Posted on 05/17/2006 6:48:58 PM PDT by Teófilo
Movie met with catcalls, jeers at Cannes.
Folks, it appears that the DaVinci Code movie is a bomb. According to CNN:
At Cannes, one scene during the film, meant to be serious, elicited prolonged laughter from the audience, and when the credits rolled, there was no applause, only a few catcalls and hisses. Things were no better Stateside, where the film screened for critics in New York.Signis, the Catholic communication association in France, declared the movie "A film which, finally, the Church has little to be concerned about." According to the Catholic News Agency:
The Catholic association described the film as simply a popular entertainment. While the early scenes set us on an exciting treasure hunt, the wordiness of the drawn out twists of the later part of the film will disappoint many cinemagoers.Time Magazine's critic, Richard Corliss, also slams the movie, yet...The film wants rather to please everyone and not upset them too much. The writers have added quite a number of dialogue exchanges which downplay the more controversial statements of the novel about the Church, the divinity of Jesus, the role of Mary Magdalene and even Opus Dei.
Signis wished that the Church can benefit from this phenomenon in explaining the theological foundations of faith and the hopes of all Christians.
...admires the film for not shying away from the book's more controversial assertions: "Beneath the chases and crashes, the chalices and cilices [hair shirts], it denies Jesus' divinity. ... And further still: the film challenges the belligerence that too often adheres to religious believers, the wars and atrocities perpetrated in His name."As if militant secularists, atheists, agnostics, and Neo-Pagans have only brought us sweetness and light and not the deadliest, most devastating wars and genocides in human history. But let's be fair, he was not addressing the larger historical and ideological context.
This morning in NBC's Today Show, I watched Sir Ian McKellen, who played "Gandalf" in the Lord of the Rings movie trilogy, replie to demands that the DaVinci Code movie include an opening disclaimer by saying:
Well, Ive often thought the Bible should have a disclaimer in the front saying this is fiction. I mean, walking on water, it takes an act of faith. And I have faith in this movie. Not that its true, not that its factual, but that its a jolly good story. And I think audiences are clever enough and bright enough to separate out fact and fiction, and discuss the thing after theyve seen it.(Thank you Dom Bettinelli for capturing the quote).
Ah, those British skeptics, love them or hate them! Or just ignore them. It always astonishes me to hear so much ignorance streaming from the lips of the self-proclaimed learned. The spectrum of stupidity runs from the triteness of Doonesbury to the tirades of Harry Bellafonte. Sir Ian's remaks fall somewhere in between.
Anyway. The artistry of the DaVinci Code movie apparently didn't move those who care of such things, so that from the viewpoint of avant garde critics and intellectuals, the work will hardly be a "blip" in their radars. However, the movie will still provide plenty of foder to those who hate Christianity in general and the Catholic Church in particular. We should rejoice that the movie has failed to get critical aclaim, but we still need to remain on guard because Neo-Pagans and Neo-Gnostics still consider the book and the movie a triumph for having pushed their ideas to the mainstream. Without a doubt, they'll try again.
PING!
Dammit. Now I want to go see it.
Lol. All the sudden CNN is a reliable source on FR. Why don't you actually wait til the movie comes out? I find I like most movies critics hate.
Regarding CNN, you may have a point. Then again, I expected praise from that quarter.
Go figure
-Theo
Wow. Christians calling others neo-pagans and new gnostics? What's that about a pot and kettle? :-)
The only really positive review I read was the 4-star rating by the NY Post's Lou Luminek, but he's generally an idiot.
The NY Post is a propaganda rag for the New York Yank-offs. They actually have a film columnist?
They sure do love themselves some Yankees over there. You have to get past off-season Rangers news to find the Mets recap!
Any excuse to not see this overblown thing is fine by me. Actually, I'm starting to conpare it to "Birth of a Nation". Should we applaud a film that lets the Ku Klux Klan be the GOOD guys and ride to the rescue of white girls being threatened by roguish blacks? That's the equivalent of the daVinci Code.
I can't see hot the "pot [calling the] and kettle" saying applies, since we are Christians and they are Neo-Pagans and Neo-Gnostics. Can't say I understand what you are trying to say.
-Theo
For what I see, a remake of Birth of a Nation may have a better reception at Cannes than the Da Vinci Code movie, if properly made. Perhaps we can convince Oliver Stone to remake Birth of a Nation and show it next year at Cannes.
-Theo
The Catholic Church seems to be doing all the advertising for this movie
I thought about it, but you know, in the end, this film has received so much propaganda from other sources that the Catholic Church, by its opposition, could not add significantly more. So I disagree with you.
-Theo
Sir Ian was interviewed by Matt Lauer on the second day of a segment called "On The Road With The Code".
The Catholic Church and the Today Show comrades? Mmmmm. Don't think so.
A colleague at work showed me Fox's glowing review after I showed him Variety's negative review.
May I say, "We told you so!"???????????????? LOl!
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