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The Da Vinci Code


Directed by: Ron Howard
Starring: Tom Hanks
Genre:
Action/Adventure
Run Time: 149
min.
Release Date:
May 2006
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
The trouble with making a
movie out of book so wildly popular as THE DA VINCI CODE is that
we all knew (just knew!) it'd have problems. Detractors will lambaste it
for the pages of the novel that had to be cast aside for the sake of
film time (the movie is still 2 hours and 29 minutes, though) and any
changes to characters or plots (all of which have happened.) But when
you transfer a book to film, a certain amount of trust has to go to the
screenwriters; a level of trust that basically says, "Please don't screw
this up! But give us a good story that'll engage film audiences!"
I've read The Da Vinci Code and I must say
that the book was interesting, but I felt it didn't live up to the hype
surrounding it. I was continually astounded to see it on the best seller
list month after month after month. I kept asking myself, "Did I miss
something? Was it really that good?" Maybe. Either way,
however, I approached this film with a fairly high level of trepidation.
"Will the movie be over-hyped, too?" I'm happy to say that this is an
adequate film (thus my three star rating.) But I don't believe it'll
stay in theaters as long as the book stayed on the best seller lists.
The film does follow the book surprisingly well. Tom Hanks
plays symbologist Robert Langdon. He's in Paris autographing his latest
book when a police officer approaches and asks him to come to the Louvre.
Once there, Mr. Hanks discovers that a murder has taken place. A curator
that Mr. Langdon was supposed to meet that night was murdered and his
body desecrated. But it appears the dead curator desecrated his own
body. But why? Sophie Neveu, a young detective played by Audrey Tautou,
arrives at the scene and soon Mr. Langdon's life begins to unravel.
Trapped by the French police, a murder investigation in which he is the
prime suspect, a secret society of ultra-worshippers known as the Opus
Dei, and a group of Templar Knights in hiding, Robert Langdon is quickly
whisked into a life of puzzle solving in order to find a secret that
could unravel Christianity as we know it.
Much controversy surrounded the film before its release. The main
complaints came from albinos. Amazingly I heard nothing from this
genetic group while the book was out, but now that the film is here,
they've emerged from the woodwork. Why? I'll let you all think about
that one on your own.
There have been complaints, too, that the film is "too slow to get
going" or that Tom Hanks and Audrey Tautou gave wooden performances. I
didn't see that.
I will complain about Tom Hanks in this role, however. I'm sure Ron
Howard and he work together comfortably after their previous
collaborations …from SPLASH to APOLLO 13. But I just
couldn't swallow Mr. Hanks as the prime character. There was zero
chemistry between him and Mrs. Tautou, and his long hair was …well
…nasty looking (like it needed a good washing.) He's getting up there in
age and I think Clive Owen or some other up-and-coming actor would've
been a wiser choice.
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Image from The Da Vinci
Code

DVD cost: $14.99
Purchase:
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Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
Officials from Britain's
Westminster Abbey refused to allow filming to take place in the Abbey,
claiming that the book is "theologically unsound". Instead, the filming
took place at Lincoln Cathedral in eastern England.
Movie Quote: "You
and I, Robert, we have observed history. We are in history now."
Other Actors/Actresses
from The Da Vinci Code
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