List about the best Tintin comics
The Adventures of Tintin is one of the most influential European cartoon series of the twentieth century. Created by the Belgian author Georges Remi (Hergé), and characteristic of the graphic and narrative style known as 'clear line', it is constituted by a total of 24 albums, the first of which was published in 1930 and the penultimate one in 1976 (the last, Tintin and Arte-Alfa, did not finish, although the sketches made by the author were later published). In the series, together with Tintin, an intrepid reporter of youthful aspect and never clarified age that travels all over the world together with his dog Milú, there are a series of secondary characters that have achieved as much or more celebrity than the protagonist: among them, Captain Haddock, Professor Tornasol, detectives Hernandez and Fernandez and singer Bianca Castafiore. The adventures of these characters are carefully set in real scenarios of the five continents, and in imaginary places created by Hergé, such as Syldavia or San Theodoros. Especially from the fifth album of the series (The Blue Lotus), the author documented meticulously about the places visited by his characters. The series knew from its beginnings an unprecedented success. It is estimated that more than 200 million albums have been sold since its inception in more than 60 languages, 3 not counting the pirated editions. The adventures of the character of Hergé are also the object of cult and collecting throughout the world. The phrase of Charles de Gaulle is famous, according to which his only rival in the international plane was Tintin.4 The fame of Tintin has not been, however, free of controversy, since some of the first albums of the series have received criticism for allegedly showing a colonialist and racist ideology.
In this list about the best Tintin comics you can find:
25. Tintin and the art-alpha (1986)
24. Tintin in the Land of the Soviets (1930)
23. Tintin and the lake of the sharks (1972)
22. Tintin in America (1932)
Tintin in the Congo (1931)
Tintin and the 'Pícaros' (1976)
Tintin in the country of Black Gold (1950)
The broken ear (1937)
The mysterious star (1942)
The Scepter of Ottokar (1939)
Stock of Coke (1958)
The jewels of the Castafiore (1963)
Flight 714 for Sydney (1968)
The crab of the gold claws (1941)
The Black Island (1938)
The blue lotus (1936)
The Temple of the Sun (1949)
The cigars of the pharaoh (1934)
The treasure of Rackham the Red (1944)
Landing on the Moon (1954)
Objective: the Moon (1953)
The Tornasol case (1956)
The 7 crystal balls (1948)
The secret of the unicorn (1943)
Tintin in Tibet (1960)
25. Tintin and the art-alpha (1986)
After several years of a certain lack of ideas, all the data indicate that this new album by Tintin would have been one of the best: the positivism of the stroke and the enthusiasm it shows indicate that Hergé had achieved a consistent thread for the story. Tintin and Art-Alpha ends with a vignette in which the bad guys take Tintin pointing him in the back with a gun. It would seem obvious that Tintin would have been saved, had the story ended. However, various data suggest that it really could not have been this way: the testimony of people close to Hergé, as well as the fact that Hergé consulted a friend if he could make Tintin die on the terrace of his house, point to a Unusual end ...
24. Tintin in the Land of the Soviets (1930)
The argument revolves around the Belgian reporter Tintin and his dog Milú, who travel to Moscow, via Berlin, to make a report on the policies instituted by the communist president Joseph Stalin. However, an agent of the Soviet secret service, the OGPU, tries that Tintin does not do it, reason why it puts traps to get rid of him. Despite this, the young reporter will gradually discover the secrets of the Bolsheviks and how they are stealing food from the Soviet citizens, manipulating the elections and assassinating their opponents.
23. Tintin and the lake o...
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