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17
88 Minutes
55
Baby Mama
78
Before I Forget
80
Bigger, Stronger, Faster*
75
Boy A
32
Chapter 27
54
CSNY: Déjà Vu
31
Deception
64
Fall, The
51
Finding Amanda
57
Forbidden Kingdom, The
67
Forgetting Sarah Marshall
34
Happening, The
27
How to Rob a Bank
79
Iron Man
46
Jack Brooks: Monster Slayer
62
Kabluey
56
Leatherheads
72
Lou Reed's Berlin
24
Love Guru, The
37
Made of Honor
65
Married Life
52
Mother of Tears, The
70
Outsourced
83
Paranoid Park
55
Pathology
22
Postal
51
Promotion, The
77
Rape of Europa, The
69
Redbelt
48
Run, Fat Boy, Run
30
Sarah Landon and the Paranormal Hour
53
Sex and the City: The Movie
67
Snow Angels
66
Son of Rambow
37
Speed Racer
82
Taxi to the Dark Side
56
Then She Found Me
79
Visitor, The
65
Water Lilies
36
What Happens in Vegas...
45
Where in the World Is Osama Bin Laden?
54
You Don't Mess with the Zohan
75
Young@Heart
83
Paranoid Park
82
Taxi to the Dark Side
80
Bigger, Stronger, Faster*
79
Visitor, The
79
Iron Man
78
Before I Forget
77
Rape of Europa, The
75
Young@Heart
75
Boy A
72
Lou Reed's Berlin
70
Outsourced
69
Redbelt
67
Forgetting Sarah Marshall
67
Snow Angels
66
Son of Rambow
65
Married Life
65
Water Lilies
64
Fall, The
62
Kabluey
57
Forbidden Kingdom, The
56
Leatherheads
56
Then She Found Me
55
Baby Mama
55
Pathology
54
You Don't Mess with the Zohan
54
CSNY: Déjà Vu
53
Sex and the City: The Movie
52
Mother of Tears, The
51
Finding Amanda
51
Promotion, The
48
Run, Fat Boy, Run
46
Jack Brooks: Monster Slayer
45
Where in the World Is Osama Bin Laden?
37
Made of Honor
37
Speed Racer
36
What Happens in Vegas...
34
Happening, The
32
Chapter 27
31
Deception
30
Sarah Landon and the Paranormal Hour
27
How to Rob a Bank
24
Love Guru, The
22
Postal
17
88 Minutes
Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed movies.
|
National Treasure: Book of Secrets
Walt Disney Pictures
 |
|
FILM:
MPAA RATING: PG for some violence and action
Starring
Nicolas Cage,
Jon Voight,
Harvey Keitel,
Ed Harris,
Diane Kruger,
Justin Bartha,
Bruce Greenwood,
and
Helen Mirren
When a missing page from the diary of John Wilkes Booth surfaces, Ben's great-great grandfather is suddenly implicated as a key conspirator in Abraham Lincoln's death. Determined to prove his ancestor's innocence, Ben follows an international chain of clues that takes him on a chase from Paris to London and ultimately back to America. This journey leads Ben and his crew not only to surprising revelations, but also to the trail of the world's most treasured secrets. (Walt Disney Pictures)
| GENRE(S): |
Action
|
Adventure
|
| WRITTEN BY: |
Charles Segars (characters), Oren Aviv (characters) , Jim Kouf (characters)
Terry Rossio (story), Ted Elliott (story)
Marianne Wibberley (& story), Cormac Wibberley (& story)
|
| DIRECTED BY: |
Jon Turteltaub
|
| RELEASE DATE: |
DVD: May 20, 2008
Theatrical: December 21, 2007
|
| RUNNING TIME: |
124 minutes, Color |
| ORIGIN: |
USA |

All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
75
San Francisco Chronicle
Peter Hartlaub
A welcome throwback to family-friendly PG moviemaking.

70
LA Weekly
Luke Y. Thompson
This ain’t "The Da Vinci Code," folks, and the reason you can tell is that it’s actually quite entertaining.

70
Washington Post
Ann Hornaday
Cage is back in crackling good form in National Treasure: Book of Secrets.

67
Entertainment Weekly
Owen Gleiberman
Director Jon Turteltaub has fun with Indian glyphs, giant stone pulleys, and an Indy Jones-worthy City of Gold located beneath the rocky shoals of Mount Rushmore.

67
The Onion (A.V. Club)
Nathan Rabin
It's a measure of the film's infectious goofiness that Cage seems altogether more interested in clearing the name of a long-dead ancestor than in finding a city of gold.

