*The Times of India* rated the movie 2.5/5 stars and although the movie was 
appreciated for being painstakingly crafted; it was criticized for being 
too dour and clinical and bereft of humour, pace and drama.[3]
Blue Oranges Movie

*Download File* https://cinurl.com/2wHIRM


The term "blue orange" is a moderately popular image among the French, and 
was originally inspired by Paul Éluard's strange quote *"Earth is blue like 
an orange"* as a reference to the colour of the fruit when it rots.

Professor Calculus on (black-and-white) TV broadcasts an appeal to help end 
world hunger. He receives many letters and parcels, and among them is a 
blue orange, which can grow in desert conditions (and glows in the dark) 
from Professor Zalamea, but no letter of explanation. That night, two 
thieves break into Marlinspike Hall and steal the blue orange. With no 
other choice, Calculus, with Tintin, the Captain, and Snowy, go to Valencia 
(filmed in Burjassot, in Simat de la Valldigna at the Monastery of Santa 
María de la Valldigna, Gandia and Xàtiva).

Arriving, they find he is not present at his hacienda and are met by his 
cousin. Professor Calculus is kidnapped to help Zalamea perfect the blue 
oranges, which with neutron bombardment can mature in just five days, but 
they taste bitter and salty, making them inedible.

Tintin befriends a local boy, who takes him to his gang hideout and he 
finds out that a boy who was to take the parcel to the post office for 
Zalamea was attacked by a man with a blue dragon tattoo on his hand. 
Thomson and Thompson turn up from Interpol, investigating Zalamea's 
disappearance, and have an unfortunate incident with a bull.

All turns out well and they are back at Marlinspike Hall for a celebration 
and photos. It is said that they hope to perfect the oranges within 10 
years and also to learn to grow wheat, potatoes, eggplants, etc. in the 
desert. Just then, Thomson and Thompson turn up in their car, crash, and 
end up in the fountain, to the amusement of all. Greedy dogs eat a "THE 
END" sign.


*Tintin and the Blue Oranges* (French: *Tintin et les Oranges bleues*) is a 
1964 French film set in France and Spain. It was the second live-action 
Tintin movie, with an original story based on characters created for the 
comic book series The Adventures of Tintin, written and drawn by the 
Belgian artist Hergé. It was less successful than its predecessor, *Tintin 
and the Golden Fleece*. The movie itself is available on video cassette and 
DVDs, in 2018 the movie was released with restoration in 4K. The same DVD 
has *Tintin and the Mystery of the Golden Fleece* as well.

Professor Calculus on (B&W) TV broadcasts an appeal to help end world 
hunger. He receives many letters and parcels and among them a blue orange 
which can grow in desert conditions (and glows in the dark) from Professor 
Zalamea, but no letter of explanation. That night, two thieves break into 
Marlinspike Hall and steal the blue orange. With no other choice, Calculus 
with Tintin, the Captain and Snowy go to Valencia (filmed in Burjassot, in 
Simat de la Valldigna at the Monastery of Santa María de la Valldigna, 
Gandia and Xàtiva).

Arriving, they find he is not present at his hacienda and are met by his 
cousin. Professor Calculus is kidnapped to help Zalamea perfect the blue 
oranges which with neutron bombardment can mature in just five days. 
Unfortunately they taste bitter and salty so are presently no good.

Tintin befriends a local boy who takes him to his gang hideout and he finds 
out that a boy who was to take the parcel to the Post Office for Zalamea 
was attacked by a man with a blue dragon tattoo on his hand. Thomson and 
Thompson turn up from Interpol, investigating Zalamea's disappearance and 
have an unfortunate incident with a bull.

All turns out well and they are back at Marlinspike Hall for a celebration 
and photos. It is said that they hope to perfect the oranges within ten 
years and also to learn to grow wheat, potatoes, eggplants etc. in the 
desert. Just then, Thomson and Thompson turn up in their car, crash and end 
up in the fountain, to the amusement of all.

A guaranteed original French 'Petite' movie poster from the 2017 re-release 
of Phillippe Condroyer's 1964 adventure "Tintin et les Oranges bleus", 
translated in to English as "Tintin and the Blue Oranges".

The movie centres on a mysterious 'blue orange' with the ability to grow in 
arid desert conditions and to glow in the dark. After it's theft, Tintin, 
Haddock and Snowy set off to Spain to solve the crime and world hunger.

This classic poster (with artwork by Herge) is for the 2017 re-release of 
the movie. Unlike most French posters, it has never been folded and is in 
superb condition. A fantastic poster for any Tintin fan.

Tintin and the Blue Oranges (Tintin et les oranges bleues in French) is a 
1964 Live-Action Adaptation film of the famous Tintin series of comics, and 
the sequel to 1961's Tintin and the Golden Fleece. Like the aforementioned 
film, it boasts an original story, rather than being based on any album. 
Jean-Pierre Talbot reprises his role as Tintin, though Captain Haddock is 
now played by Jean Bouise and Professor Calculus by Félix Fernandez.

