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Da Vinci Code Movie flops at Cannes Film Festival

Posted in Random Feed, Pop Culture, Movies on May 18th, 2006

There was only one topic on people’s lips when the Cannes Film Festival kicked off on the Riviera Wednesday. “The Da Vinci Code” might be one of the most talked-about films of the year, but the critics have crucified it.

Based on author Dan Brown’s 2003 thriller which has been translated into 44 languages and sold over 50 million copies, “The Da Vinci Code” opened the Cannes Film Festival Wednesday amid the usual glitz, glamor and hype.

But the movie about “the greatest conspiracy of the last 2000 years” looks set to be one of the greatest flops of 2006.

In it, a renowned Harvard symbologist is summoned to the Louvre Museum in Paris to examine a series of cryptic symbols relating to Da Vinci’s artwork. When he breaks the code, he uncovers the key to one of the most baffling mysteries of all time and becomes a hunted man.

Hollywood expected it to be a guaranteed crowd-pleaser — but audiences in Cannes begged to differ.

Despite the major buildup, expensive marketing campaign and A-list stars, the premiere ended up producing more snickers than gasps from the assembled journalists and movie critics. The general public might have been a little more forgiving, but few reviewers had anything good to say about what’s been billed as the most eagerly-awaited movie of the year.

Controversy

Both the book and the film version of “The Da Vinci Code” have been fuelled by controversy right from the start.
As the film’s publicity engine gathered momentum in recent months, religious groups began calling for a ban, or at least a disclaimer explaining that the plot was purely fictional.
 
Many were insulted by the central concept, which revolves around the theory that the Catholic Church covered up the fact that Jesus married Mary Magdalene, creating a lineage that still exists today.

Most of the criticism wasn’t even ideological. Others took offense simply because Brown’s book is so, well, bad.
 
“It’s a truly awful book riddled with mistakes,” said German publisher Michael Krüger. “It’s neither a well-told story, interesting, nor anything at all.”

Confusing fact and fiction

But after Wednesday’s debacle, the churches at least are breathing a sigh of relief. They’re confident that viewers won’t confuse fact with fiction.
 

The book has divided the criticsBildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:  The book has divided the critics

“The Jesus portrayed (in the movie) has nothing to do with the historical Jesus,” said Georg Schöllgen, a professor of religious history in Bonn, Germany. “The fictional one is sexually active, married, and pioneered women’s emancipation by making his wife a priest. Sure it’s fascinating, but it’s a bit too simplified.”
Experts have also argued that Brown hasn’t checked his facts, especially regarding the relationship between Jesus and Mary Magdalene. “It’s complete fabrication,” said Schöllgen. “There is no mention of this at all in the New Testament. Dan Brown cites his source as the Gospel of Philip from the 2nd century AD, but even then the theory is unsubstantiated. It’s definitely a stretch.”

Brown himself, meanwhile, has defended the novel and said the churches should be happy because after all, his book sparked a renewed interest in Christian history and promoted spiritual discussion.
 
Winning formula

The success of his book appeared to happen almost overnight, but in fact, Brown worked hard to become one of Time magazine’s most influential people in the world. After aborting a career as a pop star, he turned his hand to writing, only to be turned down by publisher after publisher.

But with “The Da Vinci Code,” he knew he was on to a winner. With all the successful ingredients for a bestseller, it was a pot-boiler about secret societies steeped in controversy and conspiracy. Now that he’s found his formula, Brown is working on a new novel set in Washington. His fans will be eager to see if he can do it again, but Hollywood might not be so keen to see it turned into a film.

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Da Vinci Code OPENS Cannes Film Festival

Posted in Random Feed, Pop Culture, Movies on May 16th, 2006

   The film world’s grandest red carpet will be crowded with celebrities as usual for the Cannes Film Festival, though plenty of weighty issues and ideas will mix with the glitz.

With Tom Hanks comes religious debate as “The Da Vinci Code” opens Cannes on Wednesday. With Oliver Stone comes a glimpse of his upcoming September 11 drama “World Trade Center.”

