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"Variety reviews The Da Vinci Code"

5 Comments -

1 – 5 of 5
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I'm not surprised.

Ron Howard's kind of a jerk, isn't he? I mean I'm sure he's personally a nice guy, but I just feel this wave of bland homogeneous "brush your teeth"/"drink your milk" prissiness combined with this barely-concealed need to be incredibly pretentious and condescending.

But he's apparently good with actors. Everybody in "Beautiful Mind" is so great that you forget or don't notice the incredible liberties the movie takes with math and with psycho disorders. (Somebody told me.)

Can't the book-buying public get interested in REAL history and REAL problems? There's always some bullshit like this moving around in the background culturally. Sometimes it's Erik von Daniken and his "Chariots of the Gods?" question-mark-fueled tomes; now it's this. And that incredibly rich, earnest doughboy Hanks who has some prissily condescending traits anyway. Anyway I don't want to see this movie.

May 17, 2006 7:21 AM

Blogger Johnny Sweatpants said...

Loved the book, definitely will see the movie. It's too bad though, I would have loved to see how a director with balls would handle the adaptation. Richie Cunningham's shmaltz looks like it's gonna dilute any real controversy.

May 17, 2006 10:33 AM

Blogger JPX said...

The problem with all Ron Howard films is that you never for one second believe that the characters are ever in any real danger. He has this way of making "safe" films that I can't really explain. I remember watching Backdraft and thinking, "Meh, everyone's going to be just fine". Those fires just look so controlled.

I bet they weren't even hot.

May 17, 2006 11:01 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

What I dislike about Ron Howard is the fake nobility, the belief that (switching to Simpsons "squeaky-voiced teen" voice) "I have to make important films with a message!" rathering than just grooving on his own particular cinematic vibe. The most meaningful films aren't made by people straining to be "meaningful" but by artists whose artistic proclivities get them there naturally, independent of any attitude about what they're "accomplishing."

May 17, 2006 11:47 AM

Blogger Octopunk said...

It's funny that he says Hanks and Tautou are pale and stiff, because that's exactly what I thought of them just from the still images.

Yeah, my favorite Ron Howard movie was Parenthood. It rolled well with his brand of talent.

He's also hilarious as the voice-over in Arrested Development.

May 17, 2006 3:54 PM

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