You may even read Inferno yourself, whether at the behest of an angry
albino monk or because you you simply want to....
I can appreciate that and still, I had plenty of hope for Epic Movie based on the fact that all of the targets are things that I've actually seen (well, with the exception of The Da Vinci Code, whose self - flagellating
albino monk Silas features throughout).
-- as the self - flagellating
albino monk, but it is Ian McKellan that grabs our attention in a superb performance that goes above and beyond the call of duty.
Since playing Silas, the self - flagellating
albino monk of The Da Vinci Code, religiously skeptical cinema has come to be for him what leaning poster poses are for Matthew McConaughey.
If your internal narrative bogs down, there's always the sudden appearance of a murderous
albino monk / hitman (Paul Bettany) to defibrillate the wheezing ol' geezer.
Not sure what has possessed Paul Bettany and his dark religious roles of late; from the murderous
albino monk in Ron Howard's adaptation of The Da Vinci Code, to the archangel in Scott Stewart's previous supernatural thriller, Legion.
Together they must solve a gruesome, pentangle - besmirched murder in The Louvre â $ «and find The Holy Grail â $ «before a) a mad
albino monk in a -LSB-...]
The only performance that really works here is Paul Bettany's turn as Silas, the killer
albino monk hot on Robert and Sophie's trail.
The plot thickens through the violent machinations of
an albino monk who works for Opus Dei, an actual Roman Catholic organization portrayed by Brown with lightly veiled contempt.
Not exact matches
To put this in perspective, there's a giant,
albino,
monk assassin knocking off the world's expert in his field, in the opening pages of the book.