THE DA VINCI CODE
Book Title : The Da Vinci Code
Author : Dan Brown
Publisher / Year : Doubleday ( US) and Bantam ( UK) / 2003
Book Type : It’s a thriller with a blend of religion, crime, mystery and fiction.
Pages : 383
The Da Vinci Code was written by American author Dan Brown. It was first published in 2003 by Doubleday. It was a bestseller in 2004 selling over 70 million copies all over the world and also having been adapted for a film in 2006.
Dan Brown was an English teacher and also gave some Spanish classes, but in 1996 he decided to quit teaching and become a full-time writer. He has written four novels so far, Digital fortress ( 1998), Angels and Demons ( 2000), Deception Point ( 2001 ) and The Da Vinci Code ( 2003), his great success. He is now writing his fifth novel, The Solomon Key. Both Angel and Demons and The Da Vinci Code have the same main character, Robert Langdon.
I started reading this thrilling novel because I’ve got some friends who have read it and told me I should read it because it was a great novel with a engrossing plot.
Robert Langdon, professor of religious iconology and Symbology at Harvard University, is in Paris to give a lecture about a Religious iconology book he has written. He had made an appointment to meet Jacques Sauniere, the curator of the Louvre. One night the French police turn up in his hotel and tell him that Jacques Sauniere has been murdered in the museum under very strange circumstances and the Captain of the French police, Bezu Fache, would like to see him to ask him some questions and help them solve the murder. Robert Langdon, bewildered and startled, cannot imagine how he will be able t help them. At first he thinks he has nothing to do there and is reluctant to see Bezu Fache, but finally, at French police’s insistence, he accepts and goes to the murder scene.
Jacques Sauniere, in his last minutes of life, managed to write a number of riddles with his own blood. The captain of the French police, having seen and studied these riddles, thinks Robert Langdon is the murderer because his name appears in one of these riddles. But it is at this stage of the book when Sophie Neveu, Sauniere’s granddaughter and Parisian police agent, goes into action and a endless and breathtaking chase starts.
Sophie Neveu, after reading the riddles J. Sauniere left written, knows that these are secret coded messages for her and that R. Langdon is innocent. Thus, Sophie will help Robert escape from the French Police. They will both start a breathless and relentless adventure through Paris, London and beyond where The Priory of Sion ( a secret society ), Opus Dei and even The Catholic Church are involved.
They will be challenged to decipher codes and puzzles which lead them to an astonishing trip, finding out stunning details about Leonardo Da Vinci’s paintings and trying to find the location of The Holy Grail, only known by the members of The Priory of Sion and supposedly where the biggest secret of The Catholic Church is hidden, the proofs of a possible descendant of Jesus and Mary Magdalene. According to these proofs, Mary Magdalene would have given birth to Jesus’s child after the cruxification.
As I wrote before, I began reading this book because some friends of mine had recommended it to me. Yes, I do think it was worth it. It is a great novel with a gripping and exciting plot. When you have started it, it is difficult to put it down, you will never guess the surprising and unexpected final. Besides there is interesting information about Leonardo Da Vinci’s masterpieces. Never had I thought what Dan Brown tells us about The Last Supper by Da Vinci. I can assure you that if any of you read this thriller, you will never see this painting as you used to see it, at least it was what happened to me!. Furthermore, the book also explains the origin of The Knight Templars, The Christian Church, Opus Dei or why people think that Friday the thirteenth is considered unlucky. As a result of all this and of what is mentioned about the mystery of The Holy Grail and the possible descendants of Jesus, as most of you will know, this book has received bad criticism and a strong opposition from the church, what from my point of view, contrary to what the religious sectors wanted, has helped The Da Vinci Code to be a bestseller, since it has been a great publicity for Dan Brown’s book.
The vocabulary used by the writter is sometimes difficult and unfamiliar due to he uses many words related to religion, art or history, therefore they may be difficult to understand. Moreover it is quite formal since the two main characters, Robert Langdon and Sophie Neveu, are supposed to be very intelligent and learned people, so they seldom use any colloquialisms, slang or jargon. The writter also uses a lot of different verbs to describe the action as the book consists of a endless race in search of The Holy Grail.
In conclusion, I would recommend this book to everybody. The plot is engrossing and interesting. However I must admit it took me a good while to finish it because the vocabulary is quite formal and there are very specific words. Even so, It is worth reading it, great book.
Salva Córcoles.
Tuesday, 15 May 2007
Thursday, 10 May 2007
Trumpet voluntary
BOOK REVIEW
Book Title: Trumpet voluntary
Author: Jeremy Harmer
Publisher/Year: Cambridge, 1999
Book Type: Adventure
Pages:111
SUMMARY:
This book deals with the story of a man whose loves bring him many different dangerous experiences. In this retrospective story, our main character called Derek, a viola musician, who remembers how his life has arrived to the point where he is at the moment, married with his best friend from the music academy, Rachel. He begins by recalling how he arrived to London to learn music many years ago, which was what he had been wondering for a long time. There, he met many different people who would be really important in his future. The most important events of this period of his life were his platonic love with a Polish girl named Malgosia who fell in love with an older music student who was really self-centred and the most popular student in the school, Tibor. Moreover while he was expecting for her he followed studying and playing in a quartet, where he met Rachel with whom he had just an affair between friends. They both wouldn’t like to follow with their relationship so they carried on being just friends. After the first summer holidays in the school Malgosia broke up with Tibor because he committed an unfaithfulness with her sister in her home in Poland while they were on holidays. Then Derek profits to win the heart of Malgosia and they got married after finishing the academy and they live together in London. Then it seemed that everything was perfect. But she began making many different trips to Scotland alone being assumed by him that she was there to relax herself. The truth was that she had been keeping in touch with Tibor because she still loved him. So she helped him by bringing a poison hidden in a trumpet box from Scotland to England.
