National Treasure is, well, slightly cheesy and cliched but nevertheless engrossing and fun. To describe it as
Indiana Jones for the
Da Vinci Code crowd would not, I think, be unkind. It stars
Nicholas Cage as Benjamin Franklin Gates, scion of a family who've long kept a secret. In the opening scenes the young Ben is taken through the tale by his grandfather, who describes how a vast treasure, originating in
Egypt, was gather and hidden by the Knights Templar and subsequently the Freemasons. Eventually it was hidden somewhere in the
USA, ostensibly to keep it from the
British and the family Gates hold the last remaining clue “The secret is held by Charlotte”.
Despite this warning about who to avoid, we first meet the adult Ben Gates and his compatriot
Short Round Riley Poole as he journeys across the arctic snow in the company of Ian Howe, a rich Briton (played by the man who may be most responsible for changing the way people prounounce Sean,
Sean Bean) and his henchmen. Howe is obviously after the treasure for nefarious porpoises (though he's supposedly already rich since he's funding the trip, but anyway) and as soon as the clue is discovered, attempts to dispatch Gates as soon as he believes it's been decoded.
The clue leads to the
Declaration of Independence and how it hides a map to the treasure. With Howe poised to steal it, and having survived the attempt on their lives and been knocked back by the FBI who don't believe anyone could steal the Declaration, Gates decides to steal it himself, stopping only long enough to pick up the young, sexy
National Archives archivist Abigail Chase. As they decipher each clue to lead them closer to the treasure, Howe and his goons keep close behind them.
Harvey Keitel does a turn as an FBI agent who's after both groups.
B+
Official site: http://nationaltreasure.com/
Yeah, too bad I've already read the books they obviously took all their information from. Might catch it when it comes on HBO though.