♥♥♥♥
+ Best Paris Movie of the Year
QUICK REVIEW:
Renowned Harvard professor of symbology and religious iconography Robert Langdon is flown in from the States to the Louvre in Paris, where an old man has been killed with mysterious signs engraved into his chest. - About a very old secret!
Rarely has a film been surrounded by more hysterical fuss than was the huge adaptation of Dan Brown's (The Lost Symbol (2009)) bestseller The Da Vinci Code (2003). It was greeted with scorn at its Cannes premiere and protested against and banned in nearly a dozen countries because of its supposedly blasphemous content. Akiva Goldsman (A New York Winter's Tale (2014)) wrote the screenplay, and Ron Howard (Frost/Nixon (2008)) directed.
Despite all the hullabaloo, mostly terrible reviews and controversy, Da Vinci Code is an exciting and entertaining, huge, broadly appealing picture, just as it should be. The international cast is impressive, counting Tom Hanks (Saving Private Ryan (1998)), Audrey Tautou (Dirty Pretty Things (2002)), Jean Reno (Léon (1994)), Paul Bettany (A Beautiful Mind (2001)) and more, but it is especially Ian McKellen (Mr. Holmes (2015)), who spreads joy in it, playing a mad atheist.
The flash-backs can seem endless, and the film is very long (running 146 minutes in the theatrical version, (a 174 minute extended cut also exists!)) But Brown's Jesus theory is well-spun and thrilling.
Related posts:
Ron Howard: Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel (2011) - Stapleton's Corman doc. is among the year's best films (interview subject)
2006 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED III]
2006 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED II]
2006 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I]
A Beautiful Mind (2001) - John Nash given the Epic TreatmentBackdraft (1991) - Howard's giant, stupid Chicago-set firefighter movie
American Graffiti (1973) or, Cruisin' Modesto '62 (actor)
Cost: 125 mil. $
Box office: 758.2 mil. $
= Blockbuster
[Despite the reviews and attacks from the Catholic church, or perhaps to some degree because of the controversy, audiences flocked to the film and made it the 2nd biggest hit of the year, only bested by Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest. It had a 77 mil. $ opening weekend in North America, the best ever for both Hanks and Howard. It grossed 217.5 mil. $ (29 % of the total gross) in North America and was a massive hit worldwide. Leonard Maltin called it "a letdown in every respect", while Roger Ebert was in line with Film Excess and gave it 3 out of 4 stars, stating "it works." Its less successful sequel Angels & Demons (2009) is also a fact, and the two will soon be followed by Inferno (2016), the 4th Langdon novel, and the 3rd to be adapted by Howard, with Hanks.]
What do you think of The Da Vinci Code?
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