The Da Vinci Code

Christy

b*tch rocket
Hess, Dan Brown has always vehemently stated that the book is fiction and never intended for anyone to think any different. It's not really his fault if people are too stupid to grasp the concept of fiction. :shrug:
 

Nickel

curiouser and curiouser
Christy said:
Hess, Dan Brown has always vehemently stated that the book is fiction and never intended for anyone to think any different. It's not really his fault if people are too stupid to grasp the concept of fiction. :shrug:
Exactly. My mother, the most Christian person I know, can't wait to see the movie and loved the book. Does she believe it's true? No. But that's because she has the mental capacity to separate real life from storybook tales.
 

Bustem' Down

Give Peas a Chance
Hessian said:
previous books did not have the savvy marketing and the star appeal of a hyped movie.

Lets take O. Stone's JFK for example...it was a lot more fun to tie loose events together, create a paranoid aura around the underdog, and play fast & loose with the facts.
Good Movie...based on some factual events...Money maker and creates a surge of spin-offs.

Dan Brown has thrown even MORE fiction in with a smidgeon of fact. This age of viewers/readers are even more susceptible to buying into a forced/noncredible conspiracy theory---and only a minority will put out the effort to dig in and understand how much of Brown's work is contrived fiction.

Previous books have toyed with similar topics to only mediocre response--this work has the ability to confuse and cast aspersions on the Christian faith (Catholic & Protestant)

I think it will have little or no effect. Believers won't be swayed and non-believers think it's a good story. I seriously doubt that this movie will start a mass exodus from the christian faith. I actually see more of an alarmist reaction from christians than an "I knew it" reaction from anyone else.
 

Tonio

Asperger's Poster Child
After reading "Da Vinci Code," I went back and read the books that Dan Brown's characters cited. As I see it, those books and the Bible represent two different sets of claims about Jesus, and people can make up their own minds.
 

Hessian

Well-Known Member
The mental jumps that Dan has to make are pretty astounding.
The Premise is to screw around with the dates of the original codex' and make far flung claims of 80 "gospels" of Christ. Then He reinterprets the goals of the council of Nicea claiming that this body decided to deify Christ: And that Constantine was crucial in pushing the agenda: All False.
He takes Opus Dei to become the mousaad of the Catholic church and claims it is run by priests...IT DID NOT EXIST UNTIL THE 19TH CENTURY AND IT IS RUN BY LAY PEOPLE.

This is just off the top of my head but given some time I could keep going.
I do KNOW that he starts off with a deceptive disclaimer....All of the things depicted in this book actually exist...
yes...but in what context???????

Classical Historians are embarrassed at his random remix and reinterpretation just to creat a wild plot.
Creative yes...Damaging...absolutely!

A poll in Canada said about 20% believed the Book was mostly true. ARGH!!
 

mAlice

professional daydreamer
Hessian said:
The mental jumps that Dan has to make are pretty astounding.
The Premise is to screw around with the dates of the original codex' and make far flung claims of 80 "gospels" of Christ. Then He reinterprets the goals of the council of Nicea claiming that this body decided to deify Christ: And that Constantine was crucial in pushing the agenda: All False.
He takes Opus Dei to become the mousaad of the Catholic church and claims it is run by priests...IT DID NOT EXIST UNTIL THE 19TH CENTURY AND IT IS RUN BY LAY PEOPLE.

This is just off the top of my head but given some time I could keep going.
I do KNOW that he starts off with a deceptive disclaimer....All of the things depicted in this book actually exist...
yes...but in what context???????

Classical Historians are embarrassed at his random remix and reinterpretation just to creat a wild plot.
Creative yes...Damaging...absolutely!

A poll in Canada said about 20% believed the Book was mostly true. ARGH!!


Paranoia will destroy ya'.
 

MMDad

Lem Putt
Hessian said:
The mental jumps that Dan has to make are pretty astounding.
The Premise is to screw around with the dates of the original codex' and make far flung claims of 80 "gospels" of Christ. Then He reinterprets the goals of the council of Nicea claiming that this body decided to deify Christ: And that Constantine was crucial in pushing the agenda: All False.
He takes Opus Dei to become the mousaad of the Catholic church and claims it is run by priests...IT DID NOT EXIST UNTIL THE 19TH CENTURY AND IT IS RUN BY LAY PEOPLE.

This is just off the top of my head but given some time I could keep going.
I do KNOW that he starts off with a deceptive disclaimer....All of the things depicted in this book actually exist...
yes...but in what context???????

