The Da Vinci Code
(Theatrical Film Review)
Stars: Tom Hanks, Audrey Tautou, Ian McKellen, Paul Bettany
Director: Ron Howard
Critic's rating: 2 out of 10
Review by Chuck O'Leary
There's a reason why Sony Pictures waited to unveil The Da Vinci Code until
the opening night of the Cannes Film Festival, and waited until Wednesday night
or Thursday night to screen it for most critics. The reason is Sony
wanted to minimize the terrible buzz on a movie that's bad enough to
offend even an atheist.
One lesson Sony should have learned is that if you're
doing a highly-touted film version of a best-selling novel; don't
cast Tom Hanks in the lead. Warner Bros. and Brian De Palma learned this
the hard way 16 years ago after miscasting Hanks in De
Palma's megabomb film version of The Bonfire of the Vanities.
But somehow Ron Howard let history repeat itself in his film adaptation of The Da Vinci Code.
But why ridicule The Bonfire of the Vanities by mentioning it in
the same breath with an all-time turkey like The Da Vinci Code. Bonfire
suddenly seems like an unfairly maligned masterwork when compared to Howard's
monumentally stupid film version of Dan Brown's controversial best-selling
book.
But it's not all Hanks' fault. Not by a
longshot. The storyline of The Da Vinci Code is so
preposterous that it's hard to believe anyone with half a brain could take it
seriously. The fact that Brown's book sold so well doesn't speak well for
the intelligence of a large portion of the public. This is what
all the hype is about?
I didn't read the book, so I can't compare the two,
but it appears Howard kept the gist of the novel's thesis -- that the
foundation of Christianity was built on a lie and the Catholic Church has kept
the cover-up going for 2,000 years. The result is more
absurd left-wing revisionist history that blasphemes Christians, Catholics
in particular, to further advance the anti-Christian agenda, of
which the entertainment industry plays a large part. This
sacrilegious idiocy is going to hurt a lot of people, and I feel sorry for
Christians more devout that I who will be deeply offended. Although,
in a way, I feel even more sorry for anyone gullible enough to believe this
nonsense.
Just ask yourself this question: Would Hollywood have the
balls to make a film that questions the life of Mohammad or Moses
and casts doubt on the very foundation of Islam or Judaism?
Don't expect the film version of Salman Rushdie's The Satanic Verses to be
coming to a theater near you anytime soon. Hollywood would be terrified
of the accusations of racism if any other religion were involved.
I'll try to be as brief as possible
in summarizing the movie's incredibly muddled plot since it's so
inane: After the murder of a museum curator in Paris, a famous professor of
Symbology named Robert Langdon (Hanks with straightened, darkened hair) is
called in to help police identify several symbols the murdered man left
behind. A French police cryptologist named Sophie Neveu (Audrey
Tautou) soon teams up with Langdon, while a police detective (Jean Reno) and a
murderous albino monk (Paul Bettany) pursue them through France and
England. The policeman and the killer monk, you see, are part of a secret
society within the Catholic Church called Opus Dei that allegedly has been
murdering people for years in order to keep the Church so archaic, sexist
and intolerant.
The Holy Grail, we're told, wasn't the chalice Jesus
drank from during the Last Supper, but is actually a symbol for Mary
Magdalene, who was really married to Jesus and pregnant with Jesus' child
when he was crucified. An old handicapped professor (Ian
McKellen) tells Robert and Sophie that it's really Mary Magdalene
directly to the left of Jesus in Da Vinci's famous portrait of the Last Supper,
and that Magdalene was never a prostitute, and her womb signifies the Holy
Grail. We're then told that Mary Magdalene gave birth to a
daughter, and for centuries the Catholic Church, through Opus Dei, has been
bumping off all descendants of Jesus and Mary Magdalene just to keep the Church
in business. Good grief.
The insidious Da Vinci Code is
a cinematic atrocity that's overlong, boring, convoluted, packed
with indecipherable mumbo-jumbo and full of ridiculous plot twists.
If this story didn't defame what so many consider sacred, it would be an
absolute howler. Even 60 Minutes, hardly
a conservative show, recently aired a segment exposing what a hoax Brown and
company have perpetrated.
Director Howard, screenwriter Akiva Goldsman, producer
Brian Grazer and Hanks should be forced to give back their Academy Awards for
this abomination. That's wishful thinking, but if there’s any justice,
they'll have a Razzie to go alongside their Oscars this time next year.