Become a Member
Life

Was Tintin’s creator drawing on hate?

January 6, 2017 13:30
9781405266987_ppt

ByBrigid Grauman, Brigid Grauman

3 min read

If ever there was a classic comic book hero it has to be Tintin, the boy reporter, defender of the weak. The books, translated into more than 100 languages, have sold 230 million copies worldwide; the original artwork sells for hundreds of thousands of pounds; and there are more than 400 books about Herg, Tintins Belgian creator.    

Adding to the myth is Paris’s hugely successful Grand Palais show Hergé on until January 15.

Yet the dark cloud of supposed antisemitism still hangs over Hergé’s conduct during the Second World War. A Jewish film-maker who made a documentary about Hergé in the 1970s believes the artist helped the film to get made to absolve himself of guilt. Henri Roanne-Rosenblatt, born in Vienna in 1932, came to Belgium on a kindertransport and spent the war in hiding. “We met in 1971 and I told him that I had been struck by how much his comic strips reflected contemporary history; hasn’t anyone ever made a film about that? And he said, why not you?”

Roanne-Rosenblatt didn’t take Hergé’s suggestion seriously, until reminded by Hergé’s secretary. “He said, ‘you know Hergé never does anything by chance’.” So he decided to make the film, with friend and colleague Gérard Valet. “Hergé said, it’s your film, it’s entirely up to you, and gave me unfettered access to his archives. The only subject he asked me to avoid was his private life.” Hergé was leaving his wife at the time.