National
Treasure is a movie
about Nic Cage dedicating his life to finding a treasure that may or may not
exist. IMDb’s synopsis is “Benjamin Franklin Gates descends from a family of
treasure-seekers who've all hunted for the same thing: a war chest hidden by
the Founding Fathers after the Revolutionary War. Ben's close to discovering
its whereabouts, as is his competition, but the FBI is also hip to the
hunt.”

If
you ever had a social studies class in the past 12 years, you’ve probably seen
it. Before we get into how we wanted it to end, we first have to establish
whether or not this is a good movie. Aaaaaaaaand scene.
Levi:
Well I for one really enjoyed it, I remember watching this growing up and
thought it was the coolest thing ever. The film actually opened me up to the
world of Nic Cage. And history. But mostly Nic.
It’s
a fun, not taking itself too serious action adventure. Of course a lot of the
history is made up, but a great deal of it is true, and they don’t try to blur
the line between the two. I actually did want to learn more about the Founding
Fathers and Revolutionary era America after seeing this. And it also brings in
this modern day- Indiana Jones treasure hunt with interesting clues and---
James:
CLUEEEEEEES!
Levi:
-- Yeah we’ll get to that. Anyway, it has all these elements of a old treasure
quest but also a 2000s spy and heist movie. Pretty good acting across the
board, decently filmed and produced, with a lot of actual stunts instead of
huge amount of CGI which was very common at the time. I will say it’s not the
greatest Cage performance, but it’s not like he slept through it. So overall an
enjoyable film.
James:
When talking about this movie, you can’t let nostalgia cloud your judgement.
Yes, we all remember watching it during US History class and pointing out the
references, but to me, it tries too hard to be smart. An obvious example, all
the main characters’ names are founding father or Revolutionary references.
That’s like if all the main characters in Oceans 11 were named Hearts, Diamond,
MGM Grand, Casino, or Moneybags. There’s being subtly clever and then there is
being belligerently clever, and National Treasure just is a little too in your
face. When judging a Cager, you have to look at the supporting cast. This was
right before the Cage-Drop (when his career fell off for most people) so they
were able to get three quality actors around him. Sean Bean (who somehow
doesn't die for once), Jon Voight (CLUES), and Bridget Von Hammersmark (Diane Kruger).
Bean plays a fairly convincing, albeit gullible, villain who wants to solve the
puzzle by illegal means. Jon Voight is what he always is, a washed up father
who tries to stifle his son’s passion (see Sky, October). Von Hammersmark goes
from being offended that Cage stole the Declaration of Independence to being
turned onto Cage for some questionable reason. Real quick, here’s the five best
scene stealers besides Cage from this movie: I say 5. Phil (a henchman with a
name) 4. The kid who helps them crack the code, because he made bank off of it,
3. Hammersmark even though she didn’t really do that much. 2. Voight. 1.
CLUUUUUUUUUUES.
Levi:
Objection! Voight and CLUES are the same thing!
James:
Yet they need each other. Without CLUES Voight wouldn’t have had any lines, and
without Voight we would never have heard the downside to following CLUES. For
those wondering what we mean, watch the movie, or even fast forward to every
scene Voight is in, and drink for when he says CLUES. You will have a good
night.
Levi:
Or make a drinking game of it. Anyway, everyone does kind of have their shtick,
Riley is the techno wiz-
James:
Riley was miscast. Shia LaBeouf would have been perfect.
Levi:
Oh dear god! Well, he would have been a bankable star at that time, maybe a
little young.
James:
Riley is just too early 2000’s smart ass for me. He really doesn’t do a great
job at anything. He fails when Cage is stealing Declaration, he pays a kid to
crack a code, and he gets reminded every scene that he isn’t as smart as he
thinks he is.
Levi:
You want to talk about nostalgia (And it isn’t clouding my judgement!!), the
technology in this movie is a fun trip, with the shocking technique of setting
security cameras on loops and tracking cell phones through GPS, simpler times.
James:
Another thing that confuses me, everyone treats each other like crap. From the
outset, Cage puts down every idea Bean comes up with. I could see why Bean
doesn’t want to work with him (although Bean has a history of not wanting to
work as a team)...
