National Treasure In Hindi Movie Download

National Treasure In Hindi Movie Download

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National Treasure In Hindi Movie Download

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Since childhood, Benjamin Franklin Gates has known that he is decended from a long line of people whose job is to guard a treasure hidden by the Founding Fathers, who hid clues to its whereabouts in the country's currency and on the back of the Declaration of Independence. Now, he has learned of a plot to steal the Declaration, and has only one option: steal it himself. Even if he pulls off this monumental task, keeping the treasure safe is still going to be incredibly hard, especially since the FBI has also gotten wind of the scheme.
A historian races to find the legendary Templar Treasure before a team of mercenaries.
For a change, here is an action movie without any comics character, no super-hero, nobody flies or moves buildings with his bare arms, on the contrary, the main character does from time to time something very different ... he thinks! &#39;National Treasure&#39; is someplace between where &#39;Indiana Jones&#39; was and where &#39;Da Vinci Code&#39; will be - treasure hunting mixed with historic riddles, with a considerable dose of free masons and US revolution history. It succeeds to catch us and makes us spend a pleasant two hours because it is well done, nicely acted, brings to screen some of the well known locations in the US North East without destroying them completely, and enough credible things happen in the screen at a good pace to keep our interest alive.<br/><br/>Nicolas Cage exchanges his typical anxiety for the obsession of a treasure hunter, and has fun carrying his Donald Trump hairdo for the length of the movie. Diane Kruger is OK as Cage&#39;s emotional interest, now that she does not have to carry the responsibility of the Troy war on her shoulders. Harvey Keitel and Jon Voight show up in supporting roles - none of them will run for a Oscar for this, but they certainly have fun and help us having fun.<br/><br/>I read that &#39;National Treasure 2&#39; is in the making - I hope that it will keep the level up and I am pretty sure that I will go to see it.
GOOGLE will be seeing LOTS of hits from this one, from &quot;Freemasons&quot; and &#39;Knights Templar&#39; to &quot;Pass and Stow.&quot; And it&#39;s wicked clever how Benjamin Franklin plays such a central role in this film, from Nic Cage&#39;s character&#39;s name (Benjamin Franklin &quot;Ben&quot; Gates) to inventions, code, letters under pen names, daylight savings time, and more. It is all done so cleverly that many people will wonder how much is fact and how much is fiction, before it reaches its full Indiana Jones level of frantic. <br/><br/>Our obsessed protagonist, Ben, has spent his entire life pursuing a Holy Grail of American Colonial mythology that is complete with Knights Templar instead of the Knights of the Round Table. His Grandfather so anointed him as a child, and this boy&#39;s been taking it seriously for decades. His father, portrayed by Jon Voight, is the disillusioned realist Ben is determined he will never become. Ben follows clues as a bloodhound follows scent, oblivious to anything that would take him off task, and with the funding of the ever-creepy Sean Bean as unscrupulous treasure hunter Ian Howe, he digs up the pivotal piece of proof that his quest is more than a myth. The hunt then moves into fast forward, with clues tumbling like dominoes. A presumption that there is an &#39;invisible&#39; treasure map on the back of the original Declaration of Independence is just the FIRST step to the ensuing mayhem.<br/><br/>The audience loved this movie, and my only objections were slight: why are so many doors unlocked, allowing our heroes such easy access to everything from fiber optic cables and conduits to historical landmarks?<br/><br/>Beyond that, I had a rollicking good time at this flick, enjoying Nicolas Cage at his oddly quirky best, admiring Jon Voight&#39;s robust willingness to be a lumpy and crotchety old character actor, finding the buddy-sidekick role of Riley Poole played by Justin Bartha a delight that&#39;s just right in tone and texture, all the while being caught up in the how-will-they-get-out-of-this-mess excitement of each moment. <br/><br/>The casting of Diane Kruger as female foil Abigail Chase seemed a bit too young for her character&#39;s power position in the historical archives, but she pulled it off with spunk and spine, which got me past her peculiar accent. There&#39;s a very clever bit with a gift from Ben to Abigail. In fact there are many, many clever bits and pieces that stay with you long after the movie is over. It was wise, too, for Ben to address Abigail&#39;s dialect, which defused some of its distraction. I have to assume Ms. Kruger talks like this in real life, as it was too extraneous to have been added as a layer of her character.<br/><br/>What I actually loved about this movie were the definitively American locations -- from the Lincoln Memorial to Independence Hall, from the overviews of Washington D.C. to great long shots of the Washington Monument.<br/><br/>The Liberty Bell, the Declaration of Independence, the historical trivia peppered throughout -- it was all just delicious in the sumptuous buffet of this movie. How refreshing to see a few true USA locations NOT being faked in Canada, Mexico or elsewhere!<br/><br/>Getting back to the Indiana Jones comparison, down to Indie&#39;s prickly relationship with his father, this is a Red-White-and-Blue version set in modern day Mom-and-apple-pie-America. And it all works, ably woven together under Jon Turtletaub&#39;s slick direction, and branded with the Jerry Bruckheimer sizzle of humor, romance, irreverence laced with underlying respect, and pace, pace, pace. What fun! And best of all, you can take the kids, take the folks, take the sweetheart, and -- although hearts will race and nails will be bitten -- no one will be embarrassed or scandalized or assaulted by gratuitous anything. Bravo!
