Da Vinci Code The facts C4 Feb 3rd
Da Vinci Code The facts C4 Feb 3rd
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Discussion

telecat

Original Poster:

8,528 posts

264 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
quotequote all
Tony Robinson delves into the Facts (or not) behind the "Da Vinci Code".

Rude-boy

22,227 posts

256 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
quotequote all
When is it on mate?

anonymous-user

77 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
quotequote all
Most of it has already been shown to be imaginary. Good book though.

Don

28,378 posts

307 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
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unrepentant said:
Most of it has already been shown to be imaginary.


Indeed yes - but well enough grounded to be pleasantly convincing whilst reading it.

unrepentant said:
Good book though.

Do you know? I actually struggled to get through it. Its not bad at all - it just didn't quite seem to live up to the hype. The wife was completely gripped though. I suspect it depends if its Your Thing or not, too.

ApexClipper

27,168 posts

266 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
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unrepentant said:
Most of it has already been shown to be imaginary. Good book though.


What parts have do you believe to have been shown as being imaginary?

docevi1

10,430 posts

271 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
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I asked the same question back in August last year this thread has some interesting points and discussions.

What gets me most about the book is that it has raised so many other books and now TV shows into it's correctness - not many other books have done that

It's a good read, but I much prefer his earlier book on the same subject, Angels and Demons

JonRB

79,363 posts

295 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
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You want to read "Cryptonomicon" and "Snow Crash", both by Neal Stephenson.

(Only marginally related to the Da Vinci Code, mind.)

>> Edited by JonRB on Wednesday 26th January 13:10

semtex73

71 posts

259 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
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It's a great yarn, and Dan Brown cleverly combines elements of truth with a huge amount of artistic license. Funnily enough the local news even made reference to it the other night as Opus Dei are opening their first parish (probably not the correct technical term) in London. The reporter questioned the Priest on whether he practised self-flagulation, to which he firstly called the journo "cheeky", and then went round the houses trying to avoid a direct answer ... that'll be a 'yes' then we can presume!! Agree that 'Angels & Demons' even better.

>> Edited by semtex73 on Wednesday 26th January 13:12

telecat

Original Poster:

8,528 posts

264 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
quotequote all
Sorry tit;e cut short 3rd of feb.

obiwonkeyblokey

5,400 posts

263 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
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semtex73 said:
Agree that 'Angels & Demons' even better.

>> Edited by semtex73 on Wednesday 26th January 13:12


except for the ridiculous helicopter bit ( trying to not give too much away)...oh and the interesting airplane at the beginning, ( again, trying to not give too much away)

otherwise I also enjoyed it more than TDVC, his others are just efforts though and Im sure you could spend your time more wisely

semtex73

71 posts

259 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
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Actually I tried the helicopter thing and it works a treat...
Selective memory on my part - slightly more than a pinch of salt required for those bits.

mr_tony

6,347 posts

292 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
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JonRB said:
You want to read "Cryptonomicon" and "Snow Crash", both by Neal Stephenson.


Yeah - when are they goign to make a film of Snow Crash - I mean the opening sequence of pizza delivery has hollywood written all over it...

as fod DV - the whole thing has completely passed me by, all I read on it put me off...

JonRB

79,363 posts

295 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
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mr_tony said:
as for DV - the whole thing has completely passed me by, all I read on it put me off...
I must confess I haven't actually read it. For the past few months, in every train I've sat on and every airport lounge I've waited in, I've seen people reading it. That alone is enough to put me off - I've never been a sheep.

rustybin

1,769 posts

261 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
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JonRB said:


I must confess I haven't actually read it. For the past few months, in every train I've sat on and every airport lounge I've waited in, I've seen people reading it. That alone is enough to put me off - I've never been a sheep.


But there must have been even more people who weren't reading it...

Baaaaaah

docevi1

10,430 posts

271 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
quotequote all
obiwonkeyblokey said:
semtex73 said:
Agree that 'Angels & Demons' even better.
except for the ridiculous helicopter bit ( trying to not give too much away)...oh and the interesting airplane at the beginning, ( again, trying to not give too much away)
Just as stupid as some of the facts imo and adds to the story line

judas

6,209 posts

282 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
quotequote all
semtex73 said:
It's a great yarn, and Dan Brown cleverly combines elements of truth with a huge amount of artistic license. Funnily enough the local news even made reference to it the other night as Opus Dei are opening their first parish (probably not the correct technical term) in London. The reporter questioned the Priest on whether he practised self-flagulation, to which he firstly called the journo "cheeky", and then went round the houses trying to avoid a direct answer ... that'll be a 'yes' then we can presume!! Agree that 'Angels & Demons' even better.

I was sat in the dentist the other day, waiting my for latest round of torture, reading the Daily Mail (it was the only paper there - it was that or 'Hello' ) Anyhow - there was an article stating that the new education secretary, Ruth Kelly, is a member of Opus Dei! More here

neil.b

6,546 posts

270 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
quotequote all
judas said:

semtex73 said:
It's a great yarn, and Dan Brown cleverly combines elements of truth with a huge amount of artistic license. Funnily enough the local news even made reference to it the other night as Opus Dei are opening their first parish (probably not the correct technical term) in London. The reporter questioned the Priest on whether he practised self-flagulation, to which he firstly called the journo "cheeky", and then went round the houses trying to avoid a direct answer ... that'll be a 'yes' then we can presume!! Agree that 'Angels & Demons' even better.


I was sat in the dentist the other day, waiting my for latest round of torture, reading the Daily Mail (it was the only paper there - it was that or 'Hello' ) Anyhow - there was an article stating that the new education secretary, Ruth Kelly, is a member of Opus Dei! More here


I was reading that on an internet news site yesterday.

Scary stuff.

The spread of fundamentalist morons obviously not limited to our friends across the pond....

FrenchTVR

1,844 posts

290 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
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Almost finished it, very good reading. As stated before, lots of fiction with just enough facts to make it really interesting.

JonRB

79,363 posts

295 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
quotequote all
FrenchTVR said:
As stated before, lots of fiction with just enough facts to make it really interesting.
Sounds just like "Cryptonomicon" and "Snow Crash" in that case.

But then again, that is probably true of a lot of 'speculative fiction' (my term).

_dobbo_

14,619 posts

271 months

Wednesday 26th January 2005
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JonRB said:

FrenchTVR said:
As stated before, lots of fiction with just enough facts to make it really interesting.

Sounds just like "Cryptonomicon" and "Snow Crash" in that case.

But then again, that is probably true of a lot of 'speculative fiction' (my term).


Cryptonomicon is not only a great book (I loved it) but it's also a good weapon in hardback form due to it's size and weight!