Orijinalini görmek için tıklayınız : The Da Vinci Code


meymane_usari
03.03.2006, 15:15
http://www.danbrown.com/images/davinci_code/gallery/davinci_art/1_the_mona_lisa.jpg The Mona Lisa.
http://www.danbrown.com/images/davinci_code/gallery/davinci_art/2_the_vitruvian_man.jpg The Vitruvian Man.
http://www.danbrown.com/images/davinci_code/gallery/davinci_art/5codex_forster_with_reverse_handwriting.jpg Codex with reverse handwriting.
http://www.danbrown.com/images/davinci_code/gallery/davinci_art/6da_vinci_self_portrait.jpg Da Vinci self-portrait.

meymane_usari
03.03.2006, 15:18
While in Paris on business, Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon receives an urgent late-night phone call: the elderly curator of the Louvre has been murdered inside the museum. Near the body, police have found a baffling cipher. Solving the enigmatic riddle, Langdon is stunned to discover it leads to a trail of clues hidden in the works of Da Vinci…clues visible for all to see…and yet ingeniously disguised by the painter.

Langdon joins forces with a gifted French cryptologist, Sophie Neveu, and learns the late curator was involved in the Priory of Sion—an actual secret society whose members included Sir Isaac Newton, Botticelli, Victor Hugo, and Da Vinci, among others. The Louvre curator has sacrificed his life to protect the Priory's most sacred trust: the location of a vastly important religious relic, hidden for centuries.

In a breathless race through Paris, London, and beyond, Langdon and Neveu match wits with a faceless powerbroker who appears to work for Opus Dei—a clandestine, Vatican-sanctioned Catholic sect believed to have long plotted to seize the Priory's secret. Unless Langdon and Neveu can decipher the labyrinthine puzzle in time, the Priory's secret—and a stunning historical truth—will be lost forever.

In an exhilarating blend of relentless adventure, scholarly intrigue, and cutting wit, symbologist Robert Langdon (first introduced in Dan Brown's bestselling Angels & Demons) is the most original character to appear in years. THE DA VINCI CODE heralds the arrival of a new breed of lightening-paced, intelligent thriller…surprising at every twist, absorbing at every turn, and in the end, utterly unpredictable…right up to its astonishing conclusion.

Naz
04.03.2006, 01:25
i recommend this book to everyone, it was a real breathtaking book. i enjoyed it beginning to end. dan brown has an amazing technique, and this reflects well on his work. angels and demons is also worth reading.

the movie adaptation of da vinci code is realing very soon, and i cant wait till its out. i've seen the trailer and the scenes look just like the ones i have pictured in my mind while i was reading the novel.

Simsek
13.06.2006, 01:31
the movie adaptation of da vinci code is realing very soon, and i cant wait till its out. i've seen the trailer and the scenes look just like the ones i have pictured in my mind while i was reading the novel.

I haven't read the book and I can make just one comment about the movie; IT WAS A TERRIBLE MOVIE! I guess the Church made the movie more popular just by being against it. It would have been better for them if they have said just nothing about it since it really was a bad one.

Naz
13.06.2006, 01:42
I haven't read the book and I can make just one comment about the movie; IT WAS A TERRIBLE MOVIE! I guess the Church made the movie more popular just by being against it. It would have been better for them if they have said just nothing about it since it really was a bad one.

yeap unfortunately i agree with u, because i read the book, i was very excited about the movie, i really like book adaptation... also the trailer looked very interesting, however, that was about it, there wasnt much more in the movie... i cant say it was a total flop, and yet they did try to stay loyal to the book, however too much was missing, they spent the 2 hours on nothing, instead they could of included more detail...

Alevimen
13.06.2006, 01:50
I think the Illuminati book is better, I hope they will make a movie about this book again with Tom Hanks as "Robert Langdon" :komik

pirimunzur
30.06.2006, 15:23
ya ben bişe soracam burada yazi yazanlar türk niye ing,l,zce konuşuyorsunuz evet o filimi bende seyrettmi 180 dakka fena degildi :)

Gannush
30.06.2006, 15:38
I suggest those, who've read Da Vinci Code, read Umberto Eco's "Foucault's Pendulum" and "The Name of The Rose" books also. Eco's novels are far superior to the Da Vinci Code.

halitseyfi
30.06.2006, 18:15
ya ben bişe soracam burada yazi yazanlar türk niye ing,l,zce konuşuyorsunuz evet o filimi bende seyrettmi 180 dakka fena degildi :)

sanırım aleviformun dili değişti veya gizli birşeyler tartışılıyor eee ne yapalım bizde fransız oluruz.

meymane_usari
30.06.2006, 18:25
Angels&Demonds is better than Da Vİnci Code i prefer it

gule_can
30.06.2006, 20:39
I watched the film too but beacuse i havent read the book I can't really say which one was better. But I don't think it was too bad.

izmirksk
01.07.2006, 01:04
ya ben bişe soracam burada yazi yazanlar türk niye ing,l,zce konuşuyorsunuz
There came a time to tell the truth:))
(Gerçeği söylemenin zamanı geldi...)

meymane_usari
01.07.2006, 08:53
once upon a time there was a forum and next it &it's users became english :D

shahrud
12.07.2006, 17:10
I suggest those, who've read Da Vinci Code, read Umberto Eco's "Foucault's Pendulum" and "The Name of The Rose" books also. Eco's novels are far superior to the Da Vinci Code.
I wonder what "Foucault's Pendulum" is about? I know it is a very well-known experiment in the history of science. Even though it was known that earth rotated, Foucault's Pendulum experiment showed the first time that earth does indeed rotates.

Gannush
13.07.2006, 03:01
Foucault's Pendulum (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foucault%27s_Pendulum) on Wikipedia.

shahrud
13.07.2006, 22:10
once upon a time there was a forum and next it &it's users became english :D
Why are some people bothered by the messages written in english. Do just omit this part of the forum and let people write in english if they want to write in english..then everyone is happy:sarkazm

shadowpuppet
14.07.2006, 07:33
Why are some people bothered by the messages written in english. Do just omit this part of the forum and let people write in english if they want to write in english..then everyone is happy:sarkazm

This is a very small part of the forum.

To the people who have something against the English language.. do you like being discriminated against because of your language?

Is it any fault of mine or any indication of my intelligence or my capacity to be human that I grew up speaking English?

Sounds a little racist to me, folks.

Gannush
14.07.2006, 07:56
No, you're not disturbing. Some of the forumers finds it odds for native Turkish speakers to speak English on a Turkish forum as they think that all of the participants are of Turkish descent.

gule_can
18.07.2006, 10:40
well they don't have to come here, these subjects writen in english can be created in the turkish part to and it is usual for english to spoken here seen as it is called english forum

shadowpuppet
22.07.2006, 07:38
Learning new languages is a good thing for anybody. Even just a little bit.

It is more than simply translating words and phrases (because none translate exactly. It is a bridge between cultures and requires us to listen and look at the world with different ears and eyes. Each has a poetry of its own when spoken and written properly ...and, alternately, I suppose that it must be listened to and read properly as well. Otherwise we just sound like a bunch of babies. :-)