Classical Historians are embarrassed at his random remix and reinterpretation just to creat a wild plot.
Creative yes...Damaging...absolutely!

A poll in Canada said about 20% believed the Book was mostly true. ARGH!!
Do you get upset when you watch old Western movies? All six shooters hold 30 rounds, pistols are accurate at two miles, Indians are all baby eating savages, etc. These are embellishments and "random remix and reinterpretation just to creat a wild plot."

If it's O.K. in war movies, westerns, and drama, why is it so wrong when there are religious figures involved?

The last Indiana Jones movie took liberties with the historical accuracy of the Holy Grail. Where is the outrage over that?

80% of Canadians realizing that a book you buy in the fiction section is actually fiction sounds pretty good to me. There are people who believe 9/11 never happened, there were no moon missions, and the government somehow created hurricane Katrina. There is no way you will ever stop stupid people from believing fiction.
 

Tonio

Asperger's Poster Child
MMDad said:
Do you get upset when you watch old Western movies? All six shooters hold 30 rounds, pistols are accurate at two miles, Indians are all baby eating savages, etc. These are embellishments and "random remix and reinterpretation just to creat a wild plot."

Great point. The Westerns have endured to become part of our national mythology, despite the historical inaccuracies. Judging by the reaction to "Brokeback Mountain," many Americans still view the cowboy as a semi-sacred icon. There is something to the Western mythology that has a deep appeal for us, maybe on a subconscious level. I believe that the appeal of "Da Vinci Code" may go beyond the plot or the theories.
 

Bustem' Down

Give Peas a Chance
Hessian said:
The mental jumps that Dan has to make are pretty astounding.
The Premise is to screw around with the dates of the original codex' and make far flung claims of 80 "gospels" of Christ. Then He reinterprets the goals of the council of Nicea claiming that this body decided to deify Christ: And that Constantine was crucial in pushing the agenda: All False.
He takes Opus Dei to become the mousaad of the Catholic church and claims it is run by priests...IT DID NOT EXIST UNTIL THE 19TH CENTURY AND IT IS RUN BY LAY PEOPLE.

This is just off the top of my head but given some time I could keep going.
I do KNOW that he starts off with a deceptive disclaimer....All of the things depicted in this book actually exist...
yes...but in what context???????

Classical Historians are embarrassed at his random remix and reinterpretation just to creat a wild plot.
Creative yes...Damaging...absolutely!

A poll in Canada said about 20% believed the Book was mostly true. ARGH!!
Dan Brown did not make those mental jumps. Those ideas have been around for a couple hundred years Hessian.

At the council of Nicea, they did deify Christ. It was voted on by popular majority. Read your history, at the time there were literally hundreds of different sects of Christianity and not all of them believed in the divinity of Christ, the Council of Nicea was held to unify these different sects into one body and the issue of the divinity of Christ was one of the issues taken up by that body. Weather or not YOU believe in Christs divinity does not change the fact that that is what they did. Any christian philosophy that did not accept Christs divinity after this aggrement was considered heresy. Constantine more than likely was just worshiping a "Sun God" in general which was a montheistic religious and Christianity fit the bill, this is something historians accept over the "firey cross in the sky" theory.
 

Bustem' Down

Give Peas a Chance
Catholic Encyclopedia said:
"We believe in one God the Father Almighty, Maker of all things visible and invisible; and in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten of the Father, that is, of the substance [ek tes ousias] of the Father, God of God, light of light, true God of true God, begotten not made, of the same substance with the Father [homoousion to patri], through whom all things were made both in heaven and on earth; who for us men and our salvation descended, was incarnate, and was made man, suffered and rose again the third day, ascended into heaven and cometh to judge the living and the dead. And in the Holy Ghost. Those who say: There was a time when He was not, and He was not before He was begotten; and that He was made our of nothing (ex ouk onton); or who maintain that He is of another hypostasis or another substance [than the Father], or that the Son of God is created, or mutable, or subject to change, [them] the Catholic Church anathematizes."
The adhesion was general and enthusiastic. All the bishops save five declared themselves ready to subscribe to this formula, convince that it contained the ancient faith of the Apostolic Church. The opponents were soon reduced to two, Theonas of Marmarica and Secundus of Ptolemais, who were exiled and anathematized. Arius and his writings were also branded with anathema, his books were cast into the fire, and he was exiled to Illyria. The lists of the signers have reached us in a mutilated condition, disfigured by faults of the copyists. Nevertheless, these lists may be regarded as authentic. Their study is a problem which has been repeatedly dealt with in modern times, in Germany and England, in the critical editions of H. Gelzer, H. Hilgenfeld, and O. Contz on the one hand, and C. H. Turner on the other. The lists thus constructed give respectively 220 and 218 names. With information derived from one source or another, a list of 232 or 237 fathers known to have been present may be constructed.