One day she disappeared and Derek became crazy, but he discovered an e-mail from Tibor to his wife where he was asking her to bring the poison to Rio de Janeiro. Afterwards he was interrogated by the police about Malgosia and he decided to travel to Rio. In that moment he was helped by two friends who told him where Tibor and his wife were, so he found them and he was shooted when he tried to rescue her. When he recovered from that, he realized that he was lucky to be alive and that his wife had escaped and was poisoned and near to die. So he came back to Poland where he knew that Malgosia was but it was pointless because she finally died.
After that he was so sceptical that he decided to come back to England where he was arrested by the police because of his wife crimes. When he was near to be jailed, Rachel’s mother who is a lawyer helped him and police set him free. Afterwards he fell in love with Rachel and he decided to come back to Rio in order to discover the truth of Tibor. This was that Tibor was going to sell this poison weapon to someone. Moreover he had been playing with Malgosia and her sister during all those years and Malgosia had committed suicide by poison because Tibor had rejected her. So Derek became crazy and contributed in Tibor’s accident which killed him.
Then he came back to London with Rachel and both lived together. That’s the point where Derek begins recalling his story from.
Characters Description
• Dereck: He is a viola player and mad about love. Along the story we can prove how he feels a blind love to Malgosia and this is going deeply mark him. I mean the way his life develops is completely different that it had been if he hadn’t fallen in love with Malgosia. Although there are a lot of objections between him and Malgosia and she is never completely involved in their relationship, he isn’t worried about it and follows believing in their relationship. So that we can say that he is an ambitious person in love questions and he is self-confident at the same time. Moreover he has an special ability to persuade other people to help him but never under blackmail.
He is not a very well-known student during his music learning period although he can be really friendly for those people he gets on well with.
On the other hand he is reliable because he tries not to disappoint his friends. He has also a quite developed common sense during his usual life, but he can also drive mad when discovers his wife’s big lie.
• Malgosia: This young girl is Dereck’ s wife. She is the most beautiful girl in the School and because of whom everyone is madly in love with her. She is from Poland and she is studying in London. This shows his enterprising spirit which makes her improve everyday. We could also say that she is a perfectionist in every area in her life. In love terms she always feels something about Tibor, although his behaviour is not the best. From my point of view his relation with Dereck lies just in friendship and when she breaks up with Tibor she feels alone and our protagonist takes advantage of the situation. In fact between her and Dereck there is never a usual lovers relation.
His quite love disappointments make her so upset that she decides that committing suicide is the only solution.
• Tibor: He is the most popular guy in his the School. He is very famous between girls because of his appealing and his sense of humour. He is very rude with unknown people although he is neither friendly with his closer people. We can prove this by the way he cares Malgosia and many other loves he seduces. He is always lying her while their relation, and long time after this relation is finished he perceives bothering her. So we can say that he is selfish and monopolizing.
If we talk about the characters motivations that provide the basis of the story these are their music tastes that make them go learning to that school. There they meet each other and our main characters begin establishing many different kind of relationships that are going to perceive during and after the school-mate relations. So that we don’t know many things at all from the characters life before their school time, and we begin knowing about their different personalities by the way they behave between them.
Firstly we can notice that the main motivation for the characters for staying together with the past of time is love and friends relationships that our main characters have. Moreover we can also point out that music paper is also very important for characters motivations, but from my point of view it is not so important as the personal relations that they discover between them.Malgosia’s love is addressed to Tibor sometimes but also to Derek many other times. This changes favour appearing new love relations between Tibor and Malgosia’ s sister, Malgosia and Derek and at the end between Rachel and Dereck. In addition we can say that Malgosia is always feeling something about Tibor, and this lying relationship is going to change many things in our characters life.
In the other hand we can see how many different friendship relations are going to begin since they met in the Royal Academy Of Music. To sample this we can mention the music group which was composed of Carl Robins (a violinist), Rachel Merino ( a cellist), Matt Jenkins ( a violinist) and Derek.
Another motivation for the characters appear when Derek begins desperately trying to look for Malgosia because he keeps in touch with her family, a Cuban private detective, a Brazilian student, and an English teacher in Rio.
From my point of view this is captivating story that catch readers attention from the first page, and keeps this emotion until the end. When I began reading this I could not imagine how a music book could deal with so different genres like adventure, love, thriller, etc.
I strongly recommend this book because it made me think a lot about the two different kinds of love that appear throughout the pages. These are real and lying love. It is amazing to think how these similar but very different feelings at the same time, are able to change character’s life in different ways. The end is a little sad because I felt that it was strongly unfair that Tibor’ s wicked love killed Malgosia. However we can also point out how truly love succeed in Derek love story, because he is able to remake his private life through his old friend Rachel.
After analysing the sentimental part of the book, I also liked how the action part of the story is a consequence, and at the end it is not left any loose end.
If we concentrate on language and style we must say that the vocabulary is not very difficult because there are just few unfamiliar words (e.g. rehearsal) and most of them have to do with technical music words. We could establish that diction is standard because the author does not use many formal nor informal words. I would describe the language the author uses as an accurate and simple way of summing up an action which happens during many years. It does not contain any colloquialisms nor jargon because it is supposed that character’s cultural level is elevated. Moreover, he succeed at the point of beginning from near the end of the history as a perfect sample of retrospective. So the exiting of the book is spread from the beginning until the end.
