These Are the Best Movies Since 2000
| sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, yes,... |
| vibrant ticket booth | 08/23/18 | | Provocative sapphire kitty | 08/23/18 | | Bright heaven wagecucks | 08/18/18 | | Rusted Mewling Bawdyhouse | 08/18/18 | | Trip Pea-brained Church | 08/19/18 | | Aromatic Cruise Ship Multi-billionaire | 08/18/18 | | bull headed corn cake pocket flask | 08/18/18 | | comical cowardly potus | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | Orchid Trump Supporter | 08/18/18 | | Concupiscible shimmering athletic conference | 08/19/18 | | Yellow tank filthpig | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Yellow tank filthpig | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Yellow tank filthpig | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Contagious weed whacker plaza | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | Contagious weed whacker plaza | 08/18/18 | | Yellow tank filthpig | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Yellow tank filthpig | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Yellow tank filthpig | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Contagious weed whacker plaza | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Contagious weed whacker plaza | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Contagious weed whacker plaza | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | Concupiscible shimmering athletic conference | 08/19/18 | | Razzle-dazzle national security agency | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | Razzle-dazzle national security agency | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | Laughsome gunner | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Laughsome gunner | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | aphrodisiac opaque senate | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | Razzle-dazzle national security agency | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | Beady-eyed Chrome Sneaky Criminal | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | blue fanboi messiness | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | blue fanboi messiness | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | Ultramarine jap giraffe | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | Yellow tank filthpig | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | Contagious weed whacker plaza | 08/18/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | Contagious weed whacker plaza | 08/18/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/18/18 | | Contagious weed whacker plaza | 08/18/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/18/18 | | Contagious weed whacker plaza | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | Contagious weed whacker plaza | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | Irradiated Scourge Upon The Earth | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | deep persian | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | Beady-eyed Chrome Sneaky Criminal | 08/18/18 | | aphrodisiac opaque senate | 08/18/18 | | soul-stirring tan forum patrolman | 08/18/18 | | Razzle-dazzle national security agency | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Drab deranged candlestick maker | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | curious abode | 08/18/18 | | bronze home | 08/18/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/18/18 | | Grizzly free-loading alpha | 08/18/18 | | Pearly Blood Rage Tanning Salon | 08/18/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/18/18 | | Arousing white milk | 08/18/18 | | Ocher thriller trailer park | 08/18/18 | | curious abode | 08/18/18 | | Lime kink-friendly yarmulke | 08/18/18 | | Insecure primrose trust fund sweet tailpipe | 08/18/18 | | deep persian | 08/18/18 | | Insecure primrose trust fund sweet tailpipe | 08/18/18 | | deep persian | 08/18/18 | | Insecure primrose trust fund sweet tailpipe | 08/18/18 | | Rusted Mewling Bawdyhouse | 08/18/18 | | aphrodisiac opaque senate | 08/18/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/18/18 | | Charcoal Meetinghouse Depressive | 08/18/18 | | frozen cerebral place of business | 08/18/18 | | Passionate ceo | 08/18/18 | | frozen cerebral place of business | 08/19/18 | | sick church building skinny woman | 08/19/18 | | razzle famous landscape painting | 08/19/18 | | Passionate ceo | 08/18/18 | | idiotic supple house | 08/18/18 | | Pink Pistol Reading Party | 08/19/18 | | exciting saffron digit ratio | 08/23/18 | | Provocative sapphire kitty | 08/23/18 | | bearded lake mediation | 08/23/18 | | Excitant Pisswyrm | 08/23/18 | | Excitant Pisswyrm | 08/23/18 |
Poast new message in this thread
Date: August 18th, 2018 12:36 PM Author: sick church building skinny woman
CHILDREN OF MEN (2006)
Alfonso Cuarón’s adaptation of the P.D. James novel evinced the perfect balance of technical prowess, propulsive storytelling, complex character development and timeliness when it was released in 2006. But its depiction of a dystopian near-future – what we ruefully now call the present — has proved to be not just visionary but prophetic. Its predictive value aside, it stands as a flawless movie — a masterwork of cinematic values at their purest, with each frame delivering emotion and information in equally compelling measure.
