The Da Vinci Code

The Da Vinci Code

The Da Vinci Code (2006) is a film directed by Ron Howard and starring Tom Hanks, which is based on the bestselling novel The Da Vinci Code (2003) by Dan Brown.

Year:
2006
9,780 Views

Sophie Neveu:
Maybe there is something about this Priory of Sion.

Robert Langdon:
I hope not. Any Priory story ends in bloodshed. They were butchered by the Church. It all started over a thousand years ago when a French king conquered the holy city of Jerusalem. This crusade, one of the most massive and sweeping in history was actually orchestrated by a secret brotherhood: the Priory of Sion and their military arm, the Knights Templar.

Sophie Neveu:
But the Templars were created to protect the Holy Land.

Robert Langdon:
That was a cover to hide their true goal, according to this myth. Supposedly the invasion was to find an artefact lost since the time of Christ. An artifact, it was said, the Church would kill to possess.

Sophie Neveu:
Did they find it, this buried treasure?

Robert Langdon:
Put it this way: One day the Templars simply stopped searching. They quit the Holy Land and traveled directly to Rome. Whether they blackmailed the papacy or the Church bought their silence, no one knows. But it is a fact the papacy declared these Priory knights, these Knights Templar, of limitless power. By the 1300s, the Templars had grown too powerful. Too threatening. So the Vatican issued secret orders to be opened simultaneously all across Europe. The Pope had declared the Knights Templar Satan worshipers and said God had charged him with cleansing the earth of these heretics. The plan went off like clockwork. The Templars were all but exterminated. The date was October 13th, 1307. A Friday.

Sophie Neveu:
Friday the 13th...

Robert Langdon:
The Pope sent troops to claim the Priory's treasure but they found nothing. The few surviving Knights of the Priory had vanished and the search for their sacred artifact began again.

Sophie Neveu:
What artifact? I've never heard about any of this.

Robert Langdon:
Yes, you have. Almost everyone on earth has. You just know it as the Holy Grail.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
The Good Book did not arrive by facsimile from heaven. The Bible, as we know it, was finally presided over by one man. The Pagan emperor Constantine.

Sophie Neveu:
I thought Constantine was a Christian.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Oh, hardly, no. He was a lifelong Pagan who was baptized on his deathbed. Constantine was Rome's supreme holy man. From time immemorial, his people had worshipped a balance between nature's male deities and the goddess, or sacred feminine. But a religious turmoil was gripping Rome. Three centuries earlier a young Jew named Jesus had come along, preaching love and a single God. Centuries after his crucifixion, Christ's followers had grown exponentially, and had started a religious war against the Pagans.

Robert Langdon:
Or was it the Pagans who commenced making war against the Christians? Leigh, we can't be sure who began the atrocities of that period .

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Well, we can agree that the conflict grew to such proportion that it threatened to tear Rome in two. So, Constantine may have been a lifelong Pagan but he was also a pragmatist. And in 325 Anno Domini he decided to unify Rome under a single religion, Christianity.

Robert Langdon:
Christianity was on the rise, he didn't want his empire torn apart.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
And to strengthen this new Christian tradition, Constantine held a famous ecumenical gathering known as the Council of Nicaea, and at this council the many sects of Christianity debated and voted on well, everything from the acceptance and rejection of specific gospels to the date for Easter to the ministry of sacrament, and of course, the immortality of Jesus.

Sophie Neveu:
I don't follow.

Sir Leigh Teabing :
Ma Chère, until that moment in history Jesus was viewed by many of his followers as a mighty prophet, as a great and powerful man, but a man nevertheless. A mortal man.

Robert Langdon:
Some Christians held that Jesus was mortal. Some Christians believed he was divine.

Sophie Neveu:
Not the Son of God?

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Not even his nephew twice removed.

Sophie Neveu:
Hold on, you're saying Jesus' divinity came from a vote.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Remember, in those days gods were everywhere. By infusing Jesus the man with divine magic, making him capable of earthly miracles and his own resurrection, Constantine turned him into a god within the human world. He basically knocked the more distant gods out of the game.

Robert Langdon:
Constantine did not create Jesus' divinity. He simply sanctioned an already widely held idea.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Semantics.

