Belvision Tintin [upd] May 2026

Belvision’s animators faced an impossible task: how to make those diagrams walk, talk, and punch. Their solution was pragmatic but brutal. They simplified Hergé’s intricate character models into rubbery, malleable shapes. Tintin’s iconic quiff became a stiff plastic wedge. Captain Haddock’s beard was reduced to a scribble. The backgrounds, once dense with architectural precision, became watercolor washes.

When we think of The Adventures of Tintin on screen, two polar opposites come to mind: Steven Spielberg’s motion-capture spectacle (2011) and the beloved, painstakingly faithful 1990s animated series by Nelvana. But between the pages of Hergé’s original ligne claire and Hollywood’s digital photorealism lies a strange, forgotten artifact: the 1957-1959 Les Aventures de Tintin by Belvision. belvision tintin

Belvision’s Tintin is a . It proved, empirically, that Hergé’s art is fundamentally anti-animation . The ligne claire is a frozen architecture of the mind. To animate it is to melt an ice sculpture. Nelvana’s 1990s series succeeded only by abandoning Belvision’s approach—slowing the frame rate, adding painted textures, and crucially, respecting the silence between Hergé’s panels. Belvision’s animators faced an impossible task: how to