25TH HOUR (2002)
Released a little more than a year after Sept. 11, 2001, Spike Lee’s urban thriller, about a criminal (a superb Ed Norton) confronting his past as he embarks on a seven-year prison sentence, was the first bona fide post-9/11 movie, evoking post-World War II neorealism in its use of a shattered city as a backdrop. Although Lee never commented on the tragedy directly in the film, it suffused the film’s mood of numbed resignation (the ruins of Ground Zero can be glimpsed in the background). Lee displayed his usual talent for beginnings and endings, conceiving an operatic coda bursting with life, hope and the grief of a future reduced to ashes.
THE HURT LOCKER (2008)
Director Kathryn Bigelow has always felt at home in hyper-masculine, ritualistically aggressive subcultures. In this Iraq War drama, she plunged viewers into the world of technicians dismantling explosive devices in and around Baghdad with filmmaking that was viscerally subjective and formally thoughtful. Although the battle sequences were masterfully choreographed and executed, it’s a scene toward the end – when a cocky bomb tech returns stateside and stands dumbfounded in a supermarket cereal aisle – that’s the most memorable, conveying an entire interior landscape with no words or discernible action whatsoever.
MICHAEL CLAYTON (2007)
If movies can be evaluated as sums of their parts — script, performance, design, editing and sound — then this legal thriller is sheer perfection. Screenwriter Tony Gilroy, making his directorial debut, wisely subverts the native charisma of star George Clooney, whose portrayal of a man coming undone among Manhattan cutthroats stands as the finest of his career. It’s a master class in balancing craft, tone and star power with precision, finesse and, of all things, soul.
PAN’S LABYRINTH (2006)
An eccentric, uncompromising artist pursuing his most personal obsession always courts risk: At their worst, such enterprises wind up being overworked, solipsistic and hopelessly opaque. With this surrealistic fable — the story of an intrepid young girl in Franco-era Spain finding safety in the most frightening reaches of her imagination — Guillermo del Toro created a film that qualified not only as one of the most dazzling visual pieces of cinema of the early century but also as a superbly effective political allegory regarding fascism, personal expression and the power of finding allies in our most secret monsters.
THERE WILL BE BLOOD (2007)
From its nearly wordless opening sequence, featuring the prospector Daniel Plainview bullying a vein of ore from a pit in the American Southwest, Paul Thomas Anderson’s adaptation of the Upton Sinclair novel “Oil!” announces its ambition: to be the closest thing we have to the Great American Novel on screen. A wild, unwieldy portrait of greed, aspiration and self-belief, featuring an uncompromising performance by Daniel Day-Lewis, this chronicle of enterprise, exploration and Darwinian capitalism bursts with daring and emotion; even its bizarre final sequence — controversial for its brazen tonal shifts and outright weirdness — acknowledges the fact that the very best movies always have a touch of madness to them.
BOYHOOD (2014)
The coming-of-age tale is a reliable genre precisely because of its reassuring linearity; the idea of discovering it anew is ludicrous, which is probably why Richard Linklater attempted to do it, filming the same boy over 12 years — along with Patricia Arquette and Ethan Hawke as his parents — and then working with longtime editor Sandra Adair to sew the resulting assortment of moments together into a seamlessly flowing depiction of time at its most inexorable, corrosive and liberating. It’s not often that one can say a filmmaker has invented a new cinematic language, but that’s what Linklater did with this tender, openhearted portrait.
4 MONTHS, 3 WEEKS AND 2 DAYS (2007)
Naturalism as cinematic style is nothing new – as the oeuvre of everyone from John Cassavetes and Mike Leigh to Paul Greengrass and Andrea Arnold readily attest – but the Romanian writer-director Cristian Mungiu reinvigorated the form with this portrait of a young woman in Bucharest working the late-communist black-market system to terminate a pregnancy. Told virtually in real time with long, uninterrupted takes, the story is a harrowing, unforgettable portrayal of Darwinian survival, as well as female friendship, generational change and ethical complexity.
