www射-国产免费一级-欧美福利-亚洲成人福利-成人一区在线观看-亚州成人

Make me your Homepage
left corner left corner
China Daily Website

"National Treasure" sequel an absurd spectacle

Updated: 2007-12-28 15:52
(Agencies)
Diane Kruger and Nicolas Cage in a scene from 'National Treasure: Book of Secrets' in an image courtesy of Walt Disney Pictures. [Agencies]

("National Treasure: Book of Secrets," the but-of-course sequel to the 2004 Nicolas Cage blockbuster, is a letdown.

It contains all the elements from the original "National Treasure," which was a kind of "Da Vinci Code" on steroids crossed, rather charmingly, with American History Trivial Pursuit. But that's the problem: It's virtually the same movie with new locations. Oh, plus Helen Mirren. Not a bad addition, but the popcorn fun is gone.

Not that it will matter. Industry trackers insist those surefire box office elements will propel "Book of Secrets" to an even higher worldwide gross than the original's $347.5 million.

The film jets from one major historical monument of Western civilization to another with Cage's Benjamin Franklin Gates racing against time to solve an ancient puzzle for essentially no real reason. This yields well-photographed tourist sites, several cliff-hanging sequences -- a few literally that -- and a capable returning cast playing now-familiar roles in an action-fantasy.

Yes, action-fantasy is all you can call a film that abandons any semblance of reality. Take a major set piece: If you are going to stage a slam-bang chase sequence with cars smashing aside all objects, inanimate or human, guns blazing and no care for life or limb, the one city where this will not work is London: 9/11 cameras are everywhere on its tiny, pedestrian-choked streets and lanes, and security is the most stringent in Europe. Yet director Jon Turteltaub stages a sequence that tries to outdo "Bullitt," "The French Connection" and all the "Bourne" movies combined in the heart of London without a single bobby showing up. Right.

The story, more a blueprint for stunts than a coherent tale, was cobbled together by the husband-wife team of Marianne and Cormac Wibberley with the story credit divided among the Wibberleys, Gregory Poirier, Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio. The central notion, derived from the original "National Treasure," is that those dastardly Masons buried secret codes and puzzles -- treasure maps, as it were -- into major American documents, monuments and even furniture. Only Cage can penetrate their secrets.

This one centers on the assassination of President Lincoln by John Wilkes Booth. Wouldn't you know a Gates ancestor named Thomas was at the center of the action on April 14, 1865, and that the assassination was really about treasure maps and Mason secrets rather than the most heinous criminal act in American history.

Since a new piece of evidence brought forward by Ed Harris' rather suspicious Mitch Wilkinson appears to implicate poor Thomas Gates in the assassination, this is cause alone for Ben to spring into action. Which in turns ignites the burners of Jon Voight as Ben's eminent (though technologically challenged) professor-father Patrick; Mirren as his mom, who for plot convenience can translate ancient Indian texts; Diane Kruger as ex-girlfriend Abigail, who for plot convenience happens to be a history archivist; Justin Bartha's Riley, a techno-whiz who can break into any place, no problem; and Harvey Keitel as the FBI agent who cannot decide whether to arrest Ben or pin a medal on him.

The story requires Ben and company to jet to Paris to examine a Statue of Liberty replica in the Luxembourg Gardens, break into Buckingham Palace, then the White House Oval Office, kidnap the president (Bruce Greenwood), ransack the Library of Congress and finally discover an American Indian archeological site implausibly located under Mount Rushmore. Here much of the cast -- in a repeat of the earlier film's climax in catacombs beneath Manhattan -- hang from decaying ladders and dodge falling debris in an underground space the size of the Grand Canyon.

But the thrill is gone as everyone is slavishly following an action memo dictated by marketing concerns and boxoffice demographics rather than cinematic invention. No credible reason is ever given for the huge race. There is no ticking clock here other than Mitch and his goons being hot on Ben's trail, again for no logical reason. Family honor is one thing, but are you really going to destroy half of London and kidnap the American president over that?

 

 

 
 
...
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 经典国产乱子伦精品视频 | 一级淫片免费视频 | 初爱视频教程在线观看高清 | 亚洲成人tv | 国产下药迷倒白嫩丰满美女j8 | 欧美国产日韩久久久 | 久久久久久久国产 | 在线中文字幕播放 | 久久91精品国产91久久小草 | 久久99精品久久只有精品 | 亚洲美女自拍视频 | 亚洲成人在线网 | 精品午夜寂寞影院在线观看 | 九九99久久 | 亚洲天堂国产 | 玖玖精品在线 | 色久网| 国产精品久久久久影院色 | 香蕉福利久久福利久久香蕉 | 世界一级毛片 | 亚洲天堂一区 | 美女一丝不佳一级毛片香蕉 | 日本精品视频一视频高清 | 万全影院亚洲影院理论片 | 国产一区二区三区在线免费 | 三级视频中文字幕 | 草久网| 色在线看 | 在线视频 中文字幕 | 成年男女免费视频网站播放 | 久久精品国产一区二区 | 日韩美毛片 | 国产在线观看91精品一区 | 99久久精品国产免费 | 成年人视频在线观看免费 | 欧美xx在线观看 | 97视频免费观看2区 97视频免费上传播放 | 怡红院免费全部视频在线视频 | 亚洲精品98久久久久久中文字幕 | 成人免费高清视频网址 | 欧美一区二区三区视频 |