You can learn who else will star in the film alongside Hanks by finding the clues I have ingeniously hidden throughout this blog post and then cross-referencing them against Dante’s Divine Comedy. Ron Howard, who directed both Da Vinci Code and Angels & Demons, will rejoin Hanks for Inferno, working from a script by David Koepp (who also co-wrote Angels & Demons). The third Langdon film will be based on the fourth book in the series, Inferno, which follows the character as he tries to stop a doomsday plot by being an art-history nerd. So that means it’s just two more years until Tom Hanks and his weird Robert Langdon hair returns!
DA VINCI CODE SEQUEL MOVIE
Ron Howard - who directed all three movies - clearly took criticisms of the first movie to heart too, and ensured the sequel moved at a.
DA VINCI CODE SEQUEL CODE
Try to find out what that is!) Now, Sony will instead première the film on October 14, 2016. The Da Vinci Code (2006) Angels & Demons (2009) Inferno (2016) Angels & Demons was actually the first novel in Dan Brown's book series but was reworked to be a sequel following the success of The Da Vinci Code. The third film in the series had been tentatively scheduled to open on December 18, 2015, where it would have debuted against something called Star Wars: Episode VII. (Note to self: That sounds interesting. Originally developed as a pilot at NBC, the series stars Succession’s Ashley Zukerman as Robert Langdon, the character previously played by Tom Hanks in the big-screen adaptations of author Dan Brown’s novel series. So, yeah, there are going to be more Robert Langdon movies. Peacock has given a series order to the Da Vinci Code follow-up series Dan Brown’s Langdon, the streamer announced Tuesday. DOWNLOAD EXCERPT BUY THE BOOK AUDIO EXCERPT. But then I remembered that the “less successful” Langdon movie made almost $500 million foreign and domestic, and The Da Vinci Code cleared over $217 million in the U.S. The Da Vinci Code heralds the arrival of a new breed of lightning-paced, intelligent thrillersurprising at every twist, absorbing at every turn, and in the end, utterly unpredictableright up to its astonishing conclusion. Frankly, I was starting to think Hollywood may have given up on Langdon as a film franchise. In that time, author Dan Brown has published two more installments in the not particularly cinematic adventures of symbologist Robert Langdon, The Lost Symbol and Inferno, but progress has been extremely slow in bringing either to the screen. It’s already been four years since Angels & Demons, the last sequel The Da Vinci Code. The Lost Symbol, Dan Browns Da Vinci Code sequel, left author crippled with nerves.