Which is the best T...
 

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[Closed] Which is the best Tintin?

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Difficult, but my top three:

[img] [/img]

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Posted : 15/01/2009 5:39 pm
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Surely a rhetorical question. TIntin being fnking shnit and all.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 5:41 pm
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What's the matter? Didn't have a childhood?


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 5:43 pm
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Even as a child I had zero interest in the adventures of a ginger boy with a quiff, his terrier and his middle aged sailor friend.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 5:46 pm
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"Iconoclast"

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 5:57 pm
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noteeth - Member
What's the matter? Didn't have a childhood?

I did - I went and did stuff rather than reading european newspaper comic strip toss.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 6:06 pm
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I went and did stuff rather than reading european newspaper comic strip toss

Hooray - this is like school. Please don't peanut my tie.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 6:10 pm
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Even Herge hated Tintin. Tintin has zero charisma. He is a complete non character. All the supporting characters are crude clichés just as bereft of character. All of them are totally asexual . His adventures consist of going to a country other than Belgium....ooooooooh imagine the rush.

During the Nazi occupation of Belgium Herge continued to churn out "adventures" for a Nazi newspaper when he could easily have fled to Britain or the US. Hmmmmm. Then there's the matter of those "adventures" actually being largely ripped off obscure Jules Verne stories.

I cant think of a single reason for tintins success, nevermind the high regard its held in today. There must be a word that sums up the phenomenon of people nostalgically holding crap from there childhood in too high a regard?


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 6:27 pm
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I liked how he brought civilization to the fuzzy wuzzies....

[img] [/img]

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Its a fine line between communist to fascist comrade! 🙂


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 6:32 pm
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I used to love comic books as a kid.

But I always preferred Asterix to Tintin.
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 6:36 pm
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[i]nostalgically holding crap from there childhood[/i]

Yawn - I am more than well-acquainted with the Herge backstory. [i]Guess what?[/i] As a 7 year old, it barely concerned me - anymore than Ezra Pound's dalliance with Italian Fascism. I mean, there [i]must[/i] be a word that sums up the phenomenon of adults talking about childhood reading as if it were a third-rate debate on the colonial other. No matter that said comic book adventures prefigured a later love of Conrad and all other manner of writing. Perhaps I should have taken up "full contact combat sports", or whatever the **** it is you advocate on the weight loss thread. Thank gawd I stuck to reading books and riding BMX.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 6:45 pm
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Well there truly are some humourless f*cks on here.

My favourites are the double episode: The Secret of the Unicorn/Red Rackham's Treasure, and I always liked the Tintin and the Shooting Star too.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 6:48 pm
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[i]Its a fine line between communist to fascist comrade![/i]

Hitler and Stalin, up a tree
K.I.S.S.I.N.G.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 6:50 pm
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Reading books and riding BMX sounds like my childhood. Some people are being rather touchy about someone daring to have fond memories of something they aren't bothered about. I liked the Tintin books too, they were good to read when my library ran out of Asterixes!


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 7:02 pm
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Asterix too - goes without saying!


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 7:05 pm
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hamishthecat - Member
Well there truly are some humourless f*cks on here.

My favourites are the double episode: The Secret of the Unicorn/Red Rackham's Treasure, and I always liked the Tintin and the Shooting Star too.

Tintin is a member here?

noteeth - Member

Yawn - I am more than well-acquainted with the Herge backstory. Guess what? As a 7 year old, it barely concerned me - anymore than Ezra Pound's dalliance with Italian Fascism. I mean, there must be a word that sums up the phenomenon of adults talking about childhood reading as if it were a third-rate debate on the colonial other. No matter that said comic book adventures prefigured a later love of Conrad and all other manner of writing. Perhaps I should have taken up "full contact combat sports", or whatever the **** it is you advocate on the weight loss thread. Thank gawd I stuck to reading books and riding BMX.

I am struggling to see the correlation between my advice to an adult trying to loose weight and what constitutes well written and or inventive fantasy for children. I mean, that's a bit of tangent is it not? Maybe you're trying to imply that I am some sort of ignorant meat head? Maybe that's why I cant appreciate the subtleties of tintin?

Or maybe what you what you did was scrub through my posts in a vain attempt to find something silly, contradictory or somehow incriminating, then post one sentence of a much larger piece, completely out of context to vainly try to imply that I talk bollocks??

