The Da Vinci Code: The Unbearable Truth

Alice 2022-04-20 09:01:09

During the meal, he suddenly talked about the DaVinci Code, so Liu suddenly wanted to see it. He felt that he was about to have a fever, so he didn't want to go, but he thought that everyone around him had seen it. I watched the pirated version, so I went to watch it with classmate Liu and Xiaodao. There were so many people that they could only watch the 11:00 show, so I went to that time with a blindfold. In the back row, it's not easy these days.

To be honest, if you haven’t read the original work, or don’t know much about “Speaking about Jesus”, you shouldn’t find it interesting. It requires a lot of understanding of the religious background. It’s like Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. It seems that it is magical, and it is also like Stephen Chow's movie. If you don't have a Cantonese cultural background, you can't figure out the reason when you look at the translated version or the original version.

I read the novel a long time ago, and aside from religious issues, the novel is well written, and the details and interlocking are very interesting, but the movie looks a bit bland, especially at the beginning when the curator of the Louvre was killed The scene decoding of those numbers, opening the cipher box, etc., the close-up of facial expressions, and the coordination of the sound were not in place. Maybe the director wanted to reflect Langdon's calmness rather than capturing the audience's mood.

Nonetheless, there are still some bright spots in the movie, which may be two sentences, one is: Why do human beings have to be inhumans or gods? What I understand is that in fact, gods also have feelings, and they also have some characteristics of human beings, not to mention that many gods are just human beings who have been myths.

Another sentence, to the effect that you already know the truth, it is up to you (Sophie) to decide whether you continue to believe or uncover the truth. In fact, when such a heavy hat was suddenly buckled on Sophie's head, many people might fall over. Judging from the director's final performance, Sophie has put down the burden, because whether the truth needs to be revealed or not is no longer important.

People, it is not important to know the truth, because there will always be various truths for you to know at this time, the key is whether you can choose to give up after something happens, give up the pain that wraps your head, and try new things. life, perhaps that is more important than knowing the truth.

If you always live in pain, life is always in the shadows. Just as Sophie was disturbed by the primitive religious ritual when she was young, wasn't Sophie in a good mood when she finally broke up with Langdon when she learned the truth and put her heart down? Ray Teabing, on the other hand, was not so lucky. He always wanted to prove the truth for himself. Instead, he fell deeper and deeper. The final end can be seen by everyone.

In the end, I really wanted to kill the translators of China Film, but the sister was translated into an old sister, and I was almost shocked.

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Extended Reading

The Da Vinci Code quotes

  • 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.

  • 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?