Cheerfully entertaining hokum, this professionally rendered popcorn movie reliably delivers charming and clever escapism. I’d avoided it for years, mostly due to Nic Cage wariness, but am quite happy to have now seen it, and wouldn’t hesitate to watch it again if the occasion arose.
And yet, not to spoil any secrets, but the sequel’s even better.
Nic Cage restrains himself, making his understated performance easy to absorb. The beauteous Diane Kruger (she played Helen of Troy, so she must be beautiful) delivers her lines with sufficient grace, while Justin Bartha is reasonably funny as the nerdy sidekick.
A trio of old time big names – Jon Voight, Harvey Keitel and Christopher Plummer – grace the screen in meaty supporting roles, making this a professional effort all around.
Glossy production values, light-on-its-feet dialogue, and state-of-the-art FX make this a great Hollywood-type film.
Harmless stooge-like violence
Farcical inventions abound in this movie, from the treasure room five stories below Manhattan’s Trinity Church to the secret decoder glasses masoned into Independence Hall, all great fun.
The movie is leavened by a frank wonder at the real glories of American history. This appreciation for the incomparable accomplishment that is the United States of America comes through as very real indeed.