Robert Langdon:
No, it's not semantics. You're interpreting facts to support your own conclusions.

Sir Leigh Teabing :
Fact: for many Christians, Jesus was mortal one day and divine the next.

Robert Langdon:
For a few Christians, Jesus had his divinity enhanced.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Absurd! There was even a formal announcement of his promotion.

Robert Langdon:
They couldn't even agree on the Nicene Creed!

Sophie Neveu:
Excuse me! "Who is God, who is man?" How many have been murdered over this question?

Sir Leigh Teabing:
As long as there has been One True God, there has been killing in His name.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
This used to be the ballroom. I have little occasions to dance these days. I trust you recognise The Last Supper, the great fresco, by Leonardo Da Vinci. [To Sophie] My dear, if you would close your eyes?

Robert Langdon:
Leigh, save us the parlour tricks.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
You asked for my help, I recall. Allow an old man his indulgences. [To Sophie, who has closed her eyes] And Mademoiselle, where is Jesus sitting?

Sophie Neveu:
In the middle.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Good. He and His disciples are breaking bread. And...what drink?

Sophie Neveu:
Wine. They drunk wine.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Splendid. And one final question: how many wine glasses are there on the table?

Sophie Neveu:
One? The Holy Grail.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Open your eyes. [Sophie does so, and looks at the screen the painting is being displayed on] No single cup. No chalice. Well, that's a bit strange, isn't it? Considering both the Bible and standard Grail legend celebrate this moment as the definitive arrival of the Holy Grail. Hmmm. [To Robert] Now, Robert, you could be of help to us. If you'd be so kind as to show us the symbols for man and woman?

Robert Langdon:
No balloon animals? I can make a great duck. [He presses his fingertips together, keeping his hands apart] This is the original icon for male. It's a rudimentary phallus.

Sophie Neveu:
Boyhood to a point.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Yes, indeed.

Robert Langdon:
This was known as the "blade". It represents aggression and manhood. It's a symbol still used today in modern military uniforms.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Yes, the more penises you have, the higher your rank. Boys will be boys!

Robert Langdon:
Now, as you can imagine, the female symbol [He pressees the heels of his hands together, keeping his fingers apart, in the shape of a begging bowl] is its exact opposite. This is called the "chalice".

Sir Leigh Teabing:
[Also making the shape with his hands] And the chalice resembles a cup, or vessel, or, more importantly, the shape of a woman's womb. No, the Grail has never been a cup! It is, quite literally, this ancient symbol of womanhood. And in this case, a woman who carried a secret so powerful that if revealed, it would devastate the very foundations of Christianity.

Sophie Neveu:
Wait, please. You're saying the Holy Grail is a person...a woman?

Sir Leigh Teabing:
And it turns out, she makes an appearance, right there. [Pointing at the screen, still showing the painting]

Sophie Neveu:
But they are all men,

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Are they? What about that figure on the right hand of Our Lord, seated in the place of honour? [As Sophie approaches the screen, which now shows the figure seated on Jesus' right hand side, supposedly the Apostle John] Flowing red hair, folded feminine hands, hint of a bosum, no?

[Sophie says something in French, and Sir Leigh replies in French]

Sir Leigh Teabing:
[In English] It's called scotoma. The mind sees what it chooses to see.

Sophie Neveu:
Who is she?

Sir Leigh Teabing:
My dear, that's Mary Magdalene.

Sophie Neveu:
The prostitute?

Sir Leigh Teabing:
[Offended] She was no such thing! Smeared by the church in 592, Anno Domini, poor dear. [Puts his tablet aside] Magdalene was Jesus' wife.

Robert Langdon:
This is an old wives' tale.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
The original one, in fact!

Robert Langdon:
There's virtually no empirical proof!

Sir Leigh Teabing:
He knows as well as I do, there's much evidence to support it!

Robert Langdon:
Theories. There are theories.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Notice how Jesus and Mary are clothed. [Zooms out on the screen, to show Jesus and Mary in the same frame. They are wearing blue on their outside arms and a bright colour on their inside arms; their clothing illuminates as the rest of the picture darkens, to heighten Teabing's point.] Mirror images of each other!