The majority of words are a mixture of concrete and abstract. We can find many of them dealing with love and loneliness topics buy many others also refer to concrete nouns like researching or music topics.
The writer uses specific words referring to different places where the history takes place like Rio de Janeiro, London, Poland. He also uses temporal specific words in order to establish a chronology (‘the next day’, ‘four years before’).
The author favours several words with particular connotations in order to arouse positive responses to his feelings (‘crazy about music’) or also negative (‘there’s no need to talk to me like that’).
Sentences are usually long because of the difficulty of telling a so long story in a short way. In addition we can sometimes find out some syntax inverted sentences (‘from the rooftop terrace of my hotel, high up above the twenty-fifth floor, the view of Rio de Janeiro was breathtaking’).
By Rubén Tena
Book Title: Trumpet voluntary
Author: Jeremy Harmer
Publisher/Year: Cambridge, 1999
Book Type: Adventure
Pages:111
SUMMARY:
This book deals with the story of a man whose loves bring him many different dangerous experiences. In this retrospective story, our main character called Derek, a viola musician, who remembers how his life has arrived to the point where he is at the moment, married with his best friend from the music academy, Rachel. He begins by recalling how he arrived to London to learn music many years ago, which was what he had been wondering for a long time. There, he met many different people who would be really important in his future. The most important events of this period of his life were his platonic love with a Polish girl named Malgosia who fell in love with an older music student who was really self-centred and the most popular student in the school, Tibor. Moreover while he was expecting for her he followed studying and playing in a quartet, where he met Rachel with whom he had just an affair between friends. They both wouldn’t like to follow with their relationship so they carried on being just friends. After the first summer holidays in the school Malgosia broke up with Tibor because he committed an unfaithfulness with her sister in her home in Poland while they were on holidays. Then Derek profits to win the heart of Malgosia and they got married after finishing the academy and they live together in London. Then it seemed that everything was perfect. But she began making many different trips to Scotland alone being assumed by him that she was there to relax herself. The truth was that she had been keeping in touch with Tibor because she still loved him. So she helped him by bringing a poison hidden in a trumpet box from Scotland to England.
One day she disappeared and Derek became crazy, but he discovered an e-mail from Tibor to his wife where he was asking her to bring the poison to Rio de Janeiro. Afterwards he was interrogated by the police about Malgosia and he decided to travel to Rio. In that moment he was helped by two friends who told him where Tibor and his wife were, so he found them and he was shooted when he tried to rescue her. When he recovered from that, he realized that he was lucky to be alive and that his wife had escaped and was poisoned and near to die. So he came back to Poland where he knew that Malgosia was but it was pointless because she finally died.
After that he was so sceptical that he decided to come back to England where he was arrested by the police because of his wife crimes. When he was near to be jailed, Rachel’s mother who is a lawyer helped him and police set him free. Afterwards he fell in love with Rachel and he decided to come back to Rio in order to discover the truth of Tibor. This was that Tibor was going to sell this poison weapon to someone. Moreover he had been playing with Malgosia and her sister during all those years and Malgosia had committed suicide by poison because Tibor had rejected her. So Derek became crazy and contributed in Tibor’s accident which killed him.
Then he came back to London with Rachel and both lived together. That’s the point where Derek begins recalling his story from.
Characters Description
• Dereck: He is a viola player and mad about love. Along the story we can prove how he feels a blind love to Malgosia and this is going deeply mark him. I mean the way his life develops is completely different that it had been if he hadn’t fallen in love with Malgosia. Although there are a lot of objections between him and Malgosia and she is never completely involved in their relationship, he isn’t worried about it and follows believing in their relationship. So that we can say that he is an ambitious person in love questions and he is self-confident at the same time. Moreover he has an special ability to persuade other people to help him but never under blackmail.
He is not a very well-known student during his music learning period although he can be really friendly for those people he gets on well with.
On the other hand he is reliable because he tries not to disappoint his friends. He has also a quite developed common sense during his usual life, but he can also drive mad when discovers his wife’s big lie.
• Malgosia: This young girl is Dereck’ s wife. She is the most beautiful girl in the School and because of whom everyone is madly in love with her. She is from Poland and she is studying in London. This shows his enterprising spirit which makes her improve everyday. We could also say that she is a perfectionist in every area in her life. In love terms she always feels something about Tibor, although his behaviour is not the best. From my point of view his relation with Dereck lies just in friendship and when she breaks up with Tibor she feels alone and our protagonist takes advantage of the situation. In fact between her and Dereck there is never a usual lovers relation.
His quite love disappointments make her so upset that she decides that committing suicide is the only solution.
• Tibor: He is the most popular guy in his the School. He is very famous between girls because of his appealing and his sense of humour. He is very rude with unknown people although he is neither friendly with his closer people. We can prove this by the way he cares Malgosia and many other loves he seduces. He is always lying her while their relation, and long time after this relation is finished he perceives bothering her. So we can say that he is selfish and monopolizing.
If we talk about the characters motivations that provide the basis of the story these are their music tastes that make them go learning to that school. There they meet each other and our main characters begin establishing many different kind of relationships that are going to perceive during and after the school-mate relations. So that we don’t know many things at all from the characters life before their school time, and we begin knowing about their different personalities by the way they behave between them.
Firstly we can notice that the main motivation for the characters for staying together with the past of time is love and friends relationships that our main characters have. Moreover we can also point out that music paper is also very important for characters motivations, but from my point of view it is not so important as the personal relations that they discover between them.Malgosia’s love is addressed to Tibor sometimes but also to Derek many other times. This changes favour appearing new love relations between Tibor and Malgosia’ s sister, Malgosia and Derek and at the end between Rachel and Dereck. In addition we can say that Malgosia is always feeling something about Tibor, and this lying relationship is going to change many things in our characters life.
