‘Da Vinci Code’ bombs with Cannes critics
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.- Film critics panned The Da Vinci Code after its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival in France yesterday.

According to the Associated Press, “reaction ranged from halfhearted admiration to boredom to derision.” The film is to open on screens worldwide Friday.

The AP reported that “laughter rippled through the theater” near the end of the film at the Cannes press screening at what was supposed to be a serious moment in the film — when Tom Hanks' character, symbologist Robert Langdon, reveals a key secret to co-star Audrey Tautou with great melodrama.

"It's not a good sign when your film's big revelatory moment is greeted with laughter," wrote the Boston Herald’s film writer, Stephen Schaefer.

The laughter was clearly something director Ron Howard “would not have anticipated,” reported the Press Association Newsfile.

CNN reported that after the audience broke out into laughter, the critics spoke through the final scenes. “There was no applause when the credits rolled; instead, a few catcalls and hisses broke the silence,” CNN reported.

The AP reported that some even walked out during the movie’s closing minutes and “there was none of the scattered applause even bad movies sometimes receive at Cannes.”

Some critics found the weight of the script too heavy to bear.

"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," wrote Daily Variety critic Todd McCarthy.

The Hollywood Reporter had a similar opinion: “The movie is so drenched in dialogue musing over arcane mythological and historical lore and scenes grow so static that even camera movement can’t disguise the dramatic inertia.”

Some critics grew restless during the two-and-a-half-hour screening. James Rocchi, a film critic for CBS 5 television in San Francisco, was among those who said the movie dragged on “and not in a good way."

“As sturdy and versatile an actor as Hanks can be, he can't work miracles when he's got nothing to work with,” wrote AP film critic Christy Lemire.

Despite the less-than-favorable reviews, the film is still expected to be a hit at the box office.

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Subscriber comments:
Published by: Miriam
Florida 10/28/2009 02:00 PM EST
All it takes for evil to prosper is for men to do nothing.
Published by: Savelina Kasiano
Apia, Samoa 05/22/2006 10:56 PM EST
Some say that it's only a movie, but still, Christ is mocked, and it hurts. I am so greatful that The Da Vinci Code is banned from screening in my country.
Published by: Javier Barrientos
Zambia 05/19/2006 04:16 AM EST
in my opinion some catholics are pushing the whole issue a bit too far as if Mr. Brown had written a scientific book on the bible.
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