Yes after directing turkeys like War of the Worlds, Indiana Jones and the Crystal Skull and producing turds like the Transformers movies, Spielberg has finally lived up to at least some of his reputation with his latest movie: The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn.
Obviously
 based on the comic strips by the Belgian artist Georges Remi (Hergé), 
Tintin is done quite proud here in this movie. It’s fun, energetic, 
suspenseful, and thoroughly entertaining stuff! And yes that is a colon 
you see in the film title. Inevitable sequels ahoy!
The whole thing is motion capture animation which as a method of storytelling is slowly but surely getting there. Tintin is probably the best mo-cap movie out there to date, probably because Spielberg is at the helm.
It’s
 actually a very good movie, one of the best of the year, which is 
pleasantly surprising as I wasn’t really expecting a whole lot from it 
because well, it’s mo-cap, which I think takes a lot out of actor’s 
performances, and it’s directed by Spielberg who’s been completely lost 
in the wilderness before this movie hit the screens.
But
 for some reason mo-cap and Spielberg have combined to create a really 
good movie filled with drama, suspense, comedy and a dog called Snowy. 
In fact I actually prefer that it is in filmed using mo-cap! I wouldn’t 
change it! That’s how much I like this movie!
The
 reason for that is the way it’s filmed. Some of the all-in-one camera 
shots would simply be impossible for a real life camera to achieve. 
Whether it be following Snowy from the streets into the apartment all in
 one go, or the thrilling chase scenes that revolve around our hero 
effortlessly.
As
 for the characters themselves they’re done well enough. Jamie Bell 
plays Tintin well, very British in his demeanour, but it’s the animation
 that brings out the most of his character. The slightly rosy cheeks, 
the inquisitive eyes, the iconic flick of hair creating wonderful 
shadows throughout; all of it is stunning. Another reason why mo-cap has
 beaten conventional filming for once.
Captain
 Haddock is done well too played by Mr mo-cap himself, Andy Serkis. 
Haddock is the funniest character by a long way. Thompson and Thompson, 
played by Pegg and Frost, raise the odd smile but it’s Haddock who hogs 
the comedy in this movie. From his alcoholic antics to his banter with 
Tintin, he really is the funniest character on the screen by far.
One
 of the most memorable scenes, is where Tintin must retrieve a key from a
 sleeping crewman amongst all the other sleeping deckhands. Haddock 
proclaims he shouldn’t wake them but in reality they’re such heavy 
sleepers they end up being tossed around all over the place due to the 
boat rocking, and they never even being become slightly disturbed. It’s 
genius.
It’s not a perfect movie though, there are some negatives.
Firstly
 some of the action scenes are unbelievable at times. One scene has 
Tintin chasing a hawk around the city weaving in and out of buildings, 
zip-lining across ropes and all the while I’m thinking: why doesn’t the 
bird just fly upwards where Tintin can’t reach him instead of 
conveniently flying along a rope where he can follow. GAME OVER TINTIN.
It’d
 also have been nice to see some more political satire in there. It was a
 big thing in the comic books and it would’ve been good to see it 
transfer to the big screen. Professor Calculus is also missing, which is
 a shame, I’d expect to find him in the sequel.
Of
 course those issues are a great example of my knit-picking skills, but 
the one major gripe that I think is a real issue was the ending. It’s a 
bit rubbish. I won’t spoil it but the way it ends is just so 
anti-climactic and only really serves as a set-up to the sequel. I much 
prefer movies to stand on their own two feet as their own separate 
entities, not just become part of an obvious trilogy.
That
 being said though, I really did enjoy the movie and I think quite a lot
 of people would appreciate it. Even if you don’t like motion capture 
you should give this a go. You never know it might turn you.
Final Verdict: 4 Stars. A great movie elevating Spielberg back to where he belongs.

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