It lacks the conviction to embrace its own garish awfulness, resulting in little more than tedious historical and patriotic hokum, a preposterous potboiler done in by slack pacing and pedestrian execution.
When Ben Gates (<a href="/name/nm0000115/">Nicolas Cage</a>) was a young boy, his grandpa, John Adams Gates (<a href="/name/nm0001626/">Christopher Plummer</a>), told him how, in 1832, Charles Carroll, the last surviving signer of the United States Declaration of Independence, entrusted his stable boy, Ben&#39;s great great grandfather Thomas Gates, with the first in a series of clues that supposedly led to a vast treasure amassed by the Knights Templar. Although Ben&#39;s own father, Patrick Gates (<a href="/name/nm0000685/">Jon Voight</a>), does not believe in the legend, Ben swore to take upon himself the duty of the Knights Templar, the Freemasons and the family Gates, and has spent his entire life trying to figure out the meaning of the clue: The secret lies with Charlotte. Finally, as an adult, Ben has found Charlotte and begins on his quest for the treasure. National Treasure is a Disney Production that was co-written by numerous screenwriters, including Jim Kouf, Marianne and Cormac Wibberley, Oren Aviv, Charles Segars, Ted Elliott, and Terry Rossio. A sequel, <a href="/title/tt0465234/">National Treasure: Book of Secrets (2007)</a>, followed in 2007. <a href="/title/tt1197627/">National Treasure 3</a> is currently in development with no release date known. The signers of the Declaration of Independence, some of whom were also members of the Freemasons, a reformation of the Knights Templar, hid the treasure during the American Revolution [1775-1783] to keep the British from getting their hands on it. Charlotte turns out to be The Charlotte, a sunken vessel in the Arctic Circle. Inside The Charlotte, Ben finds a meerschaum pipe bearing the second clue: The legend writ, the stain effected, the key in Silence undetected. Fifty-five in iron pen, Mr. Matlack can&#39;t offend. Ben deciphers the second clue to mean that the 55 signers of the Declaration of Independence hid the message invisibly on the back of the document. Ben must now inspect the Declaration, one of the most important historical documents in the United States. At the same time, Ben&#39;s ex-colleague, Ian Howe (<a href="/name/nm0000293/">Sean Bean</a>), has decided to steal the document and find the treasure for himself. Part of the experience in watching this movie is to try for oneself to decipher the clues and guess where they might lead, so posting that information would be a disservice. Suffice to say that the third clue presents an Ottendorf cipher that, translated, reads: The vision to see the treasured past comes as the timely shadow crosses in front of the house of Pass and Stow. The fourth clue is a pair of 3D spectacles. The fifth clue reads: Heere at the wall. The sixth clue revealed is Beneath Parkington Lane. Those schooled in American history might be able to figure out the clues for themselves. An Ottendorf cipher consists of three codes, i.e., 2-4-6, that corresponds to a random book or newspaper article. The first number corresponds to the page, the second number to the line on the page, and the third number to the letter/word in that line. Status quo refers to the way things are going at the present time, that is, the current status of things. If something changes, e.g., the power shifts, then the status quo also changes. After escaping from the treasure room, Ben contacts FBI agent Peter Sadusky (<a href="/name/nm0000172/">Harvey Keitel</a>) to return the Declaration. As they are attempting to work out a compromise, Ben sees from Sadusky&#39;s ring that he is a Freemason. They agree to give the treasure to &quot;the people&quot; in return for Abigail having no repercussions on her record, Riley being credited for the find, and Ben not having to go to prison. &quot;Someone has to go to prison,&quot; Sadusky says, so Ben leads them to Boston where Ian is attempting to break into the Old North Church. Ian is arrested on charges of kidnapping, attempted murder, and trespassing on government property. In the final scene, Ben, Abigail, and Riley stroll in the garden of their estate purchased with the finders fee that they received after turning over the Declaration and the treasure. Some movies that also involve jumping through various hoops to find a valuable treasure include (1) <a href="/title/tt0033870/">The Maltese Falcon (1941)</a> (1941), in which a detective searches for a priceless statue, (2) <a href="/title/tt0079240/">The First Great Train Robbery (1978)</a> (1979), in which master criminals attempt to steal a gold shipment from a moving train, (3) <a href="/title/tt0137494/">Entrapment (1999)</a> (1999), in which two thieves plot to steal 8 billion dollars at the stroke of the transition from 1999 to 2000, (4) <a href="/title/tt0382625/">The Da Vinci Code (2006)</a> (2006), in which a symbologist Robert Langdon tries to unravel a chain of cryptic codes that could change the face of religious history, (5) <a href="/title/tt0808151/">Angels &amp; Demons (2009)</a> (2009), in which Langdon follows a series of clues to find a destructive weapon that could level the Vatican, and (6) <a href="/title/tt3062096/">Inferno (2016)</a> (2016), in which Langdon is drawn by a trail of clues linked to Dante Alighieri [1265-1321]. Also of note are any of the Indiana Jones movies, i.e., <a href="/title/tt0082971/">Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)</a> (1981), <a href="/title/tt0087469/">Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984)</a> (1984), <a href="/title/tt0097576/">Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)</a> (1989), and <a href="/title/tt0367882/">Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008)</a> (2008), all of which center around Indy&#39;s search for various ancient artifacts. a5c7b9f00b

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