| | | A Ron Howard Film.|Uncover the Greatest Mystery of All Time. Features: DVD, Special Edition, Widescreen, Aspect Ratio 2.40:1, Dolby Digital (5.1), Dolby Surround Sound, English, Subtitled, French, Spanish When respected American religious symbology expert Dr. Robert Langdon (Hanks) is summoned to the Louvre by the French version of the FBI, led by Captain Bezu Fache (Reno), he soon discovered that he is the #1 suspect for the murder of a historian Langdon had been scheduled to meet with.. Assisted by a French cryptographer and government agent named Sophie (Tautou), Langdon is challenged to decipher a chain of cryptic codes and puzzles, all the while trying to stay ahead of Fache''s lawmen in a chase through the Louvre, and out into the Parisian cityscape, and finally across the channel to England. Can Langdon and Sophie decipher the nature of a secret dating back to Leonardo Da Vinci and earlier before those responsible for the historian''s murder add them to their hit list'' Running time: 149 minutes. "...a streamlined train of a picture that never stops moving." Lawrence Toppman, Charlotte Observer "...a crackling, fast-moving thriller that's every bit as brainy and irresistible as Dan Brown's controversial bestseller." Lou Lumenick, New York Post "...much more entertaining and satisfying than the novel." William Arnold, Seattle Post-Intelligencer "...a lurid saga of sinister sects, double-crosses and self flagellating zealots, set in a murky world that is always one part nightmare." Total Film "...an enjoyable, often tense and thought-provoking thriller...Tautou, Bettany, Reno and McKellen are pitch perfect in their roles..." Ultimate DVD
 Editor's Note
 Dan Brown's best-selling book THE DA VINCI CODE gets adapted for the big screen thanks to director Ron Howard (CINDERELLA MAN), who helms this big budget production. Veteran actor Tom Hanks stars as professor Robert Langdon, whose Parisian lecture tour on feminine symbolism gets disrupted when he's implicated in a murder at the Louvre. Co-starring with Hanks is Audrey Tautou (AMELIE), the French police analyst who comes to Langdon's aid and who may hold the key to some of the mysteries. The cast is fleshed out by Jean Reno as a hangdog French detective who thinks he can trick Langdon into a confession; Paul Bettany as Silas, the murderous monk; Alfred Molina as an evil Catholic cardinal; and Ian McKellen, who steals the movie in the second act as a crotchety old authority on the Holy Grail. During the course of the film, all sorts of riddles, keys, clues, and enigmas are thrown in our hero's path, along with bullets, knives, and devious betrayals. Cinematographer Salvatore Toltino shoots in a dark and somber style, with lots of detailed flashbacks to grim scenes from ancient Rome, the Crusades, and the witch hunts of the Middle Ages. Tautou looks gorgeous in the perpetual dim light, as does the ancient French and British architecture. With so many centuries of hidden knowledge, cults, sects, and Christianity-shattering secrets involved, this may have been confusing to those not acquainted with the book, but Howard and screenwriter Akiva Goldsman ingeniously weave the myriad layers into a true thrill ride. Ultimately, THE DA VINCI CODE is a thoughtful action film, with a refreshingly clear-eyed approach to world history that may scandalize the close-minded, but is sure to enlighten those open to new ideas.
| Features | Audio: English Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound |  | Audio: English, Spanish, French Dolby Digital Stereo |  | Dubbed: Spanish, French |  | Interactive Menus |  | Scene Selection |  | Subtitles: English, French, Spanish |
| Entertainment Reviews
 | The Da Vinci Code By: Sean O'Connell - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 11/17/2006 12:32 AM | | Entertainment journalist Cal Fussman interviewed Tom Hanks for the June issue of Esquire. As part of an insightful feature, the two-time Oscar winner flipped through candid photographs taken on various film sets over the course of his 20-year career....read the full review |
 | The Da Vinci Code (Widescreen Two-Disc Special Edition) Cinema Blend DVD Reviews Published on: 11/19/2006 11:58 AM | | The supposed twists, turns, and surprises are obvious from ten miles away. Is there really any doubt who the mysterious ?Teacher? will turn out to be when finally revealed? Is anyone surprised when the Holy Grail was closer to Langdon and Nevue then they ever realized? I sure wasn?t, and I?m about as dense as they come. ...read the full review |
| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: Sony Pictures |
 | Release Date: 9/2/2008 |
 | Running Time: 149 minutes |
 | Original Release Date: 2006 |  | Catalog ID: 14834 |  | UPC: 00043396148345 |  | Number of Discs: 2 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English |  | Video: Color | Aspect Ratio |  | Anamorphic Widescreen 2.40:1 |
| Cast & Crew
| Awards | Golden Globe (2007) |  | Hans Zimmer, Nominee, Best Original Score - Motion Picture | | Grammy (2007) |  | Hans Zimmer, Nominee, Best Score Soundtrack Album for Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media | | People's Choice (2007) |  | The Da Vinci Code, Nominee, Favorite Movie Drama |
