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Author
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Topic: National Treasure
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Greg Davis
Film Handler
Posts: 96
From: Vista, Ca, USA
Registered: Sep 2004
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posted 11-19-2004 03:39 AM
Epitomy of the melodrama. could have been finished in 45 minutes, dragged along a lot.
some parts were really lame, like when they were walking on ice and spoiler? maybe? and found the bell of the ship that had its friggin name on it, and in the next scene had 5 days of digging already done with ice axes (tip - ice tools are for climbing. no ice climbing was done. rarely are one of these seen without a 9.0mm ice rope and harness w/ice screw attatchments, but hey, axes are cool). Then they got inside, opened some old freaking cans and said "gunpowder" about 5 times so you probably wouldnt lose track of that, you nkow, maybe coming into play later. fun movie though, i didnt expect much and it had some cool stuff to look at
right up there with dudley doo right.
3.5/5
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John Anastasio
Master Film Handler
Posts: 325
From: Trenton, NJ, USA
Registered: Sep 2000
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posted 11-26-2004 09:17 PM
Yeah, the boat scene was complete hocum, including the explosion that somehow blows the sh*t out of the sh*p but not Penn and B, who then conveniently walk nine miles on the ice to the local village..but hey, it's not a documentary. It was slow up front, but picked up nicely. It reminded me of a mixture of DaVinci Code and Raiders of the Lost Ark. Being from the ham in the sandwich between Philadelphia and New York, I enjoyed all the local scenes. New Jersey even gets a cute mention. I think Justin Bartha makes a delightfully geeky sidekick. By the way, vellum doesn't fall apart after 200 years. I've got a 500 year-old piece of it here in my office and you can still roll it up. It had a lot of scientific inaccuracies, though...like seeing stuff through filtered glasses,even though there aren't any colors...or somehow managing to light oil torches that have been sitting around for 200 years. I still found it entertaining. The showing at the AMC Hamilton 24 was up to their usual high standards and the 6:00 show was packed to the rafters. It's surprising how many audiences there applaud at the end of a film.
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Leo Enticknap
Film God
Posts: 7474
From: Loma Linda, CA
Registered: Jul 2000
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posted 11-27-2004 07:19 PM
OK, being glamorous and blonde allows you to get your PhD aged about 22 and then walk into a senior curatorial job in your country's main national public archive. Maybe I'm just jealous (I didn't get mine until I was 26, and six years after that I'm working in a small regional archive) but I have a little bit of trouble believing that. I don't know anyone in a middle to senior curatorial post at our National Archives (formerly Public Record Office) aged under 50, and most of them are male! Then there is the issue of the Brits being the villians. Admittedly we may have been around the time of the Boston Tea Party, but surely things have moved on a bit since then. And in this case the anti-British/European stereotypes weren't even funny (as they were, say, with Alan Rickman in Die Hard).
Obviously the big area of interest around this film for me was its depiction of archives and archivists. If only I had a 'conservation room' with a fraction of the high tech gizmos as the one shown in this film! But if it encourages people to get interested in what we do and how the stuff we preserve is relevant and interesting (be it published documents like the Declaration of Independence, unpublished paper archives, photographs, moving image or audio recordings) then I guess the film will have done some good. But on the whole I really didn't like those stereotypes.
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