The Adventures of Tintin - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "The Adventures of Tintin"
The Adventures of Tintin (2011)
Timing: 1:47 (107 min)
The Adventures of Tintin - TMDB rating
6.919/10
5761
The Adventures of Tintin - Kinopoisk rating
7.403/10
88555
The Adventures of Tintin - IMDB rating
7.3/10
254000

Actors and characters

Photo Jamie Bell #21857Photo Jamie Bell #21858Photo Jamie Bell #21859Photo Jamie Bell #21860

Jamie Bell

Jamie Bell
Character Tintin (voice)
Photo Andy Serkis #10272Photo Andy Serkis #10273Photo Andy Serkis #10274

Andy Serkis

Andy Serkis
Character Captain Haddock / Sir Francis Haddock (voice)
Photo Daniel Craig #12894Photo Daniel Craig #12895Photo Daniel Craig #12896Photo Daniel Craig #12897

Daniel Craig

Daniel Craig
Character Sakharine / Red Rackham (voice)
Photo Nick Frost #40428Photo Nick Frost #40429

Nick Frost

Nick Frost
Character Thomson (voice)
Photo Simon Pegg #3699Photo Simon Pegg #3700Photo Simon Pegg #3701Photo Simon Pegg #66602

Simon Pegg

Simon Pegg
Character Thompson (voice)
Photo Daniel Mays #43202

Daniel Mays

Daniel Mays
Character Allan / Pirate Flunky #1 (voice)
Photo Gad Elmaleh #52273Photo Gad Elmaleh #52274Photo Gad Elmaleh #52275

Gad Elmaleh

Gad Elmaleh
Character Ben Salaad (voice)
Photo Toby Jones #7102Photo Toby Jones #7103Photo Toby Jones #7104Photo Toby Jones #7105

Toby Jones

Toby Jones
Character Silk (voice)
Photo Enn Reitel #26108

Enn Reitel

Enn Reitel
Character Nestor / Mr. Crabtree (voice)
Photo Mackenzie Crook #17740Photo Mackenzie Crook #17741

Mackenzie Crook

Mackenzie Crook
Character Tom / Pirate Flunky #2 (voice)
Photo Tony Curran #30540Photo Tony Curran #30541Photo Tony Curran #30542

Tony Curran

Tony Curran
Character Lieutenant Delcourt (voice)
Sonje Fortag
Character Mrs. Finch (voice)
Photo Cary Elwes #3753Photo Cary Elwes #3754Photo Cary Elwes #3755Photo Cary Elwes #3756

Cary Elwes

Cary Elwes
Character Pilot (voice)
Photo Phillip Rhys #83367
Phillip Rhys
Character Co-Pilot / French Medic (voice)
Photo Ron Bottitta #41988
Ron Bottitta
Character Sailor / Lookout (voice)
Photo Mark Ivanir #13074Photo Mark Ivanir #13075Photo Mark Ivanir #13076

Mark Ivanir

Mark Ivanir
Character Afghar Outpost Soldier / Secretary (voice)
Photo Sebastian Roché #60701Photo Sebastian Roché #74697

Sebastian Roché

Sebastian Roché
Character Pedro / 1st Mate (voice)
Kim Stengel
Character Bianca Castafiore (voice)

Abraham Justice

Abraham Justice
Character Soldier (voice)
Sana Etoile
Character Press Reporter (voice)

Joe Starr

Joe Starr
Character Barnaby (voice)