In the other hand we can see how many different friendship relations are going to begin since they met in the Royal Academy Of Music. To sample this we can mention the music group which was composed of Carl Robins (a violinist), Rachel Merino ( a cellist), Matt Jenkins ( a violinist) and Derek.
Another motivation for the characters appear when Derek begins desperately trying to look for Malgosia because he keeps in touch with her family, a Cuban private detective, a Brazilian student, and an English teacher in Rio.
From my point of view this is captivating story that catch readers attention from the first page, and keeps this emotion until the end. When I began reading this I could not imagine how a music book could deal with so different genres like adventure, love, thriller, etc.
I strongly recommend this book because it made me think a lot about the two different kinds of love that appear throughout the pages. These are real and lying love. It is amazing to think how these similar but very different feelings at the same time, are able to change character’s life in different ways. The end is a little sad because I felt that it was strongly unfair that Tibor’ s wicked love killed Malgosia. However we can also point out how truly love succeed in Derek love story, because he is able to remake his private life through his old friend Rachel.
After analysing the sentimental part of the book, I also liked how the action part of the story is a consequence, and at the end it is not left any loose end.
If we concentrate on language and style we must say that the vocabulary is not very difficult because there are just few unfamiliar words (e.g. rehearsal) and most of them have to do with technical music words. We could establish that diction is standard because the author does not use many formal nor informal words. I would describe the language the author uses as an accurate and simple way of summing up an action which happens during many years. It does not contain any colloquialisms nor jargon because it is supposed that character’s cultural level is elevated. Moreover, he succeed at the point of beginning from near the end of the history as a perfect sample of retrospective. So the exiting of the book is spread from the beginning until the end.
The majority of words are a mixture of concrete and abstract. We can find many of them dealing with love and loneliness topics buy many others also refer to concrete nouns like researching or music topics.
The writer uses specific words referring to different places where the history takes place like Rio de Janeiro, London, Poland. He also uses temporal specific words in order to establish a chronology (‘the next day’, ‘four years before’).
The author favours several words with particular connotations in order to arouse positive responses to his feelings (‘crazy about music’) or also negative (‘there’s no need to talk to me like that’).
Sentences are usually long because of the difficulty of telling a so long story in a short way. In addition we can sometimes find out some syntax inverted sentences (‘from the rooftop terrace of my hotel, high up above the twenty-fifth floor, the view of Rio de Janeiro was breathtaking’).
By Rubén Tena
Thursday, 26 April 2007
TRAINSPOTTING MOVIE REVIEW
“Trainspotting” is the title of an exciting British film about British youth which is based on Irvine Welsh’s novel about heroin junkies in the Edinburgh underworld. The film is a tragic-comedy which was released on July 19th,1996 and was directed by Danny Boyle who has also directed “Shallow Grave”, “The Beach” or “A Life Less Ordinary” among others. The main characters are Ewan McGregor (Mark Renton), Ewen Bremmer (Spud), Jonny Lee Miller (Sick Boy), Kewin McKidd (Tommy), Robert Carlyle (Begbie) and Kelly McDonald (Diane).
“Choose life. Choose a job. Choose a career. Choose a family. Choose your future. But why would anyone want to do a thing like that? I choose not to choose life. I choose something else. And the reasons? There are no reasons. Who needs reasons when you’ve got heroine?” This is the story of Mark Renton and his so-called friends a bunch of losers, liars, psychos, thieves and junkies. The film charts the disintegration of their friendship as they proceed seemingly towards self-destruction. Mark alone has the insight and opportunity to escape his fate, but then again does he really want to “choose life”?
From my point of view, there are some good monologues, some interesting camera angles, a comic scene in the worst toilet of Scotland, a hilarious job interview scene and some truly shocking moments, apart from sex, nudity and some violence. Besides, the film has a strong language apart from slang and the Scottish accents which make it a bit difficult to understand. In addition, the stellar sound track shouldn’t be missed, provided by the best of British bands and in which is played alternative rock, Britpop and electro music.
In my opinion, this is a good film alternately comical and dark, with a mixture of the ironic and the serious and which ultimately comes down to Renton’s choice between self-destruction and life.
All in all, I’ve found this film quite enjoyable, gripping and hilarious, in spite of the fact that is a bit harrowing in some scenes. Therefore, I’d recommend it.
“Choose life. Choose a job. Choose a career. Choose a family. Choose your future. But why would anyone want to do a thing like that? I choose not to choose life. I choose something else. And the reasons? There are no reasons. Who needs reasons when you’ve got heroine?” This is the story of Mark Renton and his so-called friends a bunch of losers, liars, psychos, thieves and junkies. The film charts the disintegration of their friendship as they proceed seemingly towards self-destruction. Mark alone has the insight and opportunity to escape his fate, but then again does he really want to “choose life”?
From my point of view, there are some good monologues, some interesting camera angles, a comic scene in the worst toilet of Scotland, a hilarious job interview scene and some truly shocking moments, apart from sex, nudity and some violence. Besides, the film has a strong language apart from slang and the Scottish accents which make it a bit difficult to understand. In addition, the stellar sound track shouldn’t be missed, provided by the best of British bands and in which is played alternative rock, Britpop and electro music.
In my opinion, this is a good film alternately comical and dark, with a mixture of the ironic and the serious and which ultimately comes down to Renton’s choice between self-destruction and life.
