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IMDbPro

Tintin et le mystère de la Toison d'Or

  • 1961
  • 1h 44min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,1/10
1672
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Tintin et le mystère de la Toison d'Or (1961)
AvventuraCommediaCrimineFamigliaFantascienza

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaTintin and Captain Haddock try to discover what is so desirable about their old and apparently worthless ship.Tintin and Captain Haddock try to discover what is so desirable about their old and apparently worthless ship.Tintin and Captain Haddock try to discover what is so desirable about their old and apparently worthless ship.

  • Regia
    • Jean-Jacques Vierne
  • Sceneggiatura
    • André Barret
    • Rémo Forlani
    • Hergé
  • Star
    • Jean-Pierre Talbot
    • Georges Wilson
    • Georges Loriot
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,1/10
    1672
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Jean-Jacques Vierne
    • Sceneggiatura
      • André Barret
      • Rémo Forlani
      • Hergé
    • Star
      • Jean-Pierre Talbot
      • Georges Wilson
      • Georges Loriot
    • 14Recensioni degli utenti
    • 15Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Foto72

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    Interpreti principali21

    Modifica
    Jean-Pierre Talbot
    Jean-Pierre Talbot
    • Tintin
    Georges Wilson
    Georges Wilson
    • Capitaine Haddock
    Georges Loriot
    • Professeur Tournesol
    Milo
    • Milou
    • (as Milou)
    Charles Vanel
    Charles Vanel
    • Père Alexandre
    Marcel Bozzuffi
    Marcel Bozzuffi
    • Angorapoulos
    • (as Marcel Bozzufi)
    Max Elloy
    Max Elloy
    • Nestor
    Serge Marquand
    • Le Facteur
    Henri Soya
    • Claudion
    • (as Henry Soya)
    Michel Thomass
    • Yéfime
    Darío Moreno
    Darío Moreno
    • Midas Papos
    • (as Dario Moreno)
    Dimitris Myrat
    Dimitris Myrat
    • Anton Karabine
    • (as Demetrios Myrat)
    Dimos Starenios
    Dimos Starenios
    • Scoubidouvitch
    • (as Demos Starenios)
    Gamonal
    • Dupont
    • (as Les Frères Gamonal)
    • …
    Guy Henry
    Guy Henry
    • Un bandit
    Ulvi Uraz
    Ulvi Uraz
    • Malik
    Dora Stratou
    Dora Stratou
    • Danseurs et musiciens folkloriques
    • (as Panygrist de Dora Stratou)
    Faik Coskun
    Faik Coskun
    • Cayci
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Jean-Jacques Vierne
    • Sceneggiatura
      • André Barret
      • Rémo Forlani
      • Hergé
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti14

    6,11.6K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    7euroGary

    An enjoyable rarity

    I had never heard of this 1961 film before seeing it at the 2016 Edinburgh International Film Festival. It is not based on one of Hergé's books, but the storyline - involving a trip to İstanbul, a dilapidated boat, a South American revolution and hidden treasure - contains elements that will be familiar to anyone who has read a couple of them. It also has a definite 'feel' of 1960s films about it.

    With any comic book adaptation the main issue, of course, is how close to the source material are the characters? As everyone's favourite boy reporter (sorry, Jimmy Olsen!), Jean-Pierre Talbot is game as tuppence, leaping about rocks and boats like a mountain goat, acquiting himself well in two choreographed fight scenes (even if he does seem to enjoy them more than Tintin should) and, in stripping down to a pair of tiny blue swimming shorts, showing far more skin than his pen-and-ink counterpart ever did. As Captain Haddock, Georges Wilson I found less impressive - although that may be because whenever I read one of the books Haddock always sounds, in my mind, like human foghorn Brian Blessed. Other characters appearing from the books include Professor Calculus, ineffectual policemen Thompson & Thomson (with a 'p' and without), Nestor the butler and, of course, Snowy the dog (who spends lots of his time being cradled in Tintin's arms then suddenly dropped on the floor, poor animal). Barring Tintin's blond (instead of ginger) hair, they are all styled to look very much like Hergé's illustrations - and that creates an unexpected problem, because when only they are on screen the viewer does not notice anything unusual about them, but when sharing space with characters created especially for the film, who have not been so styled, they look by comparison cartoony and unreal.

