What makes National Treasure a genuine "national treasure" (lowercase) is its earnestness. In a modern era of superheroes quipping through apocalypses and anti-heroes brooding in alleyways, Ben Gates is refreshingly square. He loves history. He loves his country’s weird, unfinished corners. He explains clues about Silence Dogood and the Charlotte’s Light with the same breathless excitement a child has for a new video game. Diane Kruger’s Dr. Abigail Chase, the archivist who gets dragged along, perfectly mirrors the audience’s journey: she starts as a skeptic rolling her eyes at the "crackpot" theories, and ends up dangling from a rope in a hidden Templar vault, screaming, "There’s a map on the back of the Declaration?!"
The Unlikely Genius of National Treasure : Why We Keep Coming Back for the Sequel That Never Was (Until Now) national treasure film
Released in 2004 and followed by its 2007 sequel, Book of Secrets , the National Treasure franchise is the cinematic equivalent of comfort food: a perfectly grilled cheese sandwich of history, puzzles, and unapologetic absurdity. It operates on a logic that is utterly insane if you think about it for more than three seconds, yet utterly irresistible if you just let go. What makes National Treasure a genuine "national treasure"
National Treasure is not high art. It is not historically accurate (the real Freemasons were not this fun). But it is a near-perfect adventure film. It believes that history is not a dead thing in a glass case, but a living puzzle waiting to be solved. It believes that a man in a nice jacket can outrun the FBI, solve a 200-year-old riddle, and still have time to get the girl. He loves his country’s weird, unfinished corners
Beyond the charm, the film works because it treats its audience as intelligent enough to follow along. The clues are silly—glasses in a pipe organ, a pipe in a clock, a riddle about a famous silversmith—but the film presents them with a straight face. It respects the process of a puzzle box. You leave the theater feeling like you could, if you really tried, find a hidden map in your own city’s landmarks.
The film also understands that a great villain doesn't need a tragic backstory. He just needs a great line. Sean Bean as Ian Howe delivers the most honest summary of the entire enterprise: "I don't care about your family's legacy, Ben. I want the treasure." He is a man who sees a priceless historical artifact and thinks, "That belongs in a museum... so I can sell it on the black market." It’s perfect.