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Tintin et le Temple du Soleil

Titre original : Tintin et le temple du soleil
  • 1969
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 17min
NOTE IMDb
6,6/10
2,3 k
MA NOTE
Philippe Ogouz in Tintin et le Temple du Soleil (1969)
AnimationAventureFamilleMystère

Basé sur les "Sept boules de crystal" et "Le Temple du Soleil", Tintin et Haddock vont au Pérou, à la recherche de Tournesol, enlevé par des descendants d'Incas suite à un sacrilège. Un jeun... Tout lireBasé sur les "Sept boules de crystal" et "Le Temple du Soleil", Tintin et Haddock vont au Pérou, à la recherche de Tournesol, enlevé par des descendants d'Incas suite à un sacrilège. Un jeune indigène local, Zorrino, se joint à eux.Basé sur les "Sept boules de crystal" et "Le Temple du Soleil", Tintin et Haddock vont au Pérou, à la recherche de Tournesol, enlevé par des descendants d'Incas suite à un sacrilège. Un jeune indigène local, Zorrino, se joint à eux.

  • Réalisation
    • Eddie Lateste
  • Scénario
    • Hergé
    • Eddie Lateste
    • Jos Marissen
  • Casting principal
    • Philippe Ogouz
    • Claude Bertrand
    • Georges Atlas
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,6/10
    2,3 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Eddie Lateste
    • Scénario
      • Hergé
      • Eddie Lateste
      • Jos Marissen
    • Casting principal
      • Philippe Ogouz
      • Claude Bertrand
      • Georges Atlas
    • 9avis d'utilisateurs
    • 5avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos22

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    Rôles principaux27

    Modifier
    Philippe Ogouz
    Philippe Ogouz
    • Tintin
    • (voix)
    Claude Bertrand
    • Le capitaine Haddock
    • (voix)
    Georges Atlas
    • Chiquito
    • (voix)
    Albert Augier
    • Le moustachu costaud s'attaquant à Zorrino
    • (voix)
    Geneviève Beau
    • L'infirmière
    • (voix)
    Jacques Balutin
    • Le témoin bègue à st.nazaire
    • (voix)
    Bachir Touré
      Jean-Henri Chambois
      • Le commissaire péruvien
      • (voix)
      Henry Djanik
      • Un bandit sur le bateau
      • (voix)
      Jacques Jouanneau
      • Le médecin
      • (voix)
      Jean-Louis Jemma
      • Le policier dans la salle de contrôle radio
      • (voix)
      Gérard Hernandez
      Gérard Hernandez
      • Le chef de gare de Santa Clara
      • (voix)
      Serge Lhorca
      • Le chef de gare de Jauga
      • (voix)
      Linette Lemercier
      • Maita
      • (voix)
      Jacques Marin
      Jacques Marin
      • Un des 7 savants
      • (voix)
      Roland Ménard
      • Le conférencier, présentateur de l'expédition des 7 savants
      • (voix)
      Bernard Musson
      Bernard Musson
      • Nestor
      • (voix)
      Jean Michaud
      • Le grand Inca, père de la princesse Maïta
      • (voix)
      • Réalisation
        • Eddie Lateste
      • Scénario
        • Hergé
        • Eddie Lateste
        • Jos Marissen
      • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
      • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

      Avis des utilisateurs9

      6,62.3K
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      Avis à la une

      dbdumonteil

      if you're fond of Tintin...

      A quite successful adaptation of one Tintin's adventure. The animation is nice and some of the elements that made the success of the famous reporter are here to keep the fans happy: exotic sceneries, a mysterious curse and a touch of humor ( of course a bit conventional) brought by the eccentric detectives: the Thompsons. This touch of humor was brought perhaps to lighten the story and to avoid that it's too seriously told. But the result works. You aren't bored at all and Tintin's fans should find something in it.
      7quin1974

      Nice rendition of a cool comic

      I have been a fan of Herge's comic strip albums concerning TinTin (Kuifje in the Netherlands). So I was pleased to view this feature length animated movie based on one of his better stories (not the best, I might add). Although an animated series has been created for Tv based on the works of TinTin, this was surely a treat to watch.

