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Tintin in America (French: Tintin en Amérique) is the third volume of The Adventures of Tintin, the comics series by Belgian cartoonist Hergé.Commissioned by the conservative Belgian newspaper Le Vingtième Siècle for its children's supplement Le Petit Vingtième, it was serialized weekly from September 1931 to October 1932 before being published in a collected volume by Éditions du Petit ...
For the third adventure, Tintin in America, serialised from September 1931 to October 1932, Hergé finally got to deal with a scenario of his own choice, and used the work to push an anti-capitalist, anti-consumerist agenda in keeping with the paper's ultraconservative ideology. [21]
Tintin in the Land of the Soviets (Tintin au pays des Soviets) (1929–1930) Tintin in the Congo (Tintin au Congo) (1930–1931) Tintin in America (Tintin en Amérique) (1931–1932) Cigars of the Pharaoh (Les Cigares du Pharaon) (1932–1934) The Blue Lotus (Le Lotus bleu) (1934–1935) The Broken Ear (L'Oreille cassée) (1935–1937)
Al Capone is a Chicago crime boss and the main villain in Tintin in the Congo and Tintin in America. In Tintin in the Congo, he runs a criminal diamond smuggling operation, trying to gain control of the African diamond production. He orders thugs to face Tintin in Tintin in America. Capone's main rival in Chicago is Bobby Smiles.
Similarly, in Tintin in America, Tintin gazes at the New York skyline from the ship's deck. In the 1992 television series The Adventures of Tintin, a poster reminiscent of Cassandre's work is displayed in Tintin's cabin aboard The Scheherazade.
Tintin's first appearance in a non-French-speaking country took place in Portugal on April 16, 1936, with the publication of Aventuras de Tim-Tim na America de Norte, a translation of Tintin in America, in the weekly O Papagaio, edited by Abbé Abel Varzim and journalist Adolfo Simões Müller. The story was colored without Hergé's approval ...
In one scene, Tintin hides in a Shanghai cinema that is screening The Sheik's House, Rastapopoulos' film that Tintin witnessed being filmed in the preceding story, later learning that Rastapopoulos, currently staying in the city, was the last person to see a famous doctor who Tintin believes could cure the dangerous poison of madness (Although ...
Following on from Tintin in the Land of the Soviets and bolstered by publicity stunts, Tintin in the Congo was a commercial success within Belgium and was also serialised in France. Hergé continued The Adventures of Tintin with Tintin in America in 1932, and the series subsequently became a defining part of the Franco-Belgian comics tradition.
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