The individuals have spoken, they usually need extra Robert Langdon, however this time, they’re hoping to see the Harvard professor reimagined in a status Netflix collection.
Over on Reddit, followers of Dan Brown’s bestselling e book collection that includes the symbologist, which started with The Da Vinci Code, appear to agree on one factor: it’s time for a small-screen revival on the favored streaming platform.
“Dan Brown (The Da Vinci Code) books have to be remade into a correct Netflix collection,” one Reddit consumer wrote. “I simply assume the fabric didn’t translate very properly as a two-hour film format. Being too involved with the time constraint as a movie, it did not ship the unique thriller and suspense of the books. The mind-boggling puzzles and richness of historic trivia had been all watered right down to a bland, awfully paced plot.”
“I feel a collection format would do it extra justice. It’s been 20 years, and it’s about time. Plus, we’re all so accomplished with studios remaking fantastic latest ‘fool-proof’ franchises that didn’t ever want a remake to start with,” the poster continued.
The commentator wasn’t alone in his sentiments. In a thread on r/tv, followers of Brown’s work echoed the decision for a collection that might do justice to the Harvard professor
“Within the movies, they had been like, ‘Assume, assume, assume…Received it!’ They didn’t even give the viewers time to soak up and be in on it,” mentioned one other fan.
Dan Brown’s Robert Langdon collection consists of 5 novels: Angels & Demons (2000), The Da Vinci Code (2003), The Misplaced Image (2009), Inferno (2013), and Origin (2017). In 2006, The Da Vinci Code was made right into a characteristic movie directed by Ron Howard and starring Tom Hanks as Robert Langdon, the Harvard symbologist who turns into entangled in a conspiracy that dates again to the early days of Christianity.
Co-starring Audrey Tautou, Paul Bettany, Jean Reno, Ian McKellen, and Alfred Molina, the movie was a field workplace hit that led to the variations of Angels & Demons in 2009 and Inferno in 2016.
In 2021, Peacock tried to carry Langdon to households with a TV adaptation of Dan Brown’s The Misplaced Image starring Ashley Zukerman. Serving as a prequel to the movies, the collection was canceled after a single season.
Given the enduring recognition of The Da Vinci Code and with the movie’s twentieth anniversary on the horizon, maybe it’s time to strive once more, this time with Netflix within the driver’s seat as Langdon deciphers the mysteries of mankind for a brand new era of viewers.