      The animation might not be top-notch as just might find with Disney or Bluth, but it surely was watchable. The story contains typical TinTin detective work, which includes obviously trying to catch the bad-guys and solving some mystery somewhere in the world, this time it is South-America concerning an Old Inca sect.

      The humour can only be appreciated if you are a fan of the comic albums, because it can be quite lame at times, but who cares, this is TinTin. Thompson and Thompson are as ludicrous as ever and Captain Haddock is as hilarious as ever as TinTin's permanent sidekick. Snowy (Bobbie in NL) is as loyal as ever.

      A must-see for fans of TinTin.

      7/10
      10andrewjaulewraed

      great movie!

      this in my opinion is better than the cheesy low budget TV adaption in fact it's way better it has a great music score by Francois rauber in fact in my opinion it's one of the greatest film scores of all time good animation no stock sound effects (except the police siren)and great voice acting (zorrino's voice is a little girlie but who cares)and overall a great movie it is a little rushed but it's way better than the cheesy TV adaption and if you don't agree then you're dumb how could you choose the lame anti climactic ending of the "better" adaption over a great movie like this? anyway it's a great movie infinity stars out of infinity
      4johnnyboyz

      Dreadful, clumsy and badly made animated feature; of which, apart from being head-spinningly dull, is just a tad crass and a mite offensive.

      For all that's at stake; the great danger particular characters therein come to find themselves, as well as the sorts of great distances they travel throughout, Tintin and the Temple of the Sun, an all-animated 1969 adventure film, is excruciatingly bland. At least, I would have settled for bland; the film does have this nasty undercurrent of hatred and ill-thought simmering beneath its surface, epitomised by one of the supporting acts to the titular Tintin and his rather brash characteristics. Primarily, it is a film about how savage and how alien specific ethnicities are, and how they need a white Caucasian male to enter their domain and put them through a process of 'civilisification'. The film, a short and breezy piece clocking in at just over an hour although feeling thrice that, is a dull; uninvolved and somewhat primitive attempt, an adventure film without the sense of adventure, indeed the sense of anything; a film which builds to what it perceives to be some sort of harrowing finale, but can only come across as distastefully xenophobic; a film that is uncourteous and brash without any right to be, a children's film that is repetitive, mean-spirited and really, truthfully terrible.

      The film begins with its bluntest moment of exposition, an individual quite literally walking onto a stage, doubling for a press conference, in which he reveals to us the unfortunate recent history more broadly linked to that of a Peruvian Inca God's tomb. Specifically, those European explorers whom only a few weeks ago raided it and were met with a terrible curse, not death like it perhaps ought to have been, but of a sort that comatosed them. Later, the Philippe Ogouz voiced eponymous hero of the hour, Tintin, that fleet footed; athletic and all round friendly Belgian, although you wouldn't know any of that here without having previously read or seen one of his adventures, is dwelling at home with some of his friends whilst about to host a rendez-vous with one of the explorers yet to be struck down by the curse. The explorer doesn't make it, and is jinxed en-route. Terror additionally strikes when, on account of a confusing blend of unprecedented levels of weather seemingly working in tandem with a pair of dastardly crooks (why would the Inca Gods need both - wouldn't you just need to use one or the other if you actually were/weren't an all powerful being?) infiltrate Tintin's grounds; create a distraction and swipe Tintin's long-standing ally Professor Calculus. Enraged, and with his faithful yet ultimately superfluous pet dog Snowy, as well as the drink-obsessed; loud mouthed; unshaven Captain Haddock (Bertrand), Tintin sets off on a quest to get Calculus back - and Lord, wouldn't you know it, but it isn't long before they realise they've got to dart off to Peru.