What's left behind the scenes

  • The film's plot is based on stories described in the comic books 'The Secret of the Unicorn' (issue No. 11, published in 1942-1943), 'The Crab with the Golden Claws' (issue No. 9, published in 1940-1941), and 'Red Rackham's Treasure' (issue No. 12, published in 1943-1944).
  • Spielberg first acquired the rights to adapt 'Tintin' after Hergé's death in 1983, and again in 2002.
  • Filming was scheduled to begin in October 2008, with a release expected in 2010. However, the release was postponed until 2011 after Universal withdrew from collaborating with Paramount, which had provided $30 million for pre-production. The delays led to actor Thomas Sangster, who had initially been cast as Tintin, leaving the project.
  • One of Simon Pegg and Nick Frost's mentors was choreographer and Cirque du Soleil star Terry Notary. He helped the actors synchronize their duet so that the blunders of the Duponts would look even funnier.
  • Snowy's test animation was performed by animators from Peter Jackson's Weta Digital. To demonstrate the capabilities, Jackson sent Spielberg a video in which the 'Lord of the Rings' director himself played the role of Captain Haddock, while a drawn Snowy spun around his feet.
  • Hergé believed that only Steven Spielberg could bring Tintin to life on the big screen. Unfortunately, the artist passed away shortly before his scheduled meeting with the director.
  • The comic books sometimes featured images of vehicles, such as a 1937 Ford and a seaplane. The drawings were so detailed that animators were even able to identify the model and year of manufacture.
  • Filming took place in a pavilion equipped with a performance capture Volume system. Approximately one hundred cameras were mounted around the perimeter of the ceiling, capturing everything in a 360-degree range and recording information in accordance with the position of each object and actor in space. Actors working in the Volume pavilion wore special suits with numerous mirrored markers, which were picked up by the cameras. This information was translated into a three-dimensional image. Props and sets used in the scenes were also equipped with similar markers. In addition, eight HD cameras filmed scenes as is, that is, directly the actors themselves. This material was subsequently used by animators to ensure that no grimace, smile, twitch, or other emotion and facial nuance went unnoticed. In addition to performance capture technology, facial capture technology was also used, recording emotions based on the distortion of facial lines. The actor wore a helmet that resembled a football helmet and to which a miniature video camera was attached, pointed at the person's face. It recorded the slightest movements of the eyes, lips, and key facial muscles.
  • This is Spielberg's first film in digital format.
  • When Spielberg made his first Indiana Jones film, 'Raiders of the Lost Ark,' fans of Tintin accused the filmmakers of plagiarism. Spielberg wasn't worried about the accusations themselves, but about the unfamiliar word 'Tintin.' With great difficulty, he found out what it was about and ordered several volumes of the comics from France without translation. He flipped through them, became interested. He found English editions. He read them in one sitting. He understood who he had been copying, unknowingly. Decades before Indiana Jones, Tintin combined detective work with archaeology – he uncovered conspiracies, exposed greedy capitalists, and discovered mysterious artifacts in the dust of time.
  • Spielberg received 'blessings' from Hergé over the phone for the film adaptation of the comics.
  • When Tintin sees the seaplane from the boat, he checks the number of cartridges in the Browning pistol he brought from the ship as follows: he removes the magazine, sees one cartridge in it, and tells the captain: 'We only have one cartridge.' This is not true – a second cartridge was in the chamber, in accordance with the pistol’s mechanism.
  • Animators from Peter Jackson’s Weta Digital performed test animation of Snowy. To demonstrate the possibilities, Jackson sent Spielberg a video in which the “Lord of the Rings” director himself played the role of Captain Haddock, while a drawn Snowy spun around his feet.
  • When Spielberg filmed the first Indiana Jones movie, “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” fans of Tintin accused the filmmakers of plagiarism. Spielberg was not troubled by the accusations themselves, but by the unfamiliar word “Tintin.” With great difficulty, he found out what it was about and ordered several volumes of the comics from France without translation. He flipped through them, became interested. He found English editions. He read them in one sitting. He realized who he had been copying, unknowingly. Decades before Indiana Jones, Tintin combined detective work with archaeology – he uncovered conspiracies, exposed greedy capitalists, and found mysterious artifacts in the dust of time.
  • Spielberg received Hergé's "blessing" for the comic book adaptation during a phone call.
  • When Tintin on the boat sees the seaplane, he checks the number of cartridges in the Browning pistol he brought from the ship as follows: he removes the magazine, sees one cartridge in it, and tells the captain: "We only have one cartridge." This is not true – a second cartridge was in the chamber, consistent with the pistol's mechanism.
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