National Treasure (film): Difference between revisions
Line 88: | Line 88: | ||
* On some versions of the movie, when Ben arrives at his dad's house a subtitle appears saying "Philadelphia, PA" when infact they are in Maryland. This has been fixed in more recent versions. |
* On some versions of the movie, when Ben arrives at his dad's house a subtitle appears saying "Philadelphia, PA" when infact they are in Maryland. This has been fixed in more recent versions. |
||
*When Riley is giving the kid the code that they found on the back of the [[Declaration of Independence]] one of the [[Post-It |
*When Riley is giving the kid the code that they found on the back of the [[Declaration of Independence]] one of the [[Post-It note] Post-It Notes]]already has "ow" on it meaning that when he gave the kid the note to find "STOW" it already had it on it. |
||
==External links== |
==External links== |
Revision as of 23:57, 3 August 2006
National Treasure | |
---|---|
Directed by | Jon Turteltaub |
Written by | Jim Kouf and Marianne & Cormac Wibberley |
Produced by | Jerry Bruckheimer |
Starring | Nicolas Cage, Diane Kruger, Justin Bartha, Sean Bean, Jon Voight |
Music by | Trevor Rabin |
Distributed by | Buena Vista International |
Release date | November 19 2004 |
Running time | 131 min. |
Language | English |
Budget | $100,000,000 |
- This is for the movie. See also the general concept of national treasure.
National Treasure is a 2004 movie from Walt Disney Pictures written by Jim Kouf, Cormac Wibberley and Marianne Wibberley, produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, and directed by Jon Turteltaub. It stars Nicolas Cage, Diane Kruger, Justin Bartha, Sean Bean, Jon Voight, Harvey Keitel and Christopher Plummer. It is an adventure movie set in the USA about a search for lost treasure, involving stealing the Declaration of Independence, which leads to a trail intertwined with the Knights Templar, the Masons, and has many similar plot elements as The Da Vinci Code.
- Tagline
- The greatest adventure history has ever revealed.
According to Box Office Mojo.com, with a production budget of $100 million and release in 3,243 theaters, National Treasure went on to have an opening weekend domestic gross of $35,142,554. Overall, National Treasure earned a domestic total gross of $173,008,894 (with a worldwide gross of $347,451,894). [1]
Synopsis
Nicholas Cage plays Benjamin Franklin Gates, scion of the Gates family, who, following in the footsteps of his grandfather (Plummer), is protector of the key to a legendary ancient worldwide Knights Templar/Freemasons treasure hidden by Masons during the American Revolution. Hoping to find it, he ventures deep in the Arctic to the wrecked SS Charlotte, whereupon finding this riddle:
The legend writ,
the stain affected.
The key in Silence, undetected.
Fifty-five in iron pen,
Mr. Matlack can't offend.
He discovers that there might be a map to the treasure on the back of the Declaration of Independence. His partner, Ian Howe, suggests they steal it. Gates says no, and this triggers a race to get the Declaration and find the map. Ben and his sidekick, Riley Poole (Bartha), decide to steal the Declaration in order to keep it out of the hands of the sinister and traitorous Ian (Bean). Along the way, he obtains the assistance of his reluctant father (Voight) and an attractive National Archives archivist, Dr. Abigail Chase (Kruger). They are all tracked by FBI agents, led by Special Agent Sadusky (Keitel). The searchers ultimately discover that the Knights Templar thought that the treasure was too big for only one man and that it should thus be spread throughout the world. There is a strong implication that the Templars believed in democracy, and that one monarch should never hold all the power.
Inspiration and influences
The idea of a large treasure which uses the Declaration of Independence as a clue to its discovery is similar to the story of the Beale ciphers, which supposedly were buried in Bedford county, Virginia circa 1820. However, to decode part of that cipher, one simply had to know the text of the Declaration; one did not need the original document itself.
The film also draws upon several real-life pieces of history, including the use by revolutionary American forces of invisible inks to store hidden information in letters and other documents; dictionary codes as a form of cipher; and other intelligence tradecraft of the era.
The secret location of the treasure may have been inspired by stories of the mysterious "Money Pit" at Oak Island. The site is subject to various rumors surrounding the Knights Templar, the American Revolution, and pre-Columbian voyages to America.
List of all clues and their meaning
- "The Secret Lies With Charlotte" - refers to a ship that somehow ended up in the Arctic Circle.
- The Pipe "The legend writ, the stain affected. The key in Silence undetected. Fifty-five in iron pen, Mr. Matlack can't offend" - Written on the stem of a Meerschaum pipe, stem needed to be dipped in ink or similar substance, then rolled across paper to read clue. Refers to the Declaration of Independence.
- Ottendorf cipher on back of Declaration of Independence - Cipher where the key is the Silence Dogood letters, this piece of information is withheld from Ian at the beginning of the movie.
- Ottendorf cipher solution - "The vision to see the treasured past, comes as the timely shadow crosses in front of the house of Pass and Stow" - refers to Independence Hall and the Liberty Bell .
- $100 Bill - supplies the specific time to be at Independence Hall to find the next clue.
- Ocular Device - Found in fake brick with Freemason symbol when the shadow from Independence Hall points to a specific wall, Ocular Device needed to see the map in its entirety.
- "Heere At The Wall" and the Trinity Church symbol - Found on the map when viewed through Ocular Device, refers to Trinity Church in New York City on the corners of Wall Street and Broadway.
- "Beneath Parkington Lane" - Found on the map when viewed through Ocular Device and the lenses are ajusted. Refers to a 3rd degree master mason intombed in the Trinity Church Mausoleum, his tomb concealed the entrance to the Freemason temple where the treasure was hidden.
- The Pipe - Final clue, the pipe was not only a clue to the Declaration of Independence, it was also the key to unlock the room where the treasure was hidden. Head of pipe needed to be placed inside the wall, to allow the stem of the pipe to turn it. Press the pipe head when turned, to unlock the treasure room.
Trivia
- Before the movie was rated PG by the MPAA, it was under the Touchstone Pictures banner (which is part of Disney). When the film received a PG rating, it was then placed under the more family-oriented Walt Disney Pictures banner. [citation needed]
- The bottomless pit underneath Trinity Church visible in the movie does not really exist under Manhattan.
- In the backstory of the treasure, Christopher Plummer's character says "The Knight's Templar understood the treasure should never fall into the hands of the British". The bad guys of the film are all British.
- National Archives security was actually tightened after the release of the movie. The reason for this is the crew of National Treasure went to the Archives and asked "If someone was to steal a document out of this building, how would they do it?". This was explained by Turteltaub in the special features on the DVD.
Sequels
- National Treasure 2 will be released in 2007-2008.
Goofs
- On the HP laptops used in the film, many are seen with Mac OS X installed, which is impossible, because of the following reasons:
- OS X only runs on Apple systems legally.
- The Intel port of Mac OS X wasn't public knowledge in 2004, although rumors existed.
- Benjamin Franklin never proposed Daylight saving time. He humourously stated that people should rise early and sleep early. William Willett actually proposed DST in 1907.
- On some versions of the movie, when Ben arrives at his dad's house a subtitle appears saying "Philadelphia, PA" when infact they are in Maryland. This has been fixed in more recent versions.
- When Riley is giving the kid the code that they found on the back of the Declaration of Independence one of the [[Post-It note] Post-It Notes]]already has "ow" on it meaning that when he gave the kid the note to find "STOW" it already had it on it.