Angels & Demons has some exciting sequences, a spectacular ending with a terrific twist and a grounding in the debate about science versus religion that could hardly be more timely.
Angels & Demons (2009)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:235
Fresh:85
Rotten:150
Average Rating:5.1/10
Consensus: Angels and Demons is a fast-paced thrill ride, and an improvement on the last Dan Brown adaptation, but the storyline too often wavers between implausible and ridiculous, and does not translate effectively to the big screen.
Rated: 12A [See Full Rating] for sequences of violence, disturbing images and thematic material.
Runtime: 4 hrs 45 mins
Genre: Action/Adventure
Theatrical Release:14-05-2009
Synopsis: Dan Brown’s novels are packed with fascinating historical tidbits which he ingeniously twists into plots that are so intricate and complex that there is a constant need to inform the reader with... Dan Brown’s novels are packed with fascinating historical tidbits which he ingeniously twists into plots that are so intricate and complex that there is a constant need to inform the reader with exposition, often leaving little room for character development. There is a bit of this stilted quality to ANGELS AND DEMONS, the second of Brown’s novels to be brought to the big screen by the tandem of Ron Howard and Tom Hanks, but more than enough intense action to keep the eyes of the audience as busy as their minds. The details of the plot are as diabolical as any in Hollywood history: after the pope’s death, a nefarious organization stashes an antimatter bomb somewhere in the Vatican, threatening to annihilate the conclave of cardinals who are meeting to elect the papal successor. To pass the time until the bomb will detonate, the enemy begins to torture and kill a few of the individual cardinals, but there is a pattern to the grotesque executions, involving hidden sculptural symbols and secret architectural clues. Unfortunately for the church, the man most capable of deciphering the code is the American "symbologist" Robert Langdon (Hanks), who happens to be an affirmed atheist. The script is filled with amazing details about the centuries-old conflict between the church and the Illuminati (whose members included Galileo, Michelangelo, and Bernini), which Hanks uncovers as he breathlessly races between various landmarks in Rome, always a step behind the sinister assassin. The secondary cast consists almost entirely of European actors, including Ewan McGregor, Stellan Skarsgaard, and Armin Mueller-Stahl, who betray so little emotion that it is impossible to tell who is a part of the conspiracy until long after the explosive climax. [More]
Starring: Tom Hanks, Ewan McGregor, Ayelet Zurer, Stellan Skarsgaard
Starring: Tom Hanks, Ewan McGregor, Ayelet Zurer, Stellan Skarsgaard, Pierfrancesco Favino, Nicolaj Lie Kaas, Armin Mueller-Stahl
Director: Ron Howard
Director: Ron Howard
Screenwriter: David Koepp, Akiva Goldsman
Producer: Brian Grazer, Ron Howard, John Calley
Composer: Hans Zimmer
Studio: Columbia Pictures
Reviews for Angels & Demons
Angels and Demons is a truly handsome production, seamlessly mixing real locations with beautifully detailed sets. There are a few good performances here, and some thrills. Yet there's a flatness to the plotting.
The Da Vinci Code, while not a great movie by a stretch, was better and actually offered some interesting characters.
At once overwrought and dull, clumsily staged and veering too often, without a hint of humor or irony, into parodic excesses and simplicities.
Angels & Demons is humorless, and way too talky. It leaves Hanks, one of the most likable actors in movies, stranded, unable to use his skill and his warmth to turn the one-dimensional Langdon into an actual character.
Those of you who felt The Da Vinci Code was too slow moving and dull should find a lot more to appreciate in the up-tempo Angels & Demons.
Angels & Demons might cause controversy among viewers who like their Tom Hanks films to be of some substance.
Ron Howard's follow-up to the stiff, stately 2006 The Da Vinci Code, might have been classy, entertaining junk -- if only it were entertaining.
A future camp classic. Where Howard wants us to make the sign of the cross, we're slapping high fives.
Tom Hanks needs to run! Run fast! Run here! Run there! Run over there, again!
By the time it’s all over audiences may feel they’ve been had by a fiendishly manipulative storyteller. But then, being had is one of the reasons we go to the movies.
Howard, however, doesn't go much beyond Langdon running and talking and thinking and running.
Try not to giggle when...Langdon is being called in for "[his] expertise, [his] erudition." The guy from Bachelor Party? Just kidding, Tom, we love you--just not in this kind of pricy but conspicuously soulless crap.
A clunky movie with awful dialogue and a more-convoluted-than-it-needs-to-be plot.
Yes, the film is a helluva lot more entertaining than The Da Vinci Code. Yes, Tom Hanks and Robert Langdon have been to the barber.
[T]he film does not conclude with Langdon being elected Pope himself, but, watching the spiraling inanities of the last 20 minutes, one might be forgiven for thinking it would be the next logical step.
Tom Hanks! Ron Howard! More dull exposition than a dozen dreary indie films! If that sounds good - run, don't walk - to see Angels & Demons
Howard seems to count on audience goodwill toward Hanks carrying over to Langdon, filling in the hero's many blanks.
Latest News for Angels & Demons
November 23, 2009:
RT on DVD & Blu-Ray: Angels & Demons, Funny People, and Superman
This week in home video, we've got a lot of brand new releases paired up with a handful of old classics making their comebacks. Among the choices from the current year's latest... More...
October 12, 2009:
RT on DVD: Top 10 Angels & Demons
This week sees Tom Hanks return to the role of author Dan Brown's most famous son, Robert Langdon, as the box-office hit Angels & Demons arrives on Blu-ray and DVD. While... More...
May 18, 2009:
Tune In to the Rotten Tomatoes Show This Week!
This week, The Rotten Tomatoes Show will be looking at the movies that opened over the weekend, with help from you (the Rotten Tomatoes community), the Current TV community, and... More...
May 17, 2009:
Box Office Guru Wrapup: Angels Floats to a #1 Debut
This weekend Tom Hanks and director Ron Howard reteamed for their second Robert Langdon adventure Angels & Demons and reached number one with an opening that was respectable,... More...
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