the film sooner, I don’t suspect that Paramount will budge from their current release schedule. I’m just hoping we get annual releases for the other films in the trilogy to make up for this torturous wait.

As for The Hobbit, we previously mentioned that the first script was completed, but Jackson spilled more info to the BBC. He mentioned that he was scouting locations in New Zealand prior to arriving in London, and that there would be continuity between his film’s and Guillermo Del Toro’s Hobbit:

We’re writing the screenplays with him, so in terms of the script, there is continuity.

We’re writing Ian McKellen’s dialogue just the same as we did in Lord Of The Rings. But Guillermo, being the director, will obviously take the script and interpret that and shoot his film. So that’ll be interesting to see.

That’s actually the reason I wanted him to do it. I felt like I’d be trying to compete with myself and deliberately do things differently, which is not the way I want to work. I want it to be natural.

Jackson also confirmed that Del Toro will be shooting the picture on film (which he prefers since it will keep the look of the earlier films), and that 3D isn’t a consideration. He does believe 3D “only adds to the experience” (it’s a big part of the Tintin trilogy, after all).

I honestly haven’t revisited The Lord of the Rings trilogy recently, but this recent influx of Jackson news has given me the urge. Now I just wish they quit holding back on that upcoming Blu-ray set.

  • Wes
    Damn, 2011? I loved reading those books as a kid.
  • It's tough to budge, especially since there are so many huge movies with a finite number of good release dates - It'd be interesting if Harvey came out before this, as it doesn't sound like Spielberg is going to be super hands on from here on out.

    I love listening to Weta's podcast, those guys are just so excited that they have Jackson, Cameron, Spielberg, del Toro and others constantly working there or calling in to their suburban workshop
  • solarguardian
    Your right. For a long time ILM has been the king of the effects world but now it's Weta's turn to shine.
  • I'd be excited, too. Seriously... that is a movie buff's absolute dream, having those guys in your midst all the time.
  • [A]
    "Jackson also confirmed that Del Toro will be shooting the picture on film" -- best part of the article.
  • Yes! I still don't think that 3D is really that big of improvement. Old grainy film all the way.
  • fanboy_d
    I'm sure I'll love Tintin, but of all the comics Spielberg could've tackled, I really wish he'd have chosen a superhero... :(
  • 2 yrs just for animation! thats a lot of time!... this better be good!!

    Sarah
    http://www.isopurewater.com/
  • Before we know it this will be on our screens, time will absolutely fly. And even when we do feel the wait, it'll be worth it.
  • goldfarb
    "While improvements in computer processing may eventually allow them to complete the film sooner..."

    it doesn't work like that...Weta, like all other VFX studios will not change hardware in mid production...
  • quintushalls
    Where is Professor Calculus?!
  • The very fact that Jackson already commented that movie already exists in rough form sans renderring is a testament that it's Spielberg's movie and there is no need to create any ambiguity here.

    Jaskson involvement in post-production has nothing to do with actual DIRECTING. Even Miyazaki has separately credited and full fledged animation directors on his films but this doesn't change the fact that it is his vision that they are executing.
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