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Tintin, Snowy
Jacques Brinon  /  AP
Tintin and his dog, Snowy, grace a Parisian cultural center last fall. It's not clear whether DreamWork's film will be animated or live action.
updated 3/12/2007 12:20:42 PM ET 2007-03-12T16:20:42

It was a quarter-century in the making, but then nothing is easy for cartoon heroes such as Tintin.

Steven Spielberg’s DreamWorks has committed to produce at least one movie about the adventures of the intrepid Belgian reporter, Nick Rodwell, head of Moulinsart NV, Tintin’s commercial studio, said Thursday.

“After 25 years, they finally said, ‘OK, let’s go,’ ” Rodwell said of the protracted talks with Spielberg. Rodwell said the Hollywood company will go into preproduction for a movie, which should appear in theaters in about two years.

“It’s been a project on our future-development plate here for quite a number of years, always with the idea it was something we would like to make,” DreamWorks spokesman Marvin Levy said.

He emphasized that the film was not in the can yet. “I don’t think we are at that point yet,” Levy said. “It’s premature to say who or when or where.”

It wasn’t clear whether the film would be cartoon animation, computer animation or a movie with actors — or which of the 24 cartoon books of Tintin’s adventures would be picked.

“If movie No. 1 works, we will continue,” Rodwell said.

Talks about a Hollywood movie on Tintin, who saves the lives of countless people and makes sure criminals end up behind bars, have long stalled on financial issues and production questions.

Slideshow: Celebrity Sightings The first plan surfaced just before Tintin’s creator, Georges Remi, aka Herge, died in 1983. Even at that time, Remi, one of the world’s foremost cartoon strip authors, delighted in Hollywood’s interest.

“If Steven Spielberg wants to make a Tintin film I cannot imagine anything better,” Rodwell said of Remi’s sentiments. Remi realized a movie adaptation might change the way Tintin looks.

“Let’s see what he comes up with,” Rodwell said.

Tintin books have sold 220 million copies worldwide and have been translated in 77 languages.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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