The whole thing here. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11044a.htm
 

DotTheEyes

Movie Fan
What a major disappointment! The Da Vinci Code novel was clever and thrilling. The film, dull and slow-paced. Ron Howard after a series of fantastic films, including A Beautiful Mind and Cinderella Man, has failed to deliver the goods here as he's made a thriller without a sense of urgency and a stupor-inducing pace. Even Tom Hanks, the actor who made watching people sit on deserted islands and in busy airport terminals for two hours electric entertainment, comes up short - delivering for the first time in a long time a film performance one could call dull. Ian McKellen (The Lord Of The Rings, X-Men) and Paul Bettany (Firewall, Master & Commander: The Far Side Of The World) were far better in supporting roles as a Grail expert and an Opus Dei assassin. This isn't the wort film ever or anything, but I felt a crippling "Meh" sensation at the end and hope to never sit through it again.
 

Bustem' Down

Give Peas a Chance
DotTheEyes said:
What a major disappointment! The Da Vinci Code novel was clever and thrilling. The film, dull and slow-paced. Ron Howard after a series of fantastic films, including A Beautiful Mind and Cinderella Man, has failed to deliver the goods here as he's made a thriller without a sense of urgency and a stupor-inducing pace. Even Tom Hanks, the actor who made watching people sit on deserted islands and in busy airport terminals for two hours electric entertainment, comes up short - delivering for the first time in a long time a film performance one could call dull. Ian McKellen (The Lord Of The Rings, X-Men) and Paul Bettany (Firewall, Master & Commander: The Far Side Of The World) were far better in supporting roles as a Grail expert and an Opus Dei assassin. This isn't the wort film ever or anything, but I felt a crippling "Meh" sensation at the end and hope to never sit through it again.
Good, maybe the Christians will shut up about it already.
 

DotTheEyes

Movie Fan
I can't imagine this film offending many, unless they go in 'wanting' to be offended so they can make an even louder fuss. It's just too goofy and "Hollywood," if you will, to really offend, or so I would think. Getting offended by this would be like American History teachers being offended by National Treasure or French people being offended by The Pink Panther. None of them are malicious films and are just playful entertainment at heart (though National Treasure, surprisingly enough, is way more entertaining and effective than the bigger-budget, higher-profile Da Vinci Code).

However, I can understand it if Christians get mad over a flick called See No Evil that also came out last weekend. It stars WWE wrestler Kane as a hulking serial killer with a Jesus fixation who goes around murdering teens he sees as "sinners." All the murders are set to a jolly recording of Jesus Loves All The Little Children. Now, that might be something to get offended by. Not summer movie Da Vinci Code's little plot about Jesus maybe being more good man than divine superhero or whatever.
 

Pandora

New Member
I didn't get to see this Friday as planned, because my best friend's father is in the hospital. I talked to her today and her and I have both heard reviews that have sounded just like yours Dot.
 

Somdmommy

:Jeepin' in NC:
Pandora said:
I didn't get to see this Friday as planned, because my best friend's father is in the hospital. I talked to her today and her and I have both heard reviews that have sounded just like yours Dot.
:yay:

I saw it last night. I thought it was great, It didnt have the punch that National Treasure had as far as the History and the fact finding went, but I still thought it was a good movie.

To Each His Own!!
 

Tonio

Asperger's Poster Child
I saw it last weekend. I give it a B minus. DotTheEyes is right about Hanks--his performance was too muted. I liked him much better in "The Green Mile" and "Cast Away" and "Apollo 13." The movie was moody and atmospheric, which made it watchable, but it had little of the tension and pace of Brown's story. Reminded me of of the job Ron Howard did with "Apollo 13." I think Howard is just not a thriller-type director.
 

Pandora

New Member
I agree with everything Roger Friedman had to say in his review that I posted prior. It was long, but entertaining. It does seem to shift in the dead center of the movie and that caused me to have to shift a bit in my seat and look at my watch until it was able to get back on track somewhat.

I don’t think it was the “total disappointment” Dot made it out to be. It was worth watching, even with the casting being off. I think Tom Hanks performed very well, and as well as to be expected considering this really wasn't a good role for him.

I will mention one thing I haven’t heard said before and that is the accents in the movie were difficult to understand in the beginning. I’m not sure if that was my hearing impairments, the sound at the theater or that the accents were just overly blended.
 
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