Calculus receives a strange parcel in the mail from the famous Professor 
Zalamea, containing a blue orange that glows in the dark and which can be 
grown in the desert, making it a potential solution to world hunger. When 
the orange is stolen, Calculus, Tintin, and Haddock all travel to Valencia 
to meet Zalamea and explain the situation to him. However, Zalamea has been 
kidnapped, and so is Calculus, with their abductors seeking to use the blue 
oranges for their own benefits. Tintin is helped by a gang of local 
children in his search for the missing professors.

Professor Calculus's friend develops a blue-skinned orange that can grow on 
any kind of land and survive harsh weather (in the manner of Lue Gim Gong) 
and therefore solve world hunger. The Professor and his friends, however, 
run afoul of gangsters who also covet the fruit. The adventure takes them 
from their home in Marlinspike Hall (Moulinsart), a fictional mansion that 
is presumably in Belgium, to Spain, where Calculus and another scientist 
are kidnapped.

By Piya Sinha-Roy LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Gene Wilder, whose wild curls and 
startling blue eyes brought a frantic air to roles in the movies "Willy 
Wonka and the Chocolate Factory," "Young Frankenstein" and "Blazing 
Saddles," died on Monday at the age of 83, his family said. Wilder, whose 
best work included collaborations with director-writer Mel Brooks and 
actor-comedian Richard Pryor, died at his home in Stamford, Connecticut, 
from complications of Alzheimer's disease, the family said in a statement. 
Wilder's nephew, Jordan Walker-Pearlman, said the actor had chosen to keep 
his illness secret so that children who knew him as Willy Wonka would not 
equate the whimsical character with an adult disease. Wilder's barely 
contained hysteria made him a go-to lead for Brooks, who cast him in 
"Blazing Saddles," "Young Frankenstein" and "The Producers" in the 1960s 
and '70s. "Gene Wilder - one of the truly great talents of our time. He 
blessed every film we did with his magic & he blessed me with his 
friendship," Brooks said on Twitter. Besides his classic collaborations 
with Brooks, Wilder paired memorably with comedian Richard Pryor in hits 
"Silver Streak" and "Stir Crazy." Wilder also was active in promoting 
ovarian cancer awareness and treatment after his wife, "Saturday Night 
Live" comedian Gilda Radner, whom he married in 1984, died of the disease 
in 1989. He helped found the Gilda Radner Ovarian Cancer Detection Center 
in Los Angeles and co-founded Gilda's Club, a support organization that has 
branches throughout the United States. Born Jerome Silberman to Russian 
immigrants in Milwaukee, Wilder studied at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre in 
Bristol, England, and then studied method acting at the Actors Studio. A 
leading role in a play that also starred Anne Bancroft, who was dating her 
future husband Brooks, led to Wilder becoming a top member of Brooks' stock 
company of crazies, some of whom branched out with Wilder into other film 
ventures. Wilder's first movie role was a small part as a terrified 
undertaker who was abducted by Bonnie and Clyde in Arthur Penn's 1967 film 
of the same name. The following year he was panic-stricken Leo Bloom to 
Zero Mostel's conniving Max Bialystock in Brooks' "The Producers," picking 
up an Oscar nomination for best supporting actor. While it initially got a 
tepid response, the movie with its over-the-top song "Springtime for 
Hitler," went on to become a cult favorite and, years later with a 
different cast, a monster hit on Broadway. Wilder was a last-minute fill-in 
as the "Waco Kid" in Brooks' "Blazing Saddles" in 1974, and with Brooks 
wrote the screenplay for "Young Frankenstein" released later that year, 
also to big box office returns. The two were nominated for best screenplay 
Oscars, but lost to Francis Ford Coppola and Mario Puzo for "The Godfather 
Part II." With Brooks alumni Madeline Kahn and Marty Feldman, Wilder made 
his directorial debut with 1975's "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' 
Smarter Brother," and directed several other movies with uneven results. 
Wilder's title role in "Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory" earned him a 
Golden Globe nomination in 1971, and he was nominated again in that 
category in 1976 for "Silver Streak." He won an Emmy in 2003 for 
outstanding guest actor in a comedy series for appearances on "Will and 
Grace." Wilder's memoir, "Kiss Me Like a Stranger: My Search for Love and 
Art," was released in 2005 and he collaborated with oncologist Steven Piver 
on the book "Gilda's Disease" in 1998. He was hospitalized in 1999 with 
non-Hodgkin lymphoma but was said to be in complete remission in 2005. 
Wilder lived in Stamford in a house built in 1734 that he had shared with 
Radner, writing and painting watercolors with his wife Karen Boyer, whom he 
married in 1991. (Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy in Los Angeles; Additional 
reporting by Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles; Editing by Bill Trott and James 
Dalgleish)
eebf2c3492

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