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Tintin - Belvision Dvd

However, these were not direct adaptations. Unlike the later faithful versions, the Belvision productions were often loose adaptations of the source material. The studio produced eight feature-length films and a 60-episode daily serial, Les Aventures de Tintin, d'après Hergé .

Check your local used media stores, set alerts on eBay France ( eBay.fr ), and be prepared to buy a multi-region DVD player. The Belvision Tintin is a strange, wonderful, and almost forgotten ghost in the Tintin canon—and for those willing to search, the DVD remains the only key to that past.

However, if you are a collector, a film historian, or a fan of animation history, tracking down the is a quest worthy of Tintin himself. It is a window into a world where the rules of Hergé’s meticulous art were broken, where Tintin had a thinner neck and Captain Haddock had wilder eyes. tintin belvision dvd

This is precisely why the remains the only legal way to view these films in high fidelity. Because streaming services refuse to negotiate the complex patchwork of international rights for such a niche library, physical media is the sole archive. A Word of Warning: Moulinsart’s Stance It is important to note that Hergé’s estate, Moulinsart (now part of TintinImagination), has historically distanced itself from the Belvision productions. In official biographies of Hergé, these films are often glossed over or described as "unfortunate necessities" of licensing. The estate has pursued takedowns of digitized versions on YouTube.

Consequently, any current pressings of the are almost guaranteed to be remaindered stock or pirated copies. If you see a "Brand New 2024 Remastered Belvision Box Set" on an e-commerce site, run—it is a bootleg. Conclusion: Is it Worth the Hunt? If you are a casual fan of the The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn movie, the Belvision DVDs might feel jarring. The animation is limited (repetitive walks, lip flaps that don't sync), the stories deviate wildly from the books, and the character designs can be rough. However, these were not direct adaptations

For over nine decades, the adventures of the intrepid young reporter Tintin, his dog Snowy (Milou), and the cantankerous Captain Haddock have captivated audiences worldwide. While fans are intimately familiar with Hergé’s original comics and the CGI motion capture films of Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson, there exists a fascinating, controversial, and highly collectible chapter in the franchise’s history: The Belvision Studios animated series (1959–1964).

For collectors, obtaining a is not merely about buying a film; it is an act of archaeological preservation. These DVDs represent the first time Tintin ever moved and spoke on screen, albeit in a radically different form than modern viewers expect. What is the “Belvision” Series? Before the 1990s animated series (often called the “Ellipse/Nelvana” series) or the recent feature films, there was Belvision. In the late 1950s, Hergé granted the Belgian animation studio Belvision (affiliated with the Franco-Belgian media company Le Lombard ) the rights to adapt his work. Check your local used media stores, set alerts

Happy hunting, and as Captain Haddock would say: "Mille millions de mille sabords!" (Blistering barnacles!)