OLD JOY (2006)
Like Mungiu, the American director Kelly Reichardt works within a rigorously realistic vernacular, the kind of unforced, spontaneous, fly-on-the-wall observation that demands far more difficult work than its improvisatory aesthetic suggests. Where “4 Months, 3 Weeks” was gritty and downbeat, this chronicle of a weekend trip taken by two old friends in the Pacific Northwest is lyrical and lush, with the actors Will Oldham and Daniel London being enveloped by the generous verdant embrace of the Cascade Mountains, their emotional connection deepening over long, eloquently silent interludes.
ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND (2004)
Michel Gondry, working from a script by Charlie Kaufman, limns a man’s desperate attempts to erase and then recapture a lost love in an audaciously imaginative, brilliantly staged psychic thriller that starts out as a thwarted love story but winds up being a deeply moving meditation on memory, consciousness and the construction of personal meaning. As an ever-enfolding house of cards, the movie manages to be cerebral and achingly emotional, freewheeling and meticulously calibrated, all at the same time.
HUNGER (2008)
The accomplished visual artist Steve McQueen would win an Oscar for the 2013 drama “12 Years a Slave,” but it was his directorial debut about Irish Republican Army leader Bobby Sands that announced his undisputed cinematic chops. Structured as a triptych set in the notorious Irish prison the Maze, the film follows Sands – played in a mesmerizing performance by Michael Fassbender – during his final days, when he embarked on a hunger strike to attain political status for IRA prisoners. Anchored by a riveting 17-minute take when Sands debates the morality of his political action with a Catholic priest, the film is both intimate and carefully formalist, disturbing and full of fleeting, improbable beauty.
YOU CAN COUNT ON ME (2000)
The writing-directing debut of playwright Kenneth Lonergan is a masterpiece of subtext, on its face the story of an adult brother and sister coming to terms with their past, but teeming with the subterranean impulses of grief, abandonment, loyalty and forgiveness. Filmed with disarming directness, masterfully interpreted by Mark Ruffalo and Laura Linney, this simple, often amusing human drama demonstrates the art of screenwriting at its most layered, honest and emotionally resonant.
NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN (2007)
With this adaptation of the Cormac McCarthy novel, Joel and Ethan Coen created a technically perfect movie, a one-film master class in every element of cinematic style, from writing and acting to cinematography, editing and sound design. Viewers can be skeptical of the film’s moral universe – conditioned by McCarthy’s weary pessimism and overworked moral rhetoric — and still appreciate the Coens’ impeccable control of the material. A scene when Josh Brolin’s protagonist listens to an approaching foe in a hotel hallway is a tutorial in the use of sound to tell a story with excruciating tension and suspense.
I’M NOT THERE (2007)
Biopics are usually the starchy, conventional stuff of Wiki-lists and Oscar bait. But Todd Haynes exploded the genre in this composite portrait of Bob Dylan, in which the notoriously mythologized and constantly self-reinventing musician was portrayed by six male and female actors, only a few of whom bore a remote physical resemblance to the real-life analog. The fact that the most spot-on depiction belonged to Cate Blanchett (as the “Dont Look Back”-era Dylan) only reinforced the rightness of an enterprise that subverted the form, but never at the expense of the subject himself.
MINORITY REPORT (2002)
Steven Spielberg’s adaptation of the Philip K. Dick story stands as one of his finest elaborations on established genre conventions, in this case film noir put to the service of speculative science fiction. Casting Tom Cruise in a starring role as a man at odds with the surveillance culture of the not-too-distant future, Spielberg built a sleek, stylish, eerily convincing world of consumerist technology and corporate control that turned out to be breathtakingly prescient.
DUNKIRK (2017)
Since his breakout indie hit “Memento,” Christopher Nolan has played with notions of time, scrambling his movies’ chronology and creating densely layered narratives that barely skirt utter incomprehensibility. With this interpretive history of the World War II evacuation of Allied forces, Nolan deconstructs the time frame, doing away with linear narrative in favor of a sensory experience that is immersive and empathic. As an exercise in sound and image, “Dunkirk” achieved a purity rarely seen in contemporary commercial cinema, simultaneously returning movies to their roots and pushing them forward.
