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The treasure of the Louvre’s town hall "Mona Lisa" is an extremely important prop, but because the lighting of the film will cause damage to this famous painting, the crew had to retreat for safety and protection reasons. Secondly, an exact scale replica was used. The leak of this secret made Howard painful: "I really hate people asking me such a question, but." He paused for a few seconds, "After all, this painting is priceless!" The consoling thing is that the film is preserved. The room in the oil painting "Mona Lisa" is real.
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Making a movie in the Louvre is like dreaming. Impressed by the artistic charm of the Louvre, Tom Hanks parked his RV on the street outside the Louvre. Every time he went to the filming location, he had to pass through countless galleries: "There are so many masterpieces here, so I can’t catch my eyes. -"The Coronation of Queen Josephine" and "Leonida at the Hot Spring Pass", the feeling of walking from here to work is really great!"
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Tom Hanks, under the pressure of public opinion, to move closer to the role in appearance, while actively losing weight, while turning the perennial brush head into "elegant" long hair, but he has watched the "Da Vinci Code" trial film The audience of's still nitpicking about Lao Tang's imitated scholar's hairstyle, describing it as "a bald forehead and a duck tail on the back of his head"!
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The Viret Castle mentioned in the novel is also one of the filming locations. This castle was built in 1668 for Louis XIV’s ambassador to Italy, and the current owner is an American real estate tycoon. It is reported that the crew has set up 6 of the 17 rooms exclusively for actors, but the old brother Tang gave up the opportunity to enjoy the noble treatment and chose to live with his wife and children in the home of actor Donald Sutherland in Paris to enjoy the pleasure of common people.
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In order to better play the role of the albino killer Silas, Paul Bettany is not satisfied with the pale skin unique to albinos that is only available during makeup, and he does not hesitate to dye his blond hair white and dark blue eyes to blood red. But this image has caused great indignation from the Albinism and Pigmentation Organization in the United States, which believes that such a description follows the uglification of albinism homosexuals in many Hollywood movies.
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Ian McLean believes in Christianity. When the film crew encountered repeated protests and demonstrations by British religious figures when filming in Lincolnshire, England, McLean made several appearances, calling on people not to be too extreme, but to look at their persistence from a new perspective. Faith.
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On August 16, 2005, just as the filming of "The Da Vinci Code" was in full swing, to protest against Lincoln Cathedral’s convenience to the crew, a Mary Michael from the "Peace and Mercy" Women’s Association kneeled in Lincoln. Before the steps of the cathedral, Knight, the director of the cathedral, had to give in, saying that the novel was "very far-fetched and full of heretics."
The Da Vinci Code behind the scenes gags
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Robert Langdon: Have you ever heard those words before, Sophie, "so dark the con of man"?
Sophie Neveu: No. Have you?
Robert Langdon: When you were a child, were you aware of any secret gatherings? Anything ritualistic in nature? Meetings your grandfather would have wanted kept secret? Was there ever any talk of something called the Priory of Sion?
Sophie Neveu: The what? Why are you asking these things?
Robert Langdon: The Priory of Sion is a myth. One of the world's oldest and most secret societies with leaders like, uh, Sir Isaac Newton, da Vinci himself. The fleur-de-lis is their crest. They're guardians of a secret they supposedly refer to as "the dark con of man."
Sophie Neveu: But what secret?
Robert Langdon: The Priory of Sion protects the source of God's power on Earth.
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Andre Vernet: Forgive the intrusion. I'm afraid the police arrived more quickly than I anticipated. You must follow me, please. For your own safety.
Sophie Neveu: You knew they were coming?
Andre Vernet: My guard alerted me to your status when you arrived. Yours is one of our oldest and highest-level accounts. It includes a safe-passage clause.
Robert Langdon: Safe passage?
Andre Vernet: [opening the back of an armored truck] If you step inside, please. Time is of the essence.
Robert Langdon: [nervously, seeing the limited space available] In there?