With Sarah Michelle Gellar and Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson comes a look at Los Angeles of the near future on the cusp of social and environmental chaos in “Southland Tales,” an offbeat combination of musical comedy and sci-fi thriller.

With former U.S. Vice President Al Gore comes a dire message in the documentary “An Inconvenient Truth” that the dangers of global warming are real, imminent and potentially catastrophic.

Even the comic-book world’s favorite mutants are turning somber with a dark, apocalyptic battle in “X-Men: The Last Stand.”

Thank goodness talking animals will be on hand to lighten things up, with Bruce Willis as mouthpiece for a rascally raccoon and Garry Shandling providing the voice of a cautious turtle in the animated comedy “Over the Hedge.”

One and all will be marching the red carpet that swoops up an imposing staircase to the festival’s main theater, running a gauntlet of tuxedo-clad photographers on each side who try to out-shout one another to catch the stars’ attention.

“It is the red carpet of all red carpets,” said Willis, previously at Cannes with “Pulp Fiction.”

“That was just completely overwhelming,” Natalie Portman said of her first experience on the Cannes red carpet at last year’s festival for “Star Wars: Episode III — Revenge of the Sith.”

“I’ve never seen so many photographers and fans. I’ve never seen anything like that before,” said Portman, who co-stars in this year’s Cannes entry “Paris, I Love You,” a collection of 20 short films set in the French capital from such directors as Gus Van Sant, Alexander Payne, Alfonso Cuaron, Wes Craven and Joel and Ethan Coen.

Da Vinci Code” director Ron Howard is an old hand at Cannes with such films as “Willow” and “Far and Away.” Playing opening night at the 59th Cannes festival caps a huge marketing blitz for the adaptation of Dan Brown’s best seller, which debuts in theaters worldwide Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.

“I think it’s going to be kind of nice to go and get it out of the way,” Howard said. “It’s an honor to be selected. This is a huge international film festival, and this is a very international kind of movie.”

Always representative of world cinema, the Cannes lineup includes Pedro Almodovar’s fanciful “Volver,” reuniting him with Penelope Cruz; Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu’s drama “Babel,” with Brad Pitt, Cate Blanchett and Gael Garcia Bernal; Ken Loach’s “The Wind that Shakes the Barley,” an Irish historical saga featuring Cillian Murphy; and “The Caiman,” a satiric assault on Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, directed by Nanni Moretti, whose film “The Son’s Room” won the top prize at Cannes in 2001.

Other U.S. filmmakers at Cannes include Sofia Coppola with “Marie Antoinette,” starring Kirsten Dunst as the 18th century noblewoman; Kevin Smith with “Clerks II,” the followup to his independent hit; and Richard Linklater with two films, the burger bash “Fast Food Nation” and the Philip K. Dick sci-fi adaptation “A Scanner Darkly,” featuring Keanu Reeves, Winona Ryder and Robert Downey Jr.

Director Stone comes to Cannes for a 20th anniversary presentation of his Vietnam masterpiece “Platoon,” which will be preceded by preview footage from “World Trade Center,” with Nicolas Cage in the story of two policemen trapped in the rubble of the twin towers.

Cannes also will feature “United 93,” Paul Greengrass’ docudrama about passengers who fought back against their hijackers on Sept. 11.

Gore has become a reluctant movie star since the Sundance Film Festival premiere of “An Inconvenient Truth,” chronicling his elaborate slide shows to educate people about global warming.

Joking that he “probably will not be seen in a bathing suit on the beach” at Cannes, Gore said he will take the festival hoopla in stride, recalling a New Yorker cartoon he once had hanging in his U.S. Senate office.

The cartoon showed a dog “with a funny little party hat on, riding a tricycle on the stage of a grand opera house, all three tiers filled with the bedecked and bejeweled, and the caption is, ‘I don’t know why they like this, but I’m going to keep on peddling,”‘ Gore said. “That’s pretty much me on the red carpet at Cannes.”
Source: CNN

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