All in all, I’ve found this film quite enjoyable, gripping and hilarious, in spite of the fact that is a bit harrowing in some scenes. Therefore, I’d recommend it.
Tuesday, 17 April 2007
REVIEW ANGELS & DEMONS
Angels & Demons was writen by Dan Brown, the famous author of The Da Vinci Code. I started to read this novel because I really enjoyed reading the Da Vinci Code and I think they are very similar because in both are mixed adventures and religion.
This novel was published in 2000 and in which Dan Brown first created the character of Robert Langdon and indulged his passion for art, symbology, codes, secret societies and religion. Alter that this character will appear in two novels more.
The novel begins with a phone call in the middle of the night from Maximilian Kohler to Robert Langdon. The first one is the director of CERN, the world’s largest scientific research facility in Geneva, Switzerland, and the second one is a profesor of religious iconology and art history at Harvard University. Like one of the physicists has been murdered with his chest branded with the word “Illuminati”, he decided to call to Robert to ask to help, because the Illumiati are an ancient secret society.
The murder victim is Leonardo Vetra, he’s a Catholic priest and he has adopted a daughter, Vittoria, who is also a scientist at CERN. Both are working in create the antimatter using the world’s largest particle accelerator and then suspend the antimatter in canisters. Leonardo created this to simulate the Bin Bang, in his mind he could proof that God exists. But the problem is that the murderer stole also the canister and it can explode. Inmediately tha canister is located in Vatican City and Langdon and Vittoria fly to Rome to help not to destroy the Vatican.
In addition to this problem in Rome is celebrating the Conclave to choose the new Pope and the Illuminati only wish the destruction of the Catholic Church in retribution for the church’s treatment over the centuries.
Langdon and Vittoria start a race against the time. They will have to resolve ancient mysteries to find clues, this will lead them through deserted cathedrals, ancient fountains, sealed crypts, forgotten passages and dangerous catacombs, which requires an extensive background in art history and religious symbology.
From my point of view, I recommend this book because it’a very exciting and absorbing novel plenty of mysteries to resolve and a real-time adventure, above all if you are interested in art history. I think you will have a wonderful time if you decide to read this book.
Patricia García García.
Angels & Demons was writen by Dan Brown, the famous author of The Da Vinci Code. I started to read this novel because I really enjoyed reading the Da Vinci Code and I think they are very similar because in both are mixed adventures and religion.
This novel was published in 2000 and in which Dan Brown first created the character of Robert Langdon and indulged his passion for art, symbology, codes, secret societies and religion. Alter that this character will appear in two novels more.
The novel begins with a phone call in the middle of the night from Maximilian Kohler to Robert Langdon. The first one is the director of CERN, the world’s largest scientific research facility in Geneva, Switzerland, and the second one is a profesor of religious iconology and art history at Harvard University. Like one of the physicists has been murdered with his chest branded with the word “Illuminati”, he decided to call to Robert to ask to help, because the Illumiati are an ancient secret society.
The murder victim is Leonardo Vetra, he’s a Catholic priest and he has adopted a daughter, Vittoria, who is also a scientist at CERN. Both are working in create the antimatter using the world’s largest particle accelerator and then suspend the antimatter in canisters. Leonardo created this to simulate the Bin Bang, in his mind he could proof that God exists. But the problem is that the murderer stole also the canister and it can explode. Inmediately tha canister is located in Vatican City and Langdon and Vittoria fly to Rome to help not to destroy the Vatican.
In addition to this problem in Rome is celebrating the Conclave to choose the new Pope and the Illuminati only wish the destruction of the Catholic Church in retribution for the church’s treatment over the centuries.
Langdon and Vittoria start a race against the time. They will have to resolve ancient mysteries to find clues, this will lead them through deserted cathedrals, ancient fountains, sealed crypts, forgotten passages and dangerous catacombs, which requires an extensive background in art history and religious symbology.
From my point of view, I recommend this book because it’a very exciting and absorbing novel plenty of mysteries to resolve and a real-time adventure, above all if you are interested in art history. I think you will have a wonderful time if you decide to read this book.
Patricia García García.
Thursday, 12 April 2007
Nemo final
Film Title: Finding Nemo
Country/ Year: USA, 2003
Genre: Adventure, animation, comedy
Director: Andrew Stanton, Lee Unkrich
Writing Credits: Bob Peterson, Andrew Stanton, David Reynolds
Cast: Albert Brooks, Ellen DeGeneres, Alexander Gould, Willem Dafoe, Barry Humphries, Eric Bana
Are you able to remember what your feelings were after watching a Walt Disney wonderful story? Childhood is a period of time when our dreams become true and our main character Nemo proves that. Through this story many of us will submerge into magic world where sadness, happiness, and comedy mix each other up. At the bottom of the movie when both Nemo and his father find each other there’s a scene that persuades everyone:
Dad: Nemo is alive!
Nemo: Daddy!
Dad: Thank Godness!!
Nemo: I was so scared!
Dad: It’s all right son. Everything is gonna be ok.
The story begins when Nemo’s fretful father and his mother are attacked by a violent shark. The only survivors are Marlin ( Nemo’s father) and an the egg which Nemo would be born from. Afterwards Marlin is really worried about his son security far away from reef. During Nemo’s first school day, and desiring to show what he is capable to do, Nemo is kidnapped by a diver while he was swimming alone in the ocean. He is taken to a tank in a Sydney dentist. There he meets all kind of peculiar fishes. We can emphasize his friend Gill who is a friendly fish who dream of escaping to the ocean. Meanwhile, Marlin bumps into a blue tang named Dory and sets out to save his son wherever he was. For this objective he tells everyone he pass about his little Nemo’s missing, and this express information spreads quickly between the whole sea animals.