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| | Professional Reviews | New York Times "THE DA VINCI CODE is, above all, a murder mystery. And as such, once it gets going, Ron Howard's movie has its pleasures." 06/09/2006 p.E21Total Film 3 stars out of 5 -- "Howard unfolds a lurid saga of sinister sects, double-crosses and self flagellating zealots, set in a murky world that is always one part nightmare." 06/01/2006 p.46 Box Office 3 stars out of 5 -- "Howard is served well by his actors....Audrey Tautou shows she's more than just an ingenue as the policewoman?" 07/01/2006 p.54 Ultimate DVD 3 stars out of 5 -- "THE DA VINCE CODE is an enjoyable, often tense and thought-provoking thriller....Tautou, Bettany, Reno and McKellen are pitch perfect in their roles..." 08/01/2006 p.60 Entertainment Weekly "To Howard and Co.'s credit, the film hews pretty closely to Brown's thriller." -- Grade: B- 11/17/2006 p.105 BeyondHollywood.com 7 of 10 Ron Howard's directorial take on this zeitgeist in popular prose is a twist laden, mathematical adventure which captures an extremely exhaustive day or two in the lives of nine or ten characters who are unbelievable interwoven. They all connect through impossible coincidence and whatnot, and in movie form this is OK, because it's over in two hours and while you may leave perplexed, you will be sufficiently entertained...For anyone that hasn't read the novel, spare yourself two weeks of reading some insipid code cracking and dogma bashing and just see the movie; you'll get the point and your eyes won't have to strain as hard. Chicago Sun-Times 8 of 10 Dan Brown's novel is utterly preposterous; Ron Howard's movie is preposterously entertaining...since everyone has read the novel, I need only give away one secret -- that the movie follows the book religiously. While the book is a potboiler written with little grace and style, it does supply an intriguing plot. Luckily, Ron Howard is a better filmmaker than Dan Brown is a novelist; he follows Brown's formula (exotic location, startling revelation, desperate chase scene, repeat as needed) and elevates it into a superior entertainment, with Tom Hanks as a theo-intellectual Indiana Jones...The movie works; it's involving, intriguing and constantly seems on the edge of startling revelations. - Roger Ebert ReelViews 7 of 10 When you boil away the hype and hysteria, all that remains is a pedestrian murder mystery that isn't sufficiently challenging or scandalous to raise anyone's hackles. It's preposterous, overlong, and saddled with a sloppy denouement that defines the term "anti-climax." The film's two big "surprises" are telegraphed early, and the ease with which they can be guessed (using the "conservation of characters" process) leeches the movie of a large measure of its suspense. Individual scenes are entertaining in their own right, but the production as a whole is a lumbering mess...I intentionally avoided Dan Brown's novel before seeing the movie (and don't intend to read it now that I have sat through the adaptation), hoping to provide a fresh perspective. Presumably, the book, which is often referred to as a "compulsive page-turner," is more riveting that its cinematic counterpart. The Da Vinci Code (the movie) is a mediocre thriller, with too few thrills and too much predictable action...The controversy has made seeing The Da Vinci Code a more desirable night out than it might otherwise have been, but it won't take long before potential audience members recognize that the Emperor has no clothes. One could classify The Da Vinci Code as diverting, but it has sidestepped greatness by a wide margin. - James Berardinelli Variety 6 of 10 A pulpy page-turner in its original incarnation as a huge international bestseller has become a stodgy, grim thing in the exceedingly literal-minded film version of "The Da Vinci Code." Tackling head-on novelist Dan Brown's controversy-stirring thriller hinging on a subversively revisionist view of Jesus Christ's life, director Ron Howard and screenwriter Akiva Goldsman have conspired to drain any sense of fun out of the melodrama, leaving expectant audiences with an oppressively talky film that isn't exactly dull, but comes as close to it as one could imagine with such provocative material; result is perhaps the best thing the project's critics could have hoped for...Sitting through all the verbose explanations and speculations about symbols, codes, secret cults, religious history and covert messages in art, it is impossible to believe that, had the novel never existed, such a script would ever have been considered by a Hollywood studio...The irony in the film's inadequacy is that the novel was widely found to be so cinematic...The appearance of its easy adaptability may have been deceptive, however, as what went down easily on the page becomes laborious onscreen, even with the huge visual plus of fabulous French and English locations, fine actors and the ability to scrutinize works of Da Vinci in detail. - Todd McCarthy
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