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7/09/2019

National Treasure (2004) - Stars shine in Turteltaub's preposterous adventure baloney

♥♥

Star Nicolas Cage crowns some ancient scrolls on this mystery-indicating poster for Jon Turteltaub's National Treasure



A historian races against mercenaries to find a secret treasure detailed on the back of the Declaration of Independence.

National Treasure is written by Jim Kouf (A Fork in the Road (2009)), Cormac Wibberley and Marianne Wibberley (Motel Blue (1997), both), with Oren Aviv (RocketMan (1997)) and Charles Segars contributing story elements, and directed by Jon Turteltaub (Think Big (1989)).
A type Indiana Jones for another age this action adventure never becomes, and the ambitions also seem set at a lower, popcorn-pushing level of entertainment. 
Nicolas Cage (Kiss of Death (1995)) is in a way miscast here as historian hero Benjamin Gates, the professorial adventurer after a Masonic treasure. The plot is a colorful concoction devised with inspiration from the Dan Brown-mania that was rampant at the time, and set in God's own country, perhaps to distinguish it clearly from its still un-adapted bestseller kin. But the story is far-fetched and superficial, the film unconvincing.
It does have a strong cast, which also includes Harvey Keitel (A Crime (2006)), Jon Voight (Zoolander (2001)) and Sean Bean (Ca$h (2010)).

 

Related post:

 

2004 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I]







Watch a trailer for the film here

Cost: 100 mil. $
Box office: 347.5 mil. $
= Box office success (returned 3.47 times its cost)
[National Treasure premiered 8 November (California) and runs 131 minutes. Development began in 1999. Shooting took place in Utah, New York, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, California, including Los Angeles, and Washington DC in and around September 2003. Cage was paid 20 mil. $ for his performance. The film opened #1 to a 35.1 mil. $ first weekend in North America, where it spent another 2 weeks at #1 and one more in the top 5 (#3), grossing 173 mil. $ (49.8 % of the total gross). The 2nd and 3rd biggest markets were Japan with 16.9 mil. $ (4.9 %) and Spain with 15.9 mil. $ (4.6 %). Roger Ebert gave the film a 2/4 star review, equal in rating to this one. Turteltaub, Cage and several other principals returned with the successful sequel National Treasure: Book of Secrets (2007). In between, Turteltaub directed 2 episodes of Jericho (2006, TV-series). Cage first returned in Lord of War (2005). National Treasure is rotten at 46 % with a 5.32/10 critical average at Rotten Tomatoes.]

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