Robert Langdon:
The mind sees what it chooses to see.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
And venturing into the even more bizarre, notice how Jesus and Mary appear to be joined at the hip and are leaning away from each other, as if to create a shape in the negative space between them. Leonardo gives us...the chalice! [he highlights the area, which resembles a triangle pointing down]

Robert Langdon:
Hmm.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Yes. Ooh, and Robert, er, notice what happens when these two figures [laughs briefly] change position. [He brings a representation of Mary over to Jesus' left side, so it looks like she has her head on His shoulder.]

Sophie Neveu:
Just because Da Vinci painted it doesn't make it true.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
No. But history, she does make it true! Now, listen to this. It's from the Gospel according to Philip.

Sophie Neveu:
Philip?

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Yes, it was rejected at the Council of Nicea, along with any other gospels that made Jesus appear human and not divine. [reading from a book] "And the companion of the Saviour was Mary Magdalene. Christ loved her more than all the disciples, and used to kiss her on -"

Sophie Neveu:
[interrupting] But this says nothing of marriage!

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Well, actually, um, Robert...?

Robert Langdon:
Actually, in those days, the word "companion" literally meant "spouse".

Sir Leigh Teabing:
[crossing the room to another book on a lectern] And this is from the gospel of Mary Magdalene herself.

Sophie Neveu:
She wrote a gospel?

Robert Langdon:
She may have.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Robert, will you fight fair?

Robert Langdon:
She may have.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
[reading] "And Peter said, 'does He prefer her to us?' And Levi answered, 'Peter, I see you contending against a woman like an adversary. If the Saviour made her worthy, who are you indeed to reject her?!'" [To Sophie] Yes. And then, my dear, Jesus goes on to tell Mary Magdalene that it's up to her to continue His Church. [He sits down and illuminates figures on the screen.] Mary Magdalene. Not Peter. The Church was supposed to be carried on by...a woman. Few realise that Mary was descended from kings, just as her husband was. Now, my dear, the word in French for "holy grail".

Sophie Neveu:
Le Sangrine.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
From the Middle English, "Sangreal", of the original Arthurian legend. [He writes the word on the screen, using his tablet.] Now, as two words. [He divides it into two four-letter words.] Can you translate for our friend?

Sophie Neveu:
Sang Real, it means "royal blood".

Sir Leigh Teabing:
When the legend speaks of the chalice that held the blood of Christ, it speaks, in fact, of the female womb that held Jesus' royal bloodline.

Sophie Neveu:
But how could Christ have a bloodline, unless...

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Mary was pregnant at the time of the Crucifixion. [He gets up.] For her own safety, and for that of Christ's unborn child, she fled the Holy Land and came to France. And here, it is said that she gave birth to a daughter, Sarah.

Sophie Neveu:
They know the child's name?

Robert Langdon:
A little girl.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Yes.

Robert Langdon:
If that were true, it's adding insult to injury.

Sophie Neveu:
Why?

Robert Langdon:
The Pagans found transcendence through the joining of male and female.

Sophie Neveu:
People found God through sex?

Robert Langdon:
In Paganism, women were worshipped, as a route to Heaven, but, the modern church has a monopoly on that, in salvation through Jesus Christ.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
And he who keeps the keys to Heaven rules the world.

Robert Langdon:
Women, then, are a huge threat to the Church. The Catholic Inquisitions soon publishes what may be the most blood-soaked book in human history.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
The Malleus Magnificarum! [He throws a book at Langdon, who catches it.]

Robert Langdon:
The Witch's Hammer.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
It instructed the clergy on how to locate, torture and kill all free-thinking women.

Robert Langdon:
Over three centuries of witch-hunts, fifty thousand women are captured and burned alive at the stake.

Sir Leigh Teabing:
Oh, at least that! Some say millions! Imagine then, Robert, that Christ's Throne might live on in a female child? [To Sophie] You asked what would be worth killing for. Witness the greatest coverup in human history. This is the secret the Priory of Sion has defended for over twenty centuries. They are the guardians of the royal bloodline, keepers of the proof of our true past. They are the protectors of the descendants of Jesus Christ and Mary Magdalene.


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