At the end of the day this is tintin we are talking about here not bible or qua-ran. I figured on a place like the internet I might be able to express an opinion on such a matter, maybe I was mistaken. Maybe tintin is the greatest fictional character ever created.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 7:05 pm
 JoB
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luckily i managed to balance the overt Nazi propoganda of my Tintin books by reading Battle-Action comics where the plucky Brits beat the crap out the Hun and the Nip


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 7:07 pm
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tintin was and has always been shite, I'm sorry, let it go.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 7:11 pm
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[i]I mean, that's a bit of tangent is it not?[/i]

Really? Because I find the phrase "full contact combat sports" utterly hilarious and redolent of Chuck Norris po-faced sensei nonsense. But then I grasp - vaguely - that people might enjoy, y'know, other stuff. Stuff inwhich I have (as you say) "zero interest."


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 7:17 pm
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tintin in tibet, my fave 😆


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 7:19 pm
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I prefer MrNutt's concise expression of his opinion, rather than the "Ooh get me, I know about politics and stuff" approach further up the thread. They're books read by 7 year olds for god's sake.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 7:20 pm
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Really? Because I find the phrase "full contact combat sports" utterly hilarious and redolent of Chuck Norris po-faced sensei nonsense. But then I grasp - vaguely - that people might enjoy, y'know, other stuff. Stuff inwhich I have (as you say) "zero interest."

The reason for using that term was to differentiate between activities where people mimic the movements of combat sports, ie Tae Bo or Boxcercise (which are popular with people attempting to loose weight) and actual combat sports for example Judo, where there is a heavy emphasis on live sparring and physical contact, thus benefiting the participant in more than just a cardiovascular sense.

You can regard it as po faced sensei nonsense if you like, maybe you need to get out more, the fact remains it was in another thread, in a completely different context and for you to use it to assassinate my character because Im not partial to tintin is laughable and tangential to the point of irrelevance.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 7:33 pm
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[i]a vain attempt to find something silly...[/i]

I dunno mate. Please lecture me again on the iniquity of Empire and the paedo subtext to Captain Haddock. Then I'll go away and burn all my childhood things, I promise.

[i]Tintin in tibet[/i]

Good choice - Chang!!


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 7:34 pm
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[i]You can regard it as po faced sensei nonsense if you like[/i]

The point being: it [i]doesn't matter[/i] what I think of it. You enjoy it - good for you.

[i]Maybe tintin is the greatest fictional character ever created.[/i]

Nope - either Anna Karenina or Mint Sauce, imo. 🙂


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 7:40 pm
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I think the biggest crime tintin ever committed was boring me.....and for that I'll never forgive him.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 7:40 pm
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[i]I think the biggest crime tintin ever committed was boring me[/i]

[i]Tintin and The Castafiore Emerald[/i] was incredibly dull, I'll give you that.

fyi disclaimer: I do not hold a low opinion of martial arts - just their misappropriation by Hollywood and would-be alpha males.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 8:01 pm
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I was made to read them in French in Lessons. Never been able to see them a anything other than school work 👿

Marvel/DC comics were more my choice of leisure reading


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 8:07 pm
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noteeth
fyi disclaimer: I do not hold a low opinion of martial arts - just their misappropriation by Hollywood and would-be alpha males.

Well I was going to leave this thread but you just reeled me back....the subtle implication being a "would be alpha male" whatever that means. I guess I'll never know. Was I misappropriating martial arts by suggesting that someone seeking to loose weight should take it up in some form? God forbid someone would do something physically demanding to loose weight and get fit.

With regards to Hollywood's misappropriation of martial arts you'll porbably find that martial arts would have all but died out were it not for hollywood.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 8:25 pm
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[i]the subtle implication being a "would be alpha male" whatever that means[/i]

No, not you! Or anybody giving/seeking to benefit from decent weight loss advice, either.

You know the sort, surely?

[i]you'll porbably find that martial arts would have all but died out were it not for hollywood.[/i]

Fair point - though some filmstars managed it with more dignity than others.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 8:30 pm
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oteeth - Member
the subtle implication being a "would be alpha male" whatever that means

No, not you! Or anybody giving/seeking to benefit from decent weight loss advice, either.

You know the sort, surely?

I suppose I do, however you generally find that people with a point to prove never last in a class environment. People who seem outwardly aggressive or intimidating ( for the sake of argument your typical bouncer ) can actually be very decent civil people, they just have an urge to compete combatively, it's also a large part of how they asses other men.

Fair point - though some filmstars managed it with more dignity than others

Franco Nero?


