Johann
12-27-2011, 11:23 AM
I went to the movies with a friend on Christmas Eve and we saw Steven Spielberg's The Adventures of TinTin.
Excellent film.
For children, for adults, this film is for everybody. A new franchise has been launched in amazing 3-D style.
Peter Jackson produced it, with his special effects teams at Weta providing all of the glorious CGI and motion capture wizardry.
Jackson's trusty man-of-all-trades Andy Serkis is Captain Haddock, and I completely forgot that it was Serkis "portraying" him.
Revelations like that are reasons I go to movies. To see an actor disappear into a role is what I want to see.
The camera is truly a motion-picture camera.
It goes everywhere, and a sequence where an eagle flies through the air in pursuit of one of the 3 pieces to a mystery about the Unicorn ship was amazing.
It looked like one take! Darting around and over everything in it's path- it was marvelous.
I'm not a fan of children's movies particularly, but I don't have anything against them. It's just that I see so few of them that I'm kinda outta the loop. But this one is really great. It may be the best thing I've seen Spielberg do since A.I.
The opening credits are cool and peppy and visually awesome.
A new style of CGI characters has arrived, and it's totally convincing.
It's convincing because we know as an audience that these characters are not real. That's part of the fun.
We know while watching that it's not "real" but we give it up anyway.
TinTin's dog Snowy is the star. He's a dog with an IQ.
Indeed he's smarter than the humans most of the time.
I read that Spielberg put 3 seperate TinTin stories into one movie but I didn't notice.
It's all seamless and a real treat to watch.
I want to see this again on a big screen. The 3-D is not intrusive. In fact, it accents the story to a T.
The images pop and sing.
Spielberg has had critical rockets fired at him for eons (and a lot of it is justified) but I have to say that this film re-iterates why he's so revered.
He has taken to 3-D and motion capture like a duck to water and hit a giant home run with this movie.
It's virtually flawless!
Seriously- tell me how and why this movie fails.
That's right.
You can't.
Spielberg and Peter Jackson are reigning kings, damn the critics.
If Spielberg throws me a movie that I can't criticize, then he's alright.
He's a good man.
Bravo for The Adventures of TinTin.
I look forward to more films in this series.
It won me over huge.
Excellent film.
For children, for adults, this film is for everybody. A new franchise has been launched in amazing 3-D style.
Peter Jackson produced it, with his special effects teams at Weta providing all of the glorious CGI and motion capture wizardry.
Jackson's trusty man-of-all-trades Andy Serkis is Captain Haddock, and I completely forgot that it was Serkis "portraying" him.
Revelations like that are reasons I go to movies. To see an actor disappear into a role is what I want to see.
The camera is truly a motion-picture camera.
It goes everywhere, and a sequence where an eagle flies through the air in pursuit of one of the 3 pieces to a mystery about the Unicorn ship was amazing.
It looked like one take! Darting around and over everything in it's path- it was marvelous.
I'm not a fan of children's movies particularly, but I don't have anything against them. It's just that I see so few of them that I'm kinda outta the loop. But this one is really great. It may be the best thing I've seen Spielberg do since A.I.
The opening credits are cool and peppy and visually awesome.
A new style of CGI characters has arrived, and it's totally convincing.
It's convincing because we know as an audience that these characters are not real. That's part of the fun.
We know while watching that it's not "real" but we give it up anyway.
TinTin's dog Snowy is the star. He's a dog with an IQ.
Indeed he's smarter than the humans most of the time.
I read that Spielberg put 3 seperate TinTin stories into one movie but I didn't notice.
It's all seamless and a real treat to watch.
I want to see this again on a big screen. The 3-D is not intrusive. In fact, it accents the story to a T.
The images pop and sing.
Spielberg has had critical rockets fired at him for eons (and a lot of it is justified) but I have to say that this film re-iterates why he's so revered.
He has taken to 3-D and motion capture like a duck to water and hit a giant home run with this movie.
It's virtually flawless!
Seriously- tell me how and why this movie fails.
That's right.
You can't.
Spielberg and Peter Jackson are reigning kings, damn the critics.
If Spielberg throws me a movie that I can't criticize, then he's alright.
He's a good man.
Bravo for The Adventures of TinTin.
I look forward to more films in this series.
It won me over huge.