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Tintin fans of movement would love everything about the movie — the setting, the characters, the references scattered all over. Even if you were not a Tintin fan, you would infatuation the 3-D movie for its state-of-the-art technology. Did you watch “The Adventures of Tintin”?
That Steven Spielberg, whose movies depend so much on actual-time emotions, should opt for an animation flick is a surprise. Well, when Spielberg goes in for digital cinematography, he does it in dash. In “ The Adventures of Tintin” he takes up James Cameron's insurrectionist motion-capture technology (aka performance capture or mo-cap) to tell the life story of Tintin, the intrepid boy reporter, using Peter Jackson's party Weta to get the 3-D, photorealistic effects. Spielberg and Jackson go from comic order to cinema screen using the latest VFX technology.
In a press deliverance some months ago, Jackson said, “We're making them look photorealistic; the fibres in their clothing, the pores on their outer layer and every individual hair. They look exactly like real people — legitimate Hergé (writer-illustrator of the comics) people!
Source: The Hindu