The Da Vinci Code Movie Review
The Da Vinci Code Movie Review

Audrey Tautou and Tom Hanks run through the Louvre (and toward a body) in 'The Da Vinci Code,' directed by Ron Howard and based on Dan Brown's best-selling novel. Credit Simon Mein/Columbia Pictures CANNES, France, May 17 — It seems you can't open a movie these days without provoking some kind of culture war skirmish, at least in the conflict-hungry media. Recent history — 'The Passion of the Christ,' 'The Chronicles of Narnia' — suggests that such controversy, especially if religion is involved, can be very good business. Ron Howard's adaptation of Dan Brown's best-selling primer on how not to write an English sentence, arrives trailing more than its share of theological and historical disputation. The arguments about the movie and the book that inspired it have not been going on for millennia — it only feels that way — but part of Columbia Pictures' ingenious marketing strategy has been to encourage months of debate and speculation while not allowing anyone to see the picture until the very last minute. Thus we have had a flood of think pieces on everything from Jesus and Mary Magdalene's prenuptial agreement to the secret recipes of Opus Dei, and vexed, urgent questions have been raised: Is Christianity a conspiracy? Is 'The Da Vinci Code' a dangerous, anti-Christian hoax?