MUDBOUND (2017)
In her adaptation of Hillary Jordan’s World War II-era novel, Dee Rees made a magnificent throwback of a movie, a multigenerational drama reminiscent of “The Best Years of Our Lives” and the literary work of William Faulkner that also felt distinctively of this era. Collaborating with cinematographer Rachel Morrison and an acting ensemble that included Carey Mulligan and Mary J. Blige, Rees embraced the classical values of sturdy, unfussy narrative filmmaking, shaking off the dust in the process and proving that even old-fashioned movies can feel urgent, new and quintessentially American.
SPOTLIGHT (2015)
Another example of pared-down, classical filmmaking, Tom McCarthy’s dramatization of the Boston Globe’s investigation of sexual abuse within the Catholic Church exudes quiet confidence, from its straightforward storytelling and McCarthy’s levelheaded control of tone to ensemble scenes of shoe-leather reporting that with less accomplished actors and filmmakers would have been fatally talky and dull. This is a high-wire act in extracting taut drama from quotidian routine, and it never puts a foot wrong.
SON OF SAUL (2015)
Even at their best-intentioned and highest execution, films aspiring to dramatize the Holocaust evoke queasiness almost by definition, with the act of bearing witness and preserving memory almost always at odds with questions of aestheticizing sadism and suffering, or reducing them to spectacle. Laszlo Nemes, a first-time feature filmmaker from Hungary, achieved the impossible, re-creating the atrocities at Auschwitz, but at the margins of a frame taken up with the wary visage of a man navigating the camp while trying to give a child’s corpse a proper Jewish burial. Filmed in a squared-off aspect ratio that accentuated the protagonist’s entrapment, Nemes called upon viewers to fill in the blanks of the unspeakable acts around them, making us collaborators in his own moral imagination.
STORIES WE TELL (2012)
In this personal memoir of her own childhood, actress and director Sarah Polley uses first-person essay, interviews, reenactments and archival footage to create a sublime visual and emotional collage in which fact, fiction, memory and slippery notions of truth run in parallel and intersect in fascinating ways. As part of a Golden Age of nonfiction film, this exploration of the genre’s core tenets qualifies both as a juicy whodunit and a valuable demonstration of how to balance artistic license and transparency, fulfilling its implicit contract with the audience with beauty, grace and tact.
THE FOG OF WAR (2003)
In the 1990s, Errol Morris revolutionized documentary filmmaking with his use of narrative film technique, including reenactments and stylized speculative scene-making. In this movie, about Vietnam-era defense secretary Robert McNamara, Morris delivered the ultimate example of an otherwise derided nonfiction form: the talking-head movie. Stripping the format down to its deceptively crude basics, filming McNamara in pitiless close-up, he allows his subject to emerge as several things at once: confident, conflicted, brilliant, arrogant and, finally, confounding.
THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS (2001)
Wes Anderson achieved the fullest expression of his signature style in this saga of a sprawling Manhattan family, who flawlessly embodied the filmmaker’s deadpan humor and mannered style, but avoided the quirk-for-quirk’s sake to which he can often succumb. Anderson’s bespoke approach to visuals and music can often feel labored and hermetic. But this story of sadness and redemption brims with genuine feeling that breaks out of the dollhouse and into a realm that’s recognizably, triumphantly human.
SPIRITED AWAY (2001)
Japanese anime director Hayao Miyazaki seems unable to make anything but masterpieces; still, this epic tale of a young girl separated from her parents and thrust into a magical world, stands as his greatest — not only for its transporting visuals but for its bracing sense of adventure, terror, resilience and heroism. Full of whimsy, fantasy and childlike wonder — elements that would otherwise feel overbearing or unforgivably ersatz – Miyazaki’s vision is also earthy and profound, even at its most allegorical.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/style/wp/2018/08/17/feature/these-are-the-best-movies-of-the-2000s
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4054836&forum_id=2#36638637) |
|
Date: August 23rd, 2018 3:25 AM Author: vibrant ticket booth
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, yes, no, no, no, no, no...
