Pander Bear
Bluelight Crew
"cockthirsty" is what really seals the deal. 

I'm not either, but is it common knowledge, yes or no, that most of xtian holidays (in terms of date) are just knock offs of previous pagan ones? Is it not true that christianity wasn't solely some patriarch? Ask someone, anyone who studies christian history and biblical intepretations and they'll attest to that...and hell most of the time those people are fundies.atlas said:I find it amusing and distasteful that the people here who are so cockthirsty for this movie/book are completely gung ho about overlooking facts, dissention, and the outright absence of evidence when they read TDC.
I don't waste my time on Pulp like this, but I'm pretty familiar with the historical Jesus, Christian Heresies, Gnosticism, and books like Holy Blood. YES: there are differences of opinion. YES: this subject is open to speculation and reinterpretation. However, you people appear hellbent on a popular interpretation (which claims to be as infallible as the Bible's proponents claim, btw). I'm left wondering why.
Could it be that you're very interested in taking Fundies down a peg and undermining the orthodoxy of a world religion. And forcing people to question their acceptance of established doctrine. I would like to do all those things too. I'm not, however, about to stoop to conspiracy theories masquerading as the incontrivertable evidence in order to kick start it.
AmorRoark said:As in the wise words of Lebowski, fuck it.
/me hands SA the bowl![]()
DigitalDuality said:Chuck Palahnuik is another fine example of someone who recycles their particular use of various literary tools over and over and over and over and over throughout his works, Tom Robins as well. Both are excellent authors IMO.
crystalcallas said:I finished the entire goddamn book in a record 8 hours. Twas good.
The extraordinary thing about the Da Vinci Code is that there is nothing extraordinary about it, and yet the author easily manages to hook us and reel us in. The structure of this mystery is entirely conventional. The prose style is stilted and ocassionally cheesy ; the characters bland and often stereotypical ; the only unique invention is a large albino hitman who happens to be an Opus Dei numerary, complete with cillice and a whip for self flaggelation.
There is also a British aristocrat scholar with leg braces who sounds like a compendium of all the eccentric old Brits we've ever seen in the movies.
Even the mystery isnt original : The Da Vinci Code is merely the mystery fiction version of a controversial nonfiction bestseller of the 1970s . The title of which I will refrain from mentioning, so as not to spoil your fun.![]()
I agree that there are some interesting sections that tackle the pagan symbolism in the "religious" paintings of Leonardo, and the early Catholic Church's campaigns to supress competing religions by appropriating their symbols, rituals, et al . It was refreshing to read because these were narrated simply by the Langdon character in the form of simple lectures. Getting a grade one lecture on the Fibonacci sequence and the golden proportion was quite a treat too. Being Catholic myself, I had fun reading this stuff....and it obviously did not affect me or my beliefs in any way at all and i think anybody who takes this too seriously should be subjected to water torture and a thorough whipping.
I noticed also that Brown often seemed to be on the verge of criticizing the Church and the Opus dei and then he swiftly backs off. Cant blame himClunky, un original, chicken - and yet I had dark circles under my eyes and a migraine because I couldnt put the book down. Amazing. The Da Vinci Code's main strength than, IMHO, is its blistering pace - free of literary aspirations or anything that can bog down the mock-serious plot. It's a meaty story and I can only hope the movie will leave me satisfied as well. ERGO : I agree with DD dammit yes it is a good book and it doesnt deserve to be called "horrible" or whatever. It's a pretty damn decent read IMHO. Kthks
If I were to start worrying about the scruples or politics of every author of every work I pick up at avery airport I happen to hop into, I would never read a damn word.
djwhirllpool, why would you say it was a letdown without even having seen it? I think it was just a case of being way too overhyped prior to its release. I enjoyed Angels and Demons more than The Davinci Code; I'd read them back to back, in reverse order. I mentioned before that I really couldn't picture Hanks in the main role, but will have to reserve my own judgement until I watch the film. I'll let the hype down first.djwhirlpool said:Did anyone see it this weekend? I heard it was horrible. What a let down!
When I'd said that "I really couldn't picture Hanks in the main role", I was afraid that what you described above is the impression he would leave. To me, putting Hanks in that role was akin to casting Clive Owen as James Bond. Both a mistake (imho), one was held back, one made it. Or did he?cravNbeets said:hanks turned in bar none the most drab uninspired performance i've ever seen from him