Then, after several Nemo’s abortive scaping plans and a Marlin big effort in order to get the dentists it is imposible to go away from this macabre tank.
When there is no hope for both child and father, and Nemo is going to be given as a present to a mischievous child, tank friends help him in order fall in a pipe which takes him to the sea.
When Nemo comes back to the ocean he finds his father and both rescue Dory who is being taken by fisherman’s nets. Afterwards they live together, Nemo and his daddy, and all of them are happy forever.
There is beauty and brilliance in every frame.Visually, the aquatic adventure is as wonderful as its predecessors of Pixar ( Toy Story and Monsters, Inc.). The vibrant undersea world and its colourful array of wildlife is dazzling us from the beginning until the end.
Another aspect that we have to emphasize are the animations which get their objective of simulating this magic atmosphere. The dialogues by many different good actors archive their purpose of being easy to understand but moving at the same time. The type of language which is used is American English.
From my point of view the best section of the film is the plot because it is capable to tell us a simple story by communicating us many different feelings. This aspect is acompanied with the soundtrack with it’s impressive sound effects and the visual part which is quite good.
On the other hand this film is really better for a young audience but it is also advisable for not-so-young people. I’m sure that each adult who watched any Disney film in his childhood is gonna feel this kind children’s emotions.
To sum up I can say that this wonderful history attracts our attention from the beginning and its comedy and adventurous accent make everything special.
By Rubén Tena
Country/ Year: USA, 2003
Genre: Adventure, animation, comedy
Director: Andrew Stanton, Lee Unkrich
Writing Credits: Bob Peterson, Andrew Stanton, David Reynolds
Cast: Albert Brooks, Ellen DeGeneres, Alexander Gould, Willem Dafoe, Barry Humphries, Eric Bana
Are you able to remember what your feelings were after watching a Walt Disney wonderful story? Childhood is a period of time when our dreams become true and our main character Nemo proves that. Through this story many of us will submerge into magic world where sadness, happiness, and comedy mix each other up. At the bottom of the movie when both Nemo and his father find each other there’s a scene that persuades everyone:
Dad: Nemo is alive!
Nemo: Daddy!
Dad: Thank Godness!!
Nemo: I was so scared!
Dad: It’s all right son. Everything is gonna be ok.
The story begins when Nemo’s fretful father and his mother are attacked by a violent shark. The only survivors are Marlin ( Nemo’s father) and an the egg which Nemo would be born from. Afterwards Marlin is really worried about his son security far away from reef. During Nemo’s first school day, and desiring to show what he is capable to do, Nemo is kidnapped by a diver while he was swimming alone in the ocean. He is taken to a tank in a Sydney dentist. There he meets all kind of peculiar fishes. We can emphasize his friend Gill who is a friendly fish who dream of escaping to the ocean. Meanwhile, Marlin bumps into a blue tang named Dory and sets out to save his son wherever he was. For this objective he tells everyone he pass about his little Nemo’s missing, and this express information spreads quickly between the whole sea animals.
Then, after several Nemo’s abortive scaping plans and a Marlin big effort in order to get the dentists it is imposible to go away from this macabre tank.
When there is no hope for both child and father, and Nemo is going to be given as a present to a mischievous child, tank friends help him in order fall in a pipe which takes him to the sea.
When Nemo comes back to the ocean he finds his father and both rescue Dory who is being taken by fisherman’s nets. Afterwards they live together, Nemo and his daddy, and all of them are happy forever.
There is beauty and brilliance in every frame.Visually, the aquatic adventure is as wonderful as its predecessors of Pixar ( Toy Story and Monsters, Inc.). The vibrant undersea world and its colourful array of wildlife is dazzling us from the beginning until the end.
Another aspect that we have to emphasize are the animations which get their objective of simulating this magic atmosphere. The dialogues by many different good actors archive their purpose of being easy to understand but moving at the same time. The type of language which is used is American English.
From my point of view the best section of the film is the plot because it is capable to tell us a simple story by communicating us many different feelings. This aspect is acompanied with the soundtrack with it’s impressive sound effects and the visual part which is quite good.
On the other hand this film is really better for a young audience but it is also advisable for not-so-young people. I’m sure that each adult who watched any Disney film in his childhood is gonna feel this kind children’s emotions.
To sum up I can say that this wonderful history attracts our attention from the beginning and its comedy and adventurous accent make everything special.
By Rubén Tena
Tuesday, 3 April 2007
A PASSAGE TO INDIA BOOK REVIEW
“A Passage to India” is a classic novel written by E.M.Forsters and published in 1924 and which is composed of three parts, MOSQUE, CAVES and TEMPLE in 306 pages and set in the fictional city of Chadrapore in India, which at the time was a colonial possession of Britain. This is a compelling tale about the relations between British and Indian people in that country. It’s also about the necessity of friendship and about the difficulty of establishing friendship across cultural boundaries. Forster’s narrative centres on Dr Aziz, a Muslim Indian who works as an intern at the English hospital whose attempt to establish friendships with several British characters has disastrous consequences. The other main characters are, Mrs Moore, mother of Ronny Healsop, visiting Chadrapore to oversee her son’s engagement. Ronny Healsop, the English Magistrate of Chandrapore. Cyril Fielding, English principal of the Chandrapore high school, middle aged and unmarried. Adela Quested, a young woman visiting India to possibly marry Ronny Healsop. Hamidullah, a Cambridge-educated barrister, he serves as Aziz’s best friend. Mr Turton, the English city collector of Chadrapore and Professor Narayan Godbole, an elderly Brahman.
