BOTTOM
LINE:
The Dan Brown page-turning
novel dealing with the ultimate conspiracy of our time has been
translated in to one of the most boring, stupid, and clumsy blockbusters
in recent memory. One has to wonder how A-star talent like Ron Howard
and Tom Hanks could have made such a bad movie.
THE
GOOD: Dan Brown’s
novel was an instant best-seller and caused much controversy over
its exploration of the ultimate conspiracy of all time: that the
Catholic Church has kept the true nature of Jesus Christ and his
royal blood line a secret so as to maintain the established religious
order and keeping people’s faith. Much of the dialogue and
detail that made the book so fascinating is present in the movie
and makes for intriguing debate, including the war between the Prior
of Sion (an order dedicated to the truth of Jesus) and Opus Dei
(a secret offshoot of the Church dedicated to destroying the Prior
of Sion and its secret). In the scenes where Robert Langdon (Tom
Hanks) and Sir Leigh Teabing (Ian McKellen) explore the stories
of the Holy Grail and its actual meaning, and more importantly,
why the Church would kill to keep it a secret, the film will at
least peak your interest as the book so effectively did. Ian McKellen
is the one member of the cast who is clearly relishing his time
in the pulp conspiracy spotlight, lending an energetic performance
as Teabing to the overall aesthetic as he goes through lengthy explanations
of Da Vinci’s work and the history of the whole thing. Langdon’s
introduction at a university lecture at the head of the film is
quite interesting in his explanations of symbols and their interpretation.
If nothing else, the material raises the possibility that symbols,
stories, and even what we know as truth could have been distorted
over time and history by those seeking to change its influence to
satisfy their own ends.
THE
BAD: Aside from the
ideas its raises and the visuals, everything about this film is astonishingly
bad. Ron Howard must have checked his brain at the door when he signed
on as director because there are so many illogical plot holes, uninspired
acting, stupid dialogue and a clumsy attempt to make the film a thriller
by inserting a chase plot over what is essentially a dialogue-driven
and professorial conspiracy piece. The biggest mistake of all, and
I know this as I have read the book, is that the film follows the
book to the letter. Film translations from novels always undergo changes
in order to take advantage of the film medium and “The Da Vinci
Code” should have been no exception. This story, as structured,
works perfectly in the book but it is death on film. Character is
substituted for exposition. The thriller aspect in the book looks
arbitrarily pasted on to the dialogue sequences, leaving no tension
at any point in the film. As a result, you have the likes of the brilliant
Tom Hanks looking totally flat, only having an arbitrarily inserted
minor plot dealing with his claustrophobia to play with which does
not have any real relevance to anything. With the exception of Ian
McKellen, all the cast come across as poor caricatures that are in
some cases quite laughable. Then there is the illogical nature of
the piece. For example, when Sophie (a mis-cast Audrey Tatou) shows
up to help Langdon, they successfully manage to trick the police in
to leaving the Louvre Gallery in order to escape. This gives them
time to examine the crime scene and the puzzles left behind from the
opening scene of the film. Perhaps someone can explain to me how a
professional police force would leave a crime scene totally unattended
while they blindly chase a red-herring? But it is convenient for Langdon
and Sophie to examine the Da Vinci puzzle left by the dead man. The
film is full of these contrivances, with the biggest of all coming
at the end when Langdon figures out that Sophie is in fact the last
living descendant of Jesus Christ; an instant joke to be sure. Maybe
they were making a comedy?