
Angels and Demons was always going to be a controversial plot. Murder within the Vatican by the Camerlengo is certainly sure to ruffle a few feathers but the film seems to have upset fewer people than expected. Unlike the Da Vinci Code, the Vatican has announced no boycott against the film - in actual fact, the Vatican newspaper gave Dan Brown's film a positive review.
I must admit that I found it to be exceedingly entertaining. However, this is most possibly due to the low expectations I had when going to see the movie which has been panned by critics.



Modernity conflicting with traditional values is the centre pillar holding Brown's plot line up. For thrills he relies on the excitement of revealing glimpses at a world so guarded and secretive that only a select handful of people have any comprehension of it. For me, glimpses at what the Vatican Library may look like and the Cardinal's conclave is what makes Angels and Demons such a success. Secret societies are all very well and good but when we know that things exist just beyond our reach, almost close enough to sense, that is when interest is caught. On a more personal note, I greatly enjoyed the scenes of the Cardinals due to my growing up around Cardinal Keith Patrick O'Brien. Whilst I never took to him myself and renounced my faith at an early age, as any child would be, I was enamoured by the pomp and prestige of a man so powerful and so important to the beliefs of so many. Politicians can never have as much importance as religious and spiritual leaders. Brown plays on this fact and not only attacks the Church in Angels and Demons but murders the Pope, absolute leader of one of the world's strongest religions.

The Cardinal Keith Patrick O'Brien
Further demonstrating his understanding of the human psyche, Brown's plot also plays on the 'Doomsday Complex', inherent in all human beings. Such is our fear of the apocalypse that Brown displays it in three separate ways in his book: the gradual disintegration of civilised society and our abandonment of human dignities, the family and political order; the attempted act of terrorism masterminded by the Camerlengo against Vatican City and the fear that such an attack would (and has done elsewhere) cause; and the potential for the literal end of the world, as presented by the Large Hadron Collider in Geneva.

What I don't understand is why the Church seems to be so against such acts of scientific advancement. I can concede that their condemnation of the God Complex is justifiable but when the Church has received such criticism and derision in the past due to its ridiculous anti-scientific views (the world is of course flat...) I can see little reason to halt their support of such experiments. Their argument surely can't be that the Large Hadron Collider could end life on Earth - after all, we're all going to heaven or hell for all eternity, aren't we?
Whilst I can never quite support the aging Tom Hanks in the role of hero, I can't exactly criticise it either. His voice is as magnificent as ever and the conviction he has for his lines shows. Again, I wasn't thrilled by Ayelet Zurer's Vittoria Vetra. The Catholic officials were more successfully portrayed and I adored the sweet sincerity of Thure Lindhardt, whom I have been a fan of since Into the Wild.
Angels and Demons certainly isn't cinematographic perfection - far from it but I think that is an unfair expectation. It is what it is, just like the book it is based on, a fun, fast-paced confrontational drama. I defy anybody not to enjoy it.