Adela Quested has come to India to meet her possible future husband, Ronny Healsop. Mrs Moore has also accompanied her, being Ronny’s mother. When they arrive they’re ardent to see the “real” India and are therefore enthusiastic to take up Aziz’s invitation to visit the Marabar Caves. However, due to a hallucination or another person Adela is “insulted” in one of the caves and makes her accusation against Aziz, consequently he’s arrested and Mr Fielding helps to defend Aziz. During the trial, the charges are dropped by Mss Quested, but the gulf between the British and native Indians grows wider than ever and Fielding comes to the aid of Adela. Because of this, Fielding’s friendship with Aziz has deteriorated and Fielding hopes that the two can remain friends. The novel ends on an ambiguous note. “Why can’t we be friends now?” he says at the end. “It’s what I want.” But India answers: “No, not yet” and the sky says, “No, not there”.
Overall, the vocabulary used in the book is quite formal and simple. Likewise, it has an easy reading because the sentences follow the normal order of English and the majority of the words are concrete. Although, there are also some Anglo-Indian colloquial words and it’s saturated with prejudiced and racist comments.
In conclusion, I could get into this wonderful book because is brilliant, absorbing and gripping. Therefore, I’ve enjoyed reading it and I truly recommend it.
Jose Javier Flors
“A Passage to India” is a classic novel written by E.M.Forsters and published in 1924 and which is composed of three parts, MOSQUE, CAVES and TEMPLE in 306 pages and set in the fictional city of Chadrapore in India, which at the time was a colonial possession of Britain. This is a compelling tale about the relations between British and Indian people in that country. It’s also about the necessity of friendship and about the difficulty of establishing friendship across cultural boundaries. Forster’s narrative centres on Dr Aziz, a Muslim Indian who works as an intern at the English hospital whose attempt to establish friendships with several British characters has disastrous consequences. The other main characters are, Mrs Moore, mother of Ronny Healsop, visiting Chadrapore to oversee her son’s engagement. Ronny Healsop, the English Magistrate of Chandrapore. Cyril Fielding, English principal of the Chandrapore high school, middle aged and unmarried. Adela Quested, a young woman visiting India to possibly marry Ronny Healsop. Hamidullah, a Cambridge-educated barrister, he serves as Aziz’s best friend. Mr Turton, the English city collector of Chadrapore and Professor Narayan Godbole, an elderly Brahman.
Adela Quested has come to India to meet her possible future husband, Ronny Healsop. Mrs Moore has also accompanied her, being Ronny’s mother. When they arrive they’re ardent to see the “real” India and are therefore enthusiastic to take up Aziz’s invitation to visit the Marabar Caves. However, due to a hallucination or another person Adela is “insulted” in one of the caves and makes her accusation against Aziz, consequently he’s arrested and Mr Fielding helps to defend Aziz. During the trial, the charges are dropped by Mss Quested, but the gulf between the British and native Indians grows wider than ever and Fielding comes to the aid of Adela. Because of this, Fielding’s friendship with Aziz has deteriorated and Fielding hopes that the two can remain friends. The novel ends on an ambiguous note. “Why can’t we be friends now?” he says at the end. “It’s what I want.” But India answers: “No, not yet” and the sky says, “No, not there”.
Overall, the vocabulary used in the book is quite formal and simple. Likewise, it has an easy reading because the sentences follow the normal order of English and the majority of the words are concrete. Although, there are also some Anglo-Indian colloquial words and it’s saturated with prejudiced and racist comments.
In conclusion, I could get into this wonderful book because is brilliant, absorbing and gripping. Therefore, I’ve enjoyed reading it and I truly recommend it.
Jose Javier Flors
-Title : Chariots of Fire.
- Country / Year : UK / 1981.
- Runtime : 123 min.
- Genre : Drama / History / Sport.
- Director : Hugh Hudson.
- Written by : Colin Welland.
- Starring : Ben Cross as Harold Abrahams, Ian Charleson as Eric Liddell, Nigel Havers as Lord Andrew, Cheryl Campbell as Jessie Liddell, Alice Krige as Sybil Gordon ( Harold’s girlfriend), Ian Holmes as Sam Mussabini ( Harold’s coach ).
This is the story of two men who run...not to run...but to prove something to the world. They will sacrifice anything to achieve their goals...Except their honour. Two men chasing dreams of glory!
Chariots of Fire is a British film released in 1981. Written by Colin Welland and directed by Hugh Hudson was nominated for seven Academy Awards and won four, best picture, original music score, costume design and writing original screenplay. After this success, Hudson’s movies have been quite dissappointing, among them “Greystoke - The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes (1984) or Revolution (1985). The two main actors are Ben Cross, as Harold Abrahams, and Ian Charleson, as Eric Liddell. Although their role in Chariots of fire was their most important perfomance, or at least their most recognized one, we can also find Ben Cross in other movies, such as First Knight , which starred Richard Gere and Sean Connery, and in the Exorxist sequel in 2004, and Ian Charleson in Jubilee (1977), Gandhi (1982 ) and horror classic Opera (1987). Charleson was gay and died of AIDS at the age of 40.