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4054836&forum_id=2#36669120) |
|
Date: August 18th, 2018 1:15 PM Author: Razzle-dazzle national security agency
Minority Report was a beautiful movie that is masterfully plotted.
I feel like "film snobs" really don't appreciate how hard it is for a movie and all its pieces to perfectly fit together.
Then they praise shit like Dunkirk which could've been written in 20 minutes.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4054836&forum_id=2#36638877) |
Date: August 18th, 2018 12:47 PM Author: razzle famous landscape painting
Assassination of Jesse James
Arrival
Prisoners
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4054836&forum_id=2#36638686)
|
Date: August 18th, 2018 12:54 PM Author: Contagious weed whacker plaza
Movies that are way better than most of the movies on this list:
Whiplash
Bladerunner 2049
Inception
Wind River
Prisoners
Collateral
The Accountant
Sicario
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4054836&forum_id=2#36638744) |
Date: August 18th, 2018 1:00 PM Author: razzle famous landscape painting
Zero Dark Thirty
Drive
A History of Violence
Apocalypto
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4054836&forum_id=2#36638776) |
Date: August 18th, 2018 1:03 PM Author: Grizzly free-loading alpha
This list has me so irate I'm digging out my hard drives.
Bone Tomahawk is the best western since Unforgiven, maybe even since Yojimbo. Suck it, libs.
If you want technically impressive films birdman blows COM out of the water. It's watchable too, not just drab british landscapes interspersed with pregnant niggers.
Bronson, Filth, The Lobster, Oldboy, Antichrist... any of these are better than Son of Saul, for christs sakes
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4054836&forum_id=2#36638789) |
Date: August 18th, 2018 1:28 PM Author: Razzle-dazzle national security agency
Additions:
Inception
Dark Knight
The Departed
--Also, no one wants to put comedies on these lists because dweebs always go "really! you found x funny, really?!" -- but these absolutely belong on the list
The Hangover
Anchorman or Step Brothers
Meet the Parents
Borat
Bad Santa
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4054836&forum_id=2#36638976) |
Date: August 18th, 2018 1:56 PM Author: Pearly Blood Rage Tanning Salon
i've really enjoyed everything jc chandor has made.
ill see anything he writes/directs, blind.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4054836&forum_id=2#36639153)
|
Date: August 18th, 2018 2:32 PM Author: Ocher thriller trailer park
Dunkirk sucked balls
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4054836&forum_id=2#36639368)
|
|
Date: August 18th, 2018 9:10 PM Author: sick church building skinny woman
It's interesting as a film, but ultimately inconsequential.
Quick: Name three characters from the film.
It's not going to hold up Canon wise.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4054836&forum_id=2#36641175) |
Date: August 23rd, 2018 3:02 AM Author: bearded lake mediation
National Treasure is a 2004 American adventure heist film produced and released by Walt Disney Pictures. It was written by Jim Kouf and the Wibberleys, produced by Jerry Bruckheimer and directed by Jon Turteltaub. It is the first film in the National Treasure film series and stars Nicolas Cage, Harvey Keitel, Jon Voight, Diane Kruger, Sean Bean, Justin Bartha and Christopher Plummer.
Cage plays Benjamin Franklin Gates, a historian and amateur cryptologist searching for a lost treasure of precious metals, jewelry, artwork and other artifacts that was accumulated into a single massive stockpile by looters and warriors over many millennia starting in Ancient Egypt, later rediscovered by warriors who form themselves into the Knights Templar to protect the treasure, eventually hidden by American Freemasons during the American Revolutionary War. A coded map on the back of the Declaration of Independence points to the location of the "national treasure," but Gates is not alone in his quest. Whoever can steal the Declaration and decode it first will find the greatest treasure in history.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4054836&forum_id=2#36669106) |
|
|