Levi:
How do all our discussions come back to Lord of the Rings?
James:
Because LOTR is the GOAT. Anyway, Riley and Cage give each other shit the whole
movie about their intelligence, and Hammersmark is very cold to Cage at the
beginning. The FBI director keeps threatening that someone has to go to jail,
which seems very black and white to me. A crime happened, but instead of
figuring it out, let’s just put someone in jail to make it look alright.
Levi:I
mean Cage did break the law, but yeah the fact that only a certain person
should go to jail is ludicrous.
James:
No, this is Ludacris:
Levi:
Multiple people did end up in prison. But Phil was just doing what he was told
man! He didn’t ask for this!
James:
Fun fact, the actor who plays Phil, Stephen Pope, is actually a stunt actor. He
has done stunts for movies like The Departed, Wolf of Wall Street, and
Zombieland. I like how he got an actual part in this. Anyway, back to the
point, I just think it tries too hard to be clever, and it slams history in
your face to cover up the holes in the movie. You like it because it brings
history to mainstream entertainment, which is cool, but not enough for me. So,
now we have to decide what we would have changed in the plot.
So,
SPOILER (Do you have to say spoiler for a 13 year old movie?) Voight (CLUES)
fools Bean at the end by telling him the treasure is in Boston. Why Bean would
believe someone who has been out of the game for 20 plus years I don’t
understand. Here’s what I would have done as Bean, taken Cage and Voight with
me. Without them, that group is just a bunch of sheep with no wolf to get them
going. Riley would have just hit on Hammersmark and she wouldn’t have had
Marcel nor Lt. Aldo Rain to save her. Thus, they would have got to Boston,
found out Voight was lying, probably leading to killing him off. Cage would
have been kept alive to find the actual treasure. He would have escaped,
leading to an epic fight scene with Bean where Bean dies and Cage goes to save
the possibly already dead duo he left behind. They never find the treasure, but
they do find friendship, inside of a jail.
Levi:
See, this decision shouldn’t have come up in the first place. First of all ‘One
if by land, two if by sea,’ isn’t a totally obscure historical fact. That is
another thing I didn’t like, either you’re super history man Benjamin Gates, or
you totally oblivious to all historical fact.
Anyway, even if Bean or Phil weren’t
familiar with the event, Bean contradicts himself by thinking they need to
travel ALL THE WAY FROM NEW YORK TO BOSTON, INSTEAD OF LOOKING AROUND THE
IMPRESSIVELY INTRICATE HOLE FOUR STORIES INTO THE GROUND. He said himself while
they were in the church that it would be weird if the map brought them to the
church and then took them somewhere else!!! And then they travel down this huge
marvel of architecture and after for searching for TWO MINUTES, he thinks
Boston is the answer. Why not call Voight (CLUE!) on his bluff and make them
look for the door. If they refuse start wasting the non-history privy cast
members: aka Riley. Boom, there might be a struggle, but you have pretty good
odds, because even if our heroes overpowered you, you still have a crew waiting
upstairs ready to kill if you don’t return with the group. Bean gets the
treasure and probably kills the rest of the cast. All because he didn’t want to
dust the walls a little bit.
James: I am just picturing either of
our ideas happening in a Disney movie. Either the main character and his
friends go to jail after his dad is killed in front of him OR the witty friend
is executed, the villain gets the treasure, and the main character dies. Not
sure if they would run with it, but it does make a little more sense. Anyway,
that does it for National Treasure. Any last thoughts?
Levi: Like I said before, a fun
action flick, I don’t think it’s trying to be in your face, just trying to
sprinkle in historical references and nods into a modern day treasure hunt.
James: Agree to disagree. I say it’s
not good and you say it is. That’s a lesson: nostalgia never dies. Well, that does
it for this “treasure”, but we will be back. Let us know if you want us to
discuss a movie (thanks to Ragin Cajun for suggesting this one), it does not have to be a Nic Cage movie. We take (arguably)
bad movies and make them better.
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