    Still, this is an enjoyable film - enjoyable enough, indeed, that I shall forgive the glaring continuity error where, early in the film, Tintin says he never touches alcohol, then at the end of the adventure is seen knocking back a glass of champagne...
    8Andy-296

    Very well made adaptation to the screen of Tintin

    This relatively little known French live action film from 1961 was the first time that Tintin (the famous boy reporter created by Belgian cartoonist Herge) was brought to the silver screen. It is also probably the best, certainly capturing better Tintin's spirit than the recent Spielberg film. It obviously helped that Herge has creative input in this, unlike with other movies based on Tintin (though this was not based on any particular book but was rather an original story for the screen). The story has Captain Haddock unexpectedly inheriting a boat in Istanbul. When he goes there with Tintin to retrieve the boat, not only it turns out to be a rotting barge, but also there are a lot of baddies trying to pursue them and the boat. It soon becomes clear that the boat is involved with some treasure. Jean Pierre Talbot and Georges Wilson are perfect as Tintin and Haddock. And the attractive locations (Istanbul, Athens, Meteora in Greece) filmed with lush color certainly help a lot.
    6Leofwine_draca

    Looks great

    A so-so storyline (not based on one of the Herge comic books) is the only thing that spoils this otherwise enthralling live-action adaptation of the TINTIN comics. It's probably the best-realised live-action version of any comic book I've seen, with characters who truly look the part and scenery and backdrops which could have come straight from Herge's pen.

    The meandering storyline involves Tintin, Snowy, and Captain Haddock finding themselves in possession of a rusting and seemingly worthless old hulk. When a gang of criminals begin hunting them down, they soon realise the battered old ship has more to it than meets the eye, and to solve the mystery they embark on a globe-trotting adventure. The comedic parts of the narrative are the best bits while the rest of it can be a little stagey at times.

    TINTIN AND THE GOLDEN FLEECE is delightfully old-fashioned in its approach and definitely tongue in cheek to boot. Jean-Pierre Talbot is pitch perfect as the titular character and Georges Loriot simply sublime as Professor Calculus. Georges Wilson is less assured as Captain Haddock - he looks and feels more like Popeye's Bluto - but at least he gives it his all. A bumbling cameo from the Thompson Twins is much welcome, but the real delight here is the dog playing Snowy. A more perfectly-trained and characterful creature you couldn't find, and the bit with him and the dynamite is the highlight of the entire movie.
    9reneartois

    Tintin done properly!

    I have been a fan of Tintin for almost all of my life, having read every book (including Tintin in the Land of the Soviets, Tintin in the Congo, and Tintin and the Alph-Art). While I did enjoy the Spielberg/Jackson film, it lacked the proper feel of a Tintin album. There was too much action and too many special effects, despite having great talent. That is where this movie, Tintin et le Mystere de la Toison d'Or (Tintin and the Golden Fleece) succeeds, and does so dramatically.

    The plot is simple, and familiar to those who have read Tintin before. A friend of Captain Haddock, Paparanic, dies, and leaves in his will a ship named the Golden Fleece. Tintin and Captain Haddock go to Istanbul to collect it. But it's a rusty old bucket, as Haddock might have said, and he plans to sell it. A man named Karabine claims he is an old friend of Paparanic and offers a small fortune for the boat. Tintin is suspicious and declines the offer. Then the threats come and it seems that a group of people will stop at nothing to have the ship in their hands. The ship, Tintin reasons, must be hiding something, and he intends to find out.

    Firstly, the characters. Jean-Pierre Talbot is, essentially, Tintin. He embodies the character perfectly and brings the athleticism and energy needed for the role, natural considering he was a personal trainer at the time. Captain Haddock, played by the well-known, BAFTA-nominated Georges Wilson, may have one of the most unreal beards in the history of film, but that is part of the charm. He also is cast superbly, with the gruffness needed for the role and also the heart of Captain Haddock (as evidenced by the scene where he speaks to the portrait of his dead friend. Calculus has very little to do but makes the most of his screen time with a nice invention and a connection to the ship's parrot, and Thomson and Thompson, incognito, have a few good scenes, and also fit the role perfectly. One cannot forget Snowy, who is ideal and looks perfect. The casting is so excellent it feels like the characters walked of the pages of Herge's albums. The rest of the cast includes, Dario Moreno, the Turkish singer, as one of Paparanic's old shipmates, and, happily, Marcel Bozzuffi as the secondary villain, who you may recognize from The French Connection, who has a very nice fight with Talbot.