      Principally, the film fails on two very basic levels; that of narrative and character, with a further level of deficiency more inclined to issues of representation depressingly propping it up. Nobody learns or discovers anything throughout the course of the film apart from one of the Inca high priests and the truths of his supposedly blood-thirsty ways, an epiphany brought about by humble Westerners. There is a ton of grotesquely misjudged content involving the ever-increasingly irritating Captain Haddock character, whose raging jingoism aimed at the Peruvians (of whom are depicted as simple, backward people engaging in fiestas and localised customs we are invited to gawp at rather than understand) get gradually and gradually more distressing as the film wears on. His unparallelled hatred of his South American surroundings; its people, culture and landscape included, is initially epitomised in his lack of being able to function on a 'proper' wavelength with that of the location's many llamas and their temperamental attitudes. Their clashing often results in the animals spitting into Haddock's face; but where there is an opportunity to establish Haddock as the grizzled man he is, ignorant and pig-headed to his foreign surroundings, before having him see the error of his ways, the film can only have the audacity to feed of this ignorance before including a scene nearer the end in which he gets his revenge on the beast by spitting back into one of their faces prior to departure: nothing has been learnt, and the coming to understand a foreign culture and the attitudes one should evoke in relation to it has been sideswiped for bodily excretial orientated humour.

      Any dramatic content which threatens to rear up prior to this is immediately undercut by that of the presence of two characters: The Thompson Twins; characters whose presence I was never sure as to what the point was. They appeared often as rivals to Tintin, which is a tract that may have worked well; only occasionally, and begrudgingly, teaming up with Tintin and his troupé. Perhaps their being there was motivated not by rescue but by something else – they might have acted as good foils for Tinin's crew, but are instead two characters useless to proceedings and do their best to make the comedic element to the film as painful as possible. The villains, that of the Inca people, are stock bad guys of a non-white variety crudely inserted into the piece; the film punishing the one Peruvian, whom it tries to portray as an ally to Tintin, by victimising them and by rendering their contribution to the task as a guide whom constantly needs aiding in spite of being in his own surroundings. The film, surprisingly and depressingly so, is an ill-judged and badly played production; a film with little in the way of life, verve or competency and is best left alone.
      6Dave_Pit

      Compromised, but still watchable

      It has been some time since I read the fantastic Tintin books by Herge but I remember enough to know that there are a number of changes in this version from the book so do not expect to see an animated book in front of you. One example, look at the front cover of prisoners of the sun ( image is online at Amazon ), it does not appear in any of the frames - why? Maybe considered too "scarey" for animated visuals yet not for a book read by the very same audience. The music and songs are a pretty dire purile Disney-ish addition, and in the dubbed English version the voices grate. Some of the animation is a mite dodgy but generally good ( using the base artistic talent of Herge how could it not be ), but my fiance who did not know when the "filming" had taken place thought it was computerised it was so good enough and in her view more advanced than other cartoons of its day. As a Tintin fan I would love to see a series of feature length films bringing them to life in a more accurate and sympathetic manner that appealed as much to their adult as the child fanbase rather than the current choices we have - 20 minute or 5 minute truncated serialisations on television or the one or two full film length but compromised variants.

      Histoire

      Modifier

      Le saviez-vous

      Modifier
      • Anecdotes
        As the albums almost figures no women in their then-format, a young girl in the Inca settlement was added as a possible love-interest to Zorrino.
      • Versions alternatives
        The two song sequences present in the original French version were cut from the British VHS release. The opening credits were almost entirely removed as well. However, one of the songs was restored for the DVD release, along with the full opening credit sequence.
      • Connexions
        Featured in Moi, Tintin (1976)
      • Bandes originales
        Ôde à la Nuit
        Music by Jacques Brel

        Lyrics by Jacques Brel

        Performed by Lucie Dolène

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      FAQ13

      • How long is Seven Crystal Balls and the Prisoners of the Sun?Alimenté par Alexa

      Détails

      Modifier
      • Date de sortie
        • 13 décembre 1969 (France)
      • Pays d’origine
        • France
        • Belgique
        • Suisse
      • Langue
        • Français
      • Aussi connu sous le nom de
        • Le Temple du Soleil
      • Lieux de tournage
        • Studio Dassonville, Brussels, Brussels-Capital, Belgique(Studio)
      • Sociétés de production
        • Belvision
        • Dargaud Films
        • Raymond Leblanc
      • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

      Spécifications techniques

      Modifier
      • Durée
        • 1h 17min(77 min)
      • Mixage
        • Mono
      • Rapport de forme
        • 1.33 : 1

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