The film is based on a true story of two British athletes who are chosen to represent Britain in the 1924 Paris Olympics, Harold Abrahams and Eric Liddell.Their personality as well as their motivations to run are very different . Harold Abrahams is a Jewish student at Caius College at Cambridge, son of a Lithuanian Jew who runs to overcome class prejudice, antisemitism and prove his worth to society, as he says: “ For me running is a compulsion, a weapon against being Jewish”. Harold is obsessed with winning and can’t face losing, he says after being defeated by Liddell in a warm-up 100 meter race: “I don’t run to take beatings. If I can’t win, I won’t run”. On the other hand Eric Liddell, son of missionary parents in China, is a devout Scottish missionary who combines getting ready for the Olympics with helping his sister to run a local mission. Liddell runs for the glory of God, He knows God gave him a splendid gift, being possibly the swifter man on earth and wants to repay God for that, he says: “I believe God made me for a purpose, but he also made me fast. And when I run I feel His pleasure”. Certainly the characters are not alike in their motivation, they have very different personalities, ways of thinking, training, but the core of the matter is the same, two good men trying to achieve their goals without betraying their beliefs.
In my view this movie deservedly won 4 Oscars. The plot is great, it keeps you gripped to the screen. The dialogues are deep, rich in meaning. Both Ben Cross playing Harold Abraham and Ian Charleson as Eric Liddell are very believable. The supporting actors are really convincing as well. There are moments to smile and moments which will move you. A very touching moment is when Harold Abrahams wins his race and Sam Mussabini, his trainer, listens to the British anthem and sees the British flag rising in the Olympic Stadium from his room. But it is also an exciting film, even on the basic level of “will they win?”. The races are riveting, partly due to the music and sound effects. The score composed by Vangelis for the film is also outstanding and is the perfect accompaniment to the swift pace of the film and to the unforgettable scene of the cheerful British boys running along the beach. The direction by Hugh Hudson is powerful. Hudson captures the feeling and excitement of track and field competition, as well as giving us numerous beautifully photographed scenes
Therefore, I truly recommend it. It’s really worth watching. I would rate it a 9/10. When you finish watching it, it makes you try to be a better person. So, nowadays when there is so much junk and violence on TV, it’s a good film for everybody to enjoy.
Salva Corcoles
- Country / Year : UK / 1981.
- Runtime : 123 min.
- Genre : Drama / History / Sport.
- Director : Hugh Hudson.
- Written by : Colin Welland.
- Starring : Ben Cross as Harold Abrahams, Ian Charleson as Eric Liddell, Nigel Havers as Lord Andrew, Cheryl Campbell as Jessie Liddell, Alice Krige as Sybil Gordon ( Harold’s girlfriend), Ian Holmes as Sam Mussabini ( Harold’s coach ).
This is the story of two men who run...not to run...but to prove something to the world. They will sacrifice anything to achieve their goals...Except their honour. Two men chasing dreams of glory!
Chariots of Fire is a British film released in 1981. Written by Colin Welland and directed by Hugh Hudson was nominated for seven Academy Awards and won four, best picture, original music score, costume design and writing original screenplay. After this success, Hudson’s movies have been quite dissappointing, among them “Greystoke - The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes (1984) or Revolution (1985). The two main actors are Ben Cross, as Harold Abrahams, and Ian Charleson, as Eric Liddell. Although their role in Chariots of fire was their most important perfomance, or at least their most recognized one, we can also find Ben Cross in other movies, such as First Knight , which starred Richard Gere and Sean Connery, and in the Exorxist sequel in 2004, and Ian Charleson in Jubilee (1977), Gandhi (1982 ) and horror classic Opera (1987). Charleson was gay and died of AIDS at the age of 40.
The film is based on a true story of two British athletes who are chosen to represent Britain in the 1924 Paris Olympics, Harold Abrahams and Eric Liddell.Their personality as well as their motivations to run are very different . Harold Abrahams is a Jewish student at Caius College at Cambridge, son of a Lithuanian Jew who runs to overcome class prejudice, antisemitism and prove his worth to society, as he says: “ For me running is a compulsion, a weapon against being Jewish”. Harold is obsessed with winning and can’t face losing, he says after being defeated by Liddell in a warm-up 100 meter race: “I don’t run to take beatings. If I can’t win, I won’t run”. On the other hand Eric Liddell, son of missionary parents in China, is a devout Scottish missionary who combines getting ready for the Olympics with helping his sister to run a local mission. Liddell runs for the glory of God, He knows God gave him a splendid gift, being possibly the swifter man on earth and wants to repay God for that, he says: “I believe God made me for a purpose, but he also made me fast. And when I run I feel His pleasure”. Certainly the characters are not alike in their motivation, they have very different personalities, ways of thinking, training, but the core of the matter is the same, two good men trying to achieve their goals without betraying their beliefs.
In my view this movie deservedly won 4 Oscars. The plot is great, it keeps you gripped to the screen. The dialogues are deep, rich in meaning. Both Ben Cross playing Harold Abraham and Ian Charleson as Eric Liddell are very believable. The supporting actors are really convincing as well. There are moments to smile and moments which will move you. A very touching moment is when Harold Abrahams wins his race and Sam Mussabini, his trainer, listens to the British anthem and sees the British flag rising in the Olympic Stadium from his room. But it is also an exciting film, even on the basic level of “will they win?”. The races are riveting, partly due to the music and sound effects. The score composed by Vangelis for the film is also outstanding and is the perfect accompaniment to the swift pace of the film and to the unforgettable scene of the cheerful British boys running along the beach. The direction by Hugh Hudson is powerful. Hudson captures the feeling and excitement of track and field competition, as well as giving us numerous beautifully photographed scenes
Therefore, I truly recommend it. It’s really worth watching. I would rate it a 9/10. When you finish watching it, it makes you try to be a better person. So, nowadays when there is so much junk and violence on TV, it’s a good film for everybody to enjoy.
Salva Corcoles
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