60
The Hollywood Reporter
Kirk Honeycutt
It contains all the elements from the original film...But that's the problem: It's virtually the same movie with new locations. Oh, plus Helen Mirren. Not a bad addition, but the popcorn fun is gone.

60
Variety
Justin Chang
Graced with some extra star wattage courtesy of Helen Mirren and Ed Harris, this diminishing-returns sequel sends Nicolas Cage on another quest to strike it rich, get young auds excited about history and solve puzzles that are generally less stimulating than yesterday's Sudoku.

60
The New York Times
Matt Zoller Seitz
Like its predecessor, “National Treasure,” this sequel amounts to a bunch of crossword puzzle answers stitched together with explosions, chases and displays of intuitive reasoning that the “Twin Peaks” F.B.I. agent Dale Cooper would reject as too right-brained.

58
Baltimore Sun
Michael Sragow
A strictly by-the-book sequel: It doesn't cheat series fans but it doesn't offer many thrills or surprises or lingering puzzles, either.

50
Boston Globe
Ty Burr
Often as noisy, dippy, and enjoyable as 2004's "National Treasure," and when it's not, it's just another sequel, more absurd than most.

50
Christian Science Monitor
Peter Rainer
No better than the first – which means it will probably be creamed by critics and make a jillion dollars. But really, standards are standards.

50
Chicago Sun-Times
Roger Ebert
The movie has terrific if completely unbelievable special effects. The actors had fun, I guess. You might, too, if you like goofiness like this.

50
USA Today
Claudia Puig
This sequel is what you would expect: If you liked the original, you'll probably enjoy this retread. But be warned: It bogs down in a drawn-out scene near the end. There's certainly nothing to treasure about this movie, but if a popcorn movie with moderate intrigue and occasional humor is what you're after, this is just the ticket.

50
Chicago Reader
Jonathan Rosenbaum
Leave it to coproducer Jerry Bruckheimer to revive the Indiana Jones cycle without the period setting, the camp elements, or Spielberg's efficiency; director Jon Turteltaub just plods along, and the script by Marianne and Cormac Wibberley is equally poker-faced.

50
TV Guide
Ken Fox
It shares all the original's shortcomings —--it’s too long and too loud and filled with historical disinformation -- but none of the snap that made "National Treasure" fun for kids and a guilty pleasure for some adults.

50
Los Angeles Times
Kevin Crust
Everything has been significantly amped up -- bigger, louder, further removed from reality -- but it also feels that much more forced. Cage and Kruger seem like they're not having much fun this time around, and Bartha still gets the best throwaway lines.

50
New York Daily News
Jack Mathews
If there was an iota of plausibility to any of this, we could forgive the film's greater leaps of imagination - all those break-ins of absurdly unprotected bastions of Western civilization. But this is not audience-participation suspense. All you can do is sit and watch, and wish there was more wonder.

40
Empire
Andrew Osmond
A turgid action sequel that loses sight of plot and characters in its humourless efforts to impress.

40
Film Threat
Mark Bell
Is the film fun? Yeah, in that campy kind of "The Mummy" way, but it is also weak as a sequel in that very campy "The Mummy Returns" type of way.

40
Austin Chronicle
Kimberley Jones
Book of Secrets isn’t so much a romp as a long trudge through American history factoids and conspiracy-theory gobbledygook. Cool car chase, though.

38
Chicago Tribune
Michael Phillips
All you want from a movie like this, really, is a little brainless fun, and it keeps holding out on you. Everyone looks fatigued. Even Cage’s toupee seems ambivalent about having signed on for a sequel.

38
Philadelphia Inquirer
Steven Rea
Like a grade-school version of an Indiana Jones adventure.

38
Premiere
Eric Alt
The movie does feature a nice, teasing chemistry between veteran actors Voight and Mirren (who clearly relishes the chance to break out of stuffy melodrama), but this shallow, empty puzzle requires more than playful banter to satisfy audiences willing to pay to play.

38
ReelViews
James Berardinelli
"Mindless" applies, and Book of Secrets is more like a tame, endlessly repetitive amusement park ride than a motion picture.

38
New York Post
Kyle Smith
It's another flick about maps, landmarks and buried treasure that makes "The Da Vinci Code" look like TOLSTOY.

38
The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Jason McBride
Throughout all this, Cage's lazy, dull performance – who knew there were so many ways to express smugness? – is enlivened only by poorly timed bursts of exuberance.


The average user rating for this movie is 5.0 (out of 10) based on 110 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
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