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 8:48 pm
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[url= http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=RPxa5tC-rt4&feature=PlayList&p=8E44F4B10D51DBE9&playnext=1&index=17 ]This is the best tintin I have ever seen[/url]


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 8:51 pm
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I'm appalled by the attempted character assassination of Tintin on here.

Tintin was my hero when I was a kid. And in fact he probably still is - shame on you.

My favourite one ? Well that's a hard one, but probably Tintin in the Congo. As not only is it an exciting adventure which he has with his guide Coco, but he also gets to help poor people in a third world country - as in the example given above when he helps the sick native with his 'white man's medicine'.

So instead of slagging off the kid, perhaps people need to appreciate what a good role model he still provides for children today.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 8:52 pm
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To avoid unnecessary confusion and insult:

would be alpha male: think Gareth from [i]The Office[/i], talking about his military skills...

[img] [/img]

....as opposed to yer actual zen-like i.e.

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 8:55 pm
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Oh yeah .........

and as for those who complain that Tintin is outdated, how to do you explain this one ?

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 9:03 pm
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Go to any town centre at 1am on a weekend - "would be alpha males" natural territory. Easy to spot by their loud vocalisations, colourful plumage and a mate grabbing their jacket saying "come on steve, he's not worth it"


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 9:04 pm
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[i]people with a point to prove never last in a class environment.[/i]

I work for the NHS - and often observe supposedly well'ard types fainting at the sight of blood/needles/matron. Not that it's a class environment, mind... 😳


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 9:11 pm
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Anyway....tintin


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 9:14 pm
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Tintin, indeed.

G.Gus - genius!


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 9:17 pm
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TinTin is sh1t.

Asterix is sh1t.

They're both sh1t.

HTH


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 9:23 pm
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Who ever thought Tintin would illicit such animosity - much be some very insecure individuals on here to get so worked up over a fictional comic character.

Personally I thought the books were fantastic and still own the complete set, always preferred Tintin to Asterix, although they were pretty good as well.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 11:06 pm
 will
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[url= http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=so6mJnBca4I ]These are rather good [i](and funny)[/i][/url]


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 11:14 pm
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Objectif Lune (aka Destination Moon)
On a marché sur la Lune (aka Explorers on the Moon)
Tintin en Amerique (easy one that one)

Read them all in French but primarily because that's what language I had them bought for me in as a kid.


 
Posted : 15/01/2009 11:52 pm
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The BEST Tintin by far is Tintin, english,25, plays at small forward even tho he's 6`10" and is the star player for Reading Rockets Basketball team. An athelete we could all aspire to be alike. Google "David Tintin Watts" basketball. Wish I could be like nah nah anh. lol 😉


 
Posted : 16/01/2009 12:00 am
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For the fans - get the boxed set of Tintin movies:

[url] http://www.amazon.co.uk/Adventures-Tintin-75th-Anniversary/dp/B0001Z5YW8/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=dvd&qid=1232076642&sr=1-1 [/url]

At that price you can't fail to get them - they're ace, and what's more they're pretty true to the English versions of the books too, same artistry etc...

[/PSA]


 
Posted : 16/01/2009 3:32 am
 juan
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Tintin chez les soviets.
As merchandising I find the "dictionnaire des insultes du Cpt Haddock" amazing.

I don't really know how Asterix could be good in English (or any other than french to be honest) as a lot is probably lost during the translation.


 
Posted : 16/01/2009 10:23 am
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[url= ]Sorry. Just had to do it![/url]

Anyway, Asterix was much better.


 
Posted : 16/01/2009 10:35 am
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Juan, the translations of Asterix and Tintin into English are great actually, pretty much all the puns and humour are adapted really well.

Kingtut, why does that not surprise me, I suspect you spent your childhood reading the ingredients on Ginster's wrappers. 😉

I don't really have a favourite Tintin book, they all kind of merge into each other, like James Bond films. When I was a kid I liked King Ottaker's Sceptre (where he thwarts the Nazis) and the Blue Lotus (where he saves Chinese people from the clutches of the dastardly Japanese). Although the politics were completely lost on me at the time I wonder if my parents steered me towards the more PC ones.

Noteeth, if you haven't read it already Harry Thompson's biography of Herge is well worth a look.

And Geordie Tintin is great. "You radge puff."


 
Posted : 16/01/2009 11:27 am
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My current favourite!

[img] [/img]

(Plus we live next door in a tiny chalet called Milou... the French TinTin fans will get that one...)


 
Posted : 16/01/2009 11:47 am