Fictional history The Secret of the Unicorn is partially set in 1676. In the English translation, the
Unicorn sails under the
Union Jack during the reign of
Charles II of England and is commanded by
Sir Francis Haddock, an ancestor of
Captain Haddock. In Hergé's original French version, however, ''
flies the French flag for the French Navy under King Louis XIV and is commanded by Chevalier François de Hadoque. No ship named the Unicorn
was listed in the annals of the French Navy during the 17th century. However, from 1634 to 1688 the English Royal Navy had a ship of the line named HMS Unicorn'' which was, coincidentally, commanded by a
Captain Haddock. ''
Red Rackham's Treasure (1944) tells of the adventure Tintin and his friends undertake to recover the lost treasure of the pirate Red Rackham, believed by Tintin to be aboard the shipwrecked Unicorn
. Sir Francis had built three models of the Unicorn
and had hidden a treasure map inside each one. The adventure, told across both books, leads Tintin to the Unicorn'' and to the lost treasure. A 2011 feature film adaptation of both
Tintin books retells the story of the
Unicorn.
The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn directed by
Steven Spielberg and produced by
Peter Jackson was released in October–December 2011.
Plot role While sailing in the
West Indies in 1676, the
Unicorn, commanded by Sir Francis Haddock, is seized and captured by a group of pirates led by Red Rackham. The pirates hoist a red pennant—no life would be spared. During the battle, Sir Francis is hit and loses consciousness. Later, the members of the
Unicorn crew still alive are killed or thrown overboard. Sir Francis regains consciousness, finding himself tied to the
mainmast. The pirate ship is damaged and sinking, so Red Rackham moves his treasure on board the
Unicorn. The ship then sails to an uninhabited island. When anchored near the shore of the island, Sir Francis manages to free himself and goes below deck to the
Unicorn gunpowder stores. Whilst there, he encounters Rackham for the final time, killing him in a sword fight. Before escaping in the ship's jolly boat, he is able to set fire to the gunpowder by means of a slow-burning fuse, causing the
Unicorn (with Rackham's drunken crew and presumably Red Rackham's treasure still aboard) to explode and sink. In the present day, Tintin, his dog
Snowy, and his friends Captain Haddock and
Professor Calculus follow coordinates that Sir Francis had left his three sons in a strange riddle hidden in three model ships of the
Unicorn. Reaching the coordinates, they discover the island and, upon diving, they find the wreck of the
Unicorn. Although they recover various artefacts from it, they do not find the treasure. Back in Belgium, Tintin realises that Sir Francis' message referred, not to the location of the
Unicorn, but to a globe mounted on a statue in Sir Francis' former country home. Understanding now that Francis would never have left the treasure but would have taken it with him to his home, Tintin locates the coordinates to the treasure on the globe, presses a secret button he finds there, and discovers Red Rackham's treasure hidden inside. == See also ==