Results 1 to 2 of 2

Thread: Angels And Demons

  1. #1
    Senior Member slickstu's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    The SmartArse State
    Posts
    747
    Thanks
    30
    Thanked 301 Times in 164 Posts
    Rep Power
    277
    Reputation
    2739

    Default Angels And Demons

    Ron Howard's The Da Vinci Code was a film adaptation of Dan Brown's book, an average story about a man with a dopey hairdo and an intriguing premise about self flagellating religious zealots with barb wire garter belts and clandestine codes hidden within Leonardo's art. Sensibly, Angels And Demons jettisons the dopey hairdo but to it's detriment also purges an intriguing premise. What is left is an average story utilising an unremarkable idea and not so much as a hairdo as a talking point.

    Looking over Ron Howard's filmography it seems clear that he has his passion projects and he has those which merely pay the bills; for every Frost/Nixon and Apollo 13 there's an EdTV and Backdraft. Angels And Demons is definitely a bill payer. You get the impression that this story was conceived as a direct result of the runaway success of The Da Vinci Code and hence suffers from a severe case of sequelitis; Robert Langdon reduced to merely a kind of ecclesiastical Indiana Jones decoding a seemingly endless procession of tedious cryptic clues. The former story was based on an intriguing idea of which Dan Brown was not the author, I suspect the central idea for Angels An Demons was largely of Brown's manufacture.

    The film includes some truly ridiculous setups which completely defy any sane logic. Take, for instance, the set piece where our hero becomes trapped in a high security, climate controlled vault during a power outage. When the power goes out, the backup batteries kick in but apparently the uninterruptible power supply doesn't power the stringently controlled air conditioning system, neither does it power the electronic lock on the door. It does, however, power a video monitor (the only thing it does power other than the moody lighting) which kindly advises how much battery life is left as you die a rapid asphyxiating death. Indeed, judging by the rate at which our hero is running out of oxygen, we can only presume that the power failure results in all the air being immediately evacuated from the room as well. Ridiculous! And this is not an isolated example.

    In the end when one of the good guys is seemingly approaching certain death, the "sad" music is wailing on the soundtrack but do we care? No, not really, but it nicely sums up the movie as a whole.

    5.5 out of 10.

  2. The Following User Says Thank You to slickstu For This Useful Post:

    osci (20-08-09)



Look Here ->
  • #2
    Senior Member

    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Location, Location
    Posts
    4,054
    Thanks
    1,170
    Thanked 930 Times in 532 Posts
    Rep Power
    419
    Reputation
    4290

    Default

    nice one.... remarkably similar as you mention...

    Should have called it Davinci Code II
    If you feed ducks at a pond, chances are your bound to feed a goose or two without even knowing it.

  • Similar Threads

    1. I8: ERI-TV movie Charlies Angels 12726H
      By osci in forum Free to Air , C Band and Feeds
      Replies: 0
      Last Post: 09-04-09, 07:58 PM
    2. Blazing Angels 2
      By Dean Machine in forum Sony Playstation , Playstation 2 , PSP and Playstation 3
      Replies: 0
      Last Post: 08-07-08, 11:52 AM

    Bookmarks

    Posting Permissions

    • You may not post new threads
    • You may not post replies
    • You may not post attachments
    • You may not edit your posts
    •