    It is one thing to have perfect characterizations, but the Golden Fleece succeeds where almost all other Tintin movies have failed by capturing the spirit of Tintin. Spielberg and Jackson had the right ideas in mind (particularly, I think, Jackson) but the action is too over-stated and the movie as a whole opts for grandness when subtlety would have done much better. The climactic crane fight at the end of that film was fine when assumed as a modern-day version of a sword fight, but Tintin's villains were not brought to justice by shipyard equipment or the equivalent; they were captured by gunpoint, traps, or by sheer coincidence. The same goes for the rest of Spielberg's creation. Laying waste to a city is surely not Tintin's style. Tintin and the Mystery of the Golden Fleece is so much better because it understands this and seeks to make itself like a Tintin album. The story is light yet intimate, well-paced and simple, and virtually eliminates all exposition (although for the mass of people who were assumed to never have read Tintin before, Spielberg had to accommodate, naturally). Most importantly, the direction is absolutely dynamic. The camera-work is exactly as it would be in a Tintin book. It is again simple, with little weight, and to the point. There is little trickery, little grandiosity, unless it is necessary: as Herge did with his landscapes, so Istanbul is portrayed from overhead for a while, but even then non-pretentiously. Although the movie lacks some subtleties that only Herge could have created, it ticks all of the other boxes. Thankfully, an excellent release came out on DVD not too long ago. The picture is very clear, clearer than any other version I have seen. And the sound is better, which is just as well because the music is also fantastic in this. This is a must-see for any Tintin fan, casual or Tintinologist. Also worth watching is the slightly less excellent sequel, Tintin et les Oranges Bleues (Tintin and the Blue Oranges), also with Jean- Pierre Talbot.
    8Alberto-7

    Well done comic book adventure

    This is easily the best of the two live-action Tintin adaptations(the other being TINTIN ET LES ORANGES BLEUES which was ok, but nothing special). For the uninitiated, Tintin is the well known Belgian comic book character created by Herge. Every French-speaking child and most European children have grown up following his many comic book adventures. The film is not an adaptation of a Tintin story but this does not matter greatly. Instead we have an exciting adventure that sees Tintin and Capitaine Haddock travel to Turkey to claim a boat(the Toison D'or)that the good captain inherited from a friend. The intrigue starts at this point as numerous people want the boat for some mysterious reason. Jean-Pierre Talbot is perfectly cast as Tintin. Not only does he resemble the character physically but he shares the enthusiasm and athletic agility of his comic book counterpart. Georges Wilson is also good as Capitaine Haddock(gruff and a little silly). The beautiful sun-drenched Turkish and Greek locations are a delight to look at and the story moves along at a good clip. Milou the dog is also quite good. What more can one ask for? An excellent film for the young and young at heart.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      The first live-action adaptation of The Adventures of Tintin, with a script that did not connect with the books.
    • Blooper
      Near the end as the marching band comes towards Haddock and Tintin, Professor Tournesol can be seen at the far right of the screen awaiting his cue carrying his latest invention.
    • Curiosità sui crediti
      Dupond et Dupont (Thomson and Thompson) are credited 'Incognito'.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in Moi, Tintin (1976)
    • Colonne sonore
      Ailleurs
      Music by André Popp

      Lyrics by Pierre Delanoë

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 6 dicembre 1961 (Francia)
    • Paesi di origine
      • Francia
      • Belgio
    • Lingue
      • Francese
      • Turco
      • Greco
    • Celebre anche come
      • Tintin and the Mystery of the Golden Fleece
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Istanbul, Turchia
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Alliance de Production Cinematographique (APC)
      • Union Cinématographique
      • Téléfrance
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 44min(104 min)
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.66 : 1

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