Publicity
Stills of "The Da Vinci Code"
(Courtesy from Columbia TriStar)
Based
on the worldwide best-selling novel by Dan Brown
Genre: Mystery/Drama/Thriller Director: Ron Howard Starring: Tom Hanks, Ian McKellen, Afred
Molina, Jean Reno, Audrey Tautou RunTime: 2 hrs 29 mins Released By: Columbia TriStar Rating: NC16 (Mature Content) Official Website:http://www.sonypictures.com.sg/
Opening
Day : 19 May 2006
Synopsis:
While in Paris on business, Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon
('Tom Hanks') receives an urgent late-night phone call: the
elderly curator of the Louvre has been murdered inside the
museum. Near the body, police have found a baffling cipher.
Solving the enigmatic riddle, Langdon is stunned to discover
it leads to a trail of clues hidden in the works of Da Vinci
- clues visible for all to see, and yet ingeniously disguised
by the painter. Langdon joins forces with a gifted French
cryptologist, Sophie Neveu (Audrey Tautou), and learns the
late curator was involved in the Priory of Sion - an actual
secret society. In a breathless race through Paris, London
and beyond, Langdon and Neveu match wits with a faceless powerbroker
who appears to work for Opus Dei - a clandestine, Vatican-sanctioned
Catholic organization believed to have long plotted to seize
the Priory's secret. Unless Langdon and Neveu can decipher
the labyrinthine puzzle in time, the Priory's secret - and
a stunning historical truth - will be lost forever.
Movie
Review:
Da
Vinci Code has made hoopla all over the world for its controversial
topic, which threatens to shake the basic foundation of Christianity.
Funny that such fictional writing turn movie would create
such uproar among the religious groups. And so the marketing
ploy of the very essence of the book goes around, indefinitely,
unknowingly creating a big “ho ha” among the communities
making Da Vinci Code a must watch. Then came those reports
out of Cannes of how awful it was. But seriously, there isn’t
any reason to boo, nothing to hiss at, no reason to stand
up and walk out in disgust because it’s so terrible.
This film isn’t the worst thing you’re ever going
to see, not by a long shot, and the beatings Howard and actor
Tom Hanks are taking from other critics seems to me, at least
on the surface, more than a bit unfair. What can be said wholeheartedly
is that the rapturously anticipated film adaptation of "The
Da Vinci Code" marks a welcome return to the days when
potential summer blockbusters didn't just rely on mindless
CGI effects to garner moviegoers, but actually featured complexity,
character nuances and a brain. Indeed, director Ron Howard
has somehow succeeded at mounting an old-school thriller just
as heavy on intellect and thought-provoking ideas as it is
on chase sequences and shootouts.
Not
that it’s still any good. Perhaps the expectation was
set too high that any slight disappointment would crumble
the very idolization of this fascinating fictional writing.
At over 150 minutes, this controversial imagining of the secret
life of Jesus Christ is a ponderous, self-serious pseudo puzzle
box whose mysteries are readily apparent to a wary audience
just about half way through. While I appreciate the fact the
filmmakers do not shy away from the book’s central conceit
(Jesus was mortal, married to Mary Magdalene and had a daughter),
Howard and screenwriter Akiva Goldsman treat it with so much
earnest didactic respect, the whole thing ends up coming off
relatively static. The reality is that the scenario presented
here should be a bit of pop entertainment fluff, a fast and
furious mystery whose twists and turns are revealed with enthusiastic
glee, not with pompous solemnity.
Ian McKellan grasps this. Popping up about an hour in as noted
British religious theologian and Holy Grail fanatic Sir Leigh
Teabing, he brings the whole affair to zesty, robust life
almost by his lonesome. This is one of the year’s great
portrayals, the brilliant actor digging into his character
with such relish it becomes a complete joy watching him work.
The man makes a simple request for tea sound like the most
interesting query on the face of the earth, and when he commands,
“Witness the biggest cover-up in human history,”
a person can’t help but sit upright in their theater
seat in rapt attention waiting to hear what that cover-up
is.
If only everyone else shared his bemused flippant intensity.
Surprisingly, Tom came as the weakest link in the storyline.
Thrust suddenly into a murder investigation with biblical
implications, the man’s faith is challenged as the actual
truth of historical events is laid bare thanks to a series
of cryptic clues hidden throughout Europe and involving the
great painter Leonardo Da Vinci. Unfortunately, the actor
is flat; almost stone-faced throughout the picture, and the
deeper Langdon fell inside the mystery the less the actor
seemed to care about where it was all leading.
The rest of the cast is fine even if this isn’t their
best work. Audrey Tautou makes a decent female lead, her character
(police officer Sophie Neveu) helping Langdon navigate the
wild corners of the puzzle while danger and suspicion (and
her own secret) follows them every step of the way. That danger
comes in the form of dogged French detective Captain Fache
(Jean Reno) and mysterious Monk Silas (Paul Bettany). Both
actors may be stuck playing one-dimensional characters, yet
that doesn’t stop either from trying to make the most
of them. Bettany, in particular, manages to invest a great
deal of murderously conflicted pathos into his assassin, his
demise realizing the breadth of his betrayal surprisingly
touching.
As
for the plot itself, for those uninitiated of Dan Brown’s
code, in a nut shell: A curator is murdered at the Louvre
and found displayed in a seemingly ritualistic fashion, visiting
Harvard symbologist professor Robert Langdon (Tom Hanks) is
called in to decode and translate the markings the victim
left at the crime scene before he died. Enter the curator's
estranged granddaughter, French cryptologist Sophie Neveu
(Audrey Tautou), who shows up just in time to warn Robert
that he is the prime suspect in Captain Fache's (Jean Reno)
investigation. As Robert and Sophie go on the run, they gradually
discover a long-standing war being waged between a society
known as the Priory of Sion and the Vatican-sanctioned Opus
Dei Catholic organization involving the secrets behind Jesus
Christ's past—proof that he married Mary Magdalene,
who birthed his child following his crucifixion—and
no less than the Holy Grail itself.
Any
controversy surrounding "The Da Vinci Code" proves
to be unfounded by the film itself. Whether one chooses to
believe the theories set forth by novelist Dan Brown is beside
the point; those viewers paying attention will clearly see
that the story is not about right and wrong or fact and falsehoods,
but about the mere possibilities concerning how our history
may have been shaped. A suspension of disbelief is sporadically
required, but in the context of the smart screenplay by Akiva
Goldsman (2004's "I, Robot"), the historical-based
questions offered up make a mostly logical and convincing
case for themselves.
Most
certainly, movie adaptation of novels, can never reach its
intensity of the original maker but by the time things reached
their conclusion, I can’t really say that’s a
fact the filmmakers should take too much joy from. Howard
and Goldsman make this tale so serious, so ponderously sincere,
the simple joy of watching an intriguing mystery revealed
piece by intricate pieces evaporates even before it has a
chance to begin. Fondness for flashbacks was rather taken
aback which seemed odd in the storyline, other than a truly
jarring car crash (Note: one of cinema’s all-time best).
Pity, because I really do think there is a fun and engaging
thriller begging to be released from all of this. If it had
been a good hour shorter and treated with less prosaic gravity,
I really believe this could have been a real twisty (and twisted)
summertime delight. But the problem lies that clearly divides
those who have read the book and those who are oblivious.
In one hand, those who have come in contact of the novel would
be a little bored because it relatively follows pretty much
the skeletal structure of the book and thus making it predictable.
But in the other hand, those who have no idea can’t
help but scratch their heads and wonder what all the fuss
is about.
Movie
Rating:
(A compelling twist of fictional storytelling in religious
proportion that almost hits home)