Although the ongoing writers' strike means that you'll probably have to wait another year to see how crappy the new season of 24 is, it's not all bad – the strike has meant that the sequel to The Da Vinci Code has been delayed.
Apparently Angels & Demons, the chronological prequel to last year's clergy-enraging The Da Vinci Code, is the first big-name movie to be hit by the writers' strike, and its release date of Christmas 2008 has now been pushed back to May 2009 at the earliest because the script isn't good enough. But, hey, let's not get glum because we have to wait to see Ron Howard grind out another tedious, tourist-baiting film about how rubbish it is to be a Catholic – in the intervening time, not only can Ron Howard try to make Angels & Demons look vaguely interesting, but Tom Hanks has gained an extra half-year to style his hair into a mullet that's even more preposterous than the one from The Da Vinci Code.
The Da Vinci Code was one of those universally-popular books that everyone seemed to enjoy, mainly because it meant that they could go on holiday to Paris and talk loudly about all the kids that Jesus had like some sort of titting theology professor even though all they'd done was read a vaguely trashy book about it once.
But when The Da Vinci Code was made into a movie it hit a wall of protests – Catholics and the Chinese and all of Pakistan hated it, as did most movie critics and all people with a properly functioning connection between their eyes and brain. But people still went to see The Da Vinci Code, so a sequel based on Angels & Demons – Dan Brown's prequel to The Da Vinci Code – was always an inevitability. That was until the writers' strike got underway.
Thanks to the striking TV and film writers, several TV shows are already up against the wall – with late-night talkshows so far being the worst hit – but as the strike wears on, the movie industry is started to get nudged to the brink as well. And the first casualty is Angels & Demons, because screenwriter Akiva Goldman went on strike before he could make the Angels & Demons script any good. Not that it stopped him from making The Da Vinci Code very good, of course. Or Batman & Robin. Or Practical Magic. Or Lost In Space. Or I, Robot.
Anyway, all that matters is that the striking means that Angels & Demons will come out in the summer of 2009 instead of Christmas 2008, with Angels & Demons studio Columbia putting out this statement:
"With the strike nearing its third week, Columbia Pictures has postponed production of Angels & Demons. While the film-makers and the studio feel the screenplay is very strong, we do not believe it is the fully realised production draft required of this ambitious project. At this time, there is no new start date, but we are setting a release date of 15 May 2009."
We understand that you're all probably devastated that you won't get to see Angels & Demons for six months longer than you expected, so in the name of good decency, we've decided to fill you in on the plot to tide you over:
When a man is murdered (just like in The Da Vinci Code), some bloke calls upon the help of Tom Hanks. Tom Hanks is busy trying to make his hair look as much like a pelican that's been caught in an oil slick as possible, but eventually agrees to assist. Turns out it was all the work of a secret society (just like in The Da Vinci Code) that has put a bomb in the Vatican. A bunch of dark secrets about the Catholic church are uncovered (just like in The Da Vinci Code) and in the end one of the main characters turns out to be a descendant of someone you didn't expect (just like in The Da Vinci Code). To celebrate solving the mystery, Tom Hanks goes home and varnishes his hair.
That's it. Strictly speaking you should all immediately send us the £7.50 that you would have spent buying a cinema ticket to see Angels & Demons, but we'll let it slide just this once.