Roy Allen III

Roy Allen III

  • Born:
  • Height: 6' 1" (1.85 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • Guiseppe 2022-04-21 09:01:22

      four star

      To be honest, at the beginning, I wanted to give 5 stars, but after that... I got tired of it. After all, the movie can't shoot the Shinto things in the original book, so there will be discounts, but if the actors are really liked, I will add more. one star.

      Even if the plot is spurned, the film's...

    • Horacio 2022-04-22 07:01:04

      We all learned to watch suspense

      I took a cursory look at other people's movie reviews. If I, who have not read the book, commented on the movie directly, although it would be superficial and naive, it really represented the feelings of the movie-watchers, not something that could be compared, and then gorgeous. Criticize how bad...

    • Pamela 2022-03-22 09:01:17

      Just looking at the value of the face is enough, the plot is so general

    • Aletha 2021-10-20 19:02:47

      This is simply too damn unfaithful to the original... or reading and reliable... and then you will be Conan if you shoot like this, ah, I know, there, ah, I'm going to the library, ah, in There, it’s really there, this time you have to believe me, where... Give me a map, ah ah ah...

    Angels & Demons quotes

    • Robert Langdon: [Swiss Guards Offices Corridor. As Langdon and Olivetti walk, Langdon studies the row of statues of male nudes that line both sides of the hallway, all wearing fig leaves] The Great Castration.

      Inspector Olivetti: I beg your pardon?

      Robert Langdon: 1857. Pius IX felt the male form might inspire lust, so he got a hammer and chisel and unmanned two hundred statues. These plaster figs were added later.

      Inspector Olivetti: [Olivetti stops abruptly, outside a heavy steel door with a security keyboard beside it] Are you anti-Catholic, Professor Langdon?

      Robert Langdon: Me? No, I'm anti-vandalism.

    • Robert Langdon: [Swiss Guards Offices corridor. As Langdon and Olivetti walk, Langdon studies the row of statues of Male nudes that line both sides of the hallway, all wearing fig leaves] The Great Castration.

      Inspector Olivetti: I beg your pardon?

      Robert Langdon: 1857. Pius IX felt that the male form might inspire lust, so he took a hammer and chisel and unmanned hundreds of these statues. These plaster fig leaves were added later.

      Robert Langdon: [Olivetti stops abruptly outside a heavy steel door with a security keyboard beside it] Are you anti-Catholic, Professor Langdon?

      Robert Langdon: Me? No, I'm anti-vandalism?