Tintin is actually a prop

Kody 2022-12-30 22:55:14

Watching "The Adventures of Tintin" gave me the feeling that I was traveling along a river from the source. At the beginning, it was a trickle, but at the end it was always magnificent and merged into the ocean. As a reporter, "Ding Ding" often completes the task of a detective, starting from a strange incident, like solving a puzzle, and finally finding the jaw-dropping truth. On the one hand, there are unrestrained stories here, and the witty and brave Tintin can always solve difficulties subtly, which gives Tintin's text a fantasy color. On the other hand, in the process of finding the truth, the customs of various countries come into view, and the political background and the background of the times echo each other, giving Tintin's text a deep sense of historical reality. The value of "The Adventures of Tintin" is actually reflected in the fusion of this strong fantasy and deep realism.

View more about The Adventures of Tintin reviews

Extended Reading

The Adventures of Tintin quotes

  • Sakharine: [grabs Tom after the ship sinks a lifeboat] You idiots! What have you done?

    Tom: We killed them, boss, like you wanted.

    Sakharine: No! NOT like I wanted! I needed Haddock alive!

    Allan: Wait a minute, boss! There are two boats missing!

    Tom: So, that one must have been a decoy.

    [Sakharine grabs the searchlight, then spots a note Tintin dropped lying on the deck; picks it up; it says, "Bagghar"]

    Sakharine: They're on to us and our destination.

    [turns to Tom]

    Sakharine: Find them!

    [points his cane]

    Sakharine: Make absolutely certain they never reach Bagghar!

    Tom: Yes, boss.

  • Sakharine: [slams Allan against the wall] How could you let them escape? Find them. Find them both.

    Allan: Don't worry. We'll kill them, sir.

    Sakharine: No! You can kill the boy, not Haddock.

    Tom: [groans] What? He's just a hopeless old soak! We should've killed him long since.

    Sakharine: [yanks Tom up close with his cane] You think it's an accident that I chose Haddock's ship, Haddock's crew, Haddock's...

    [yanks Allan up close]

    Sakharine: ... treacherous first mate? Nothing is an accident.

    [a hawk flies over and pearches on Sakharine's left arm]

    Sakharine: We go back a long way, Captain Haddock and I. We've unfinished business.

    [feeds the hawk]

    Sakharine: And this time, I'm going to make him... pay.