The Librarian - Quest for the Spear

by Turner Home Ent

$19.98
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Average Rating: * * * * -
Sales Rank:592 (lower is better)
Price Used:$14.03
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Availability:Usually ships in 24 hours
Director:Peter Winther
Release Date:2005-08-30
Label:Turner Home Ent
UPC:053939690125
Binding:DVD
Published By:Turner Home Ent
ASIN:B0009NSCRQ
Category:DVD

Actors and Actresses

Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions

Description

To be a librarian, you must master the Dewey Decimal System, ace internet research and, if you're new librarian Flynn Carsen (Noah Wyle), save the world! Wyle (ER) heads a sterling cast in a fun, fantastical, special effects-laden adventure that soars around the world from the Metropolitan Library to the Amazon jungle to the Himalayas. Geeky Carsen lands a job as the Librarian, keeper of such top-secret Met treasures as Excalibur and Pandora's Box. Then the Serpent Brotherhood, seeking world domination, steals one of three parts of the magical Spear of Destiny from the library. Only Flynn, aided by a gorgeous bodyguard, has the knowhow to thwart their plan. But does he know how to be a hero? He will - even if he has to gouge, kick, punch, brave Mayan death traps and plunge off icy precipices every inch of the way!

DVD Features:
Additional Scenes:15 minutes of unaired bonus footage and special effects
Easter Eggs:Hidden interviews with cast
Featurette:Behind-the-scenes featurette including never-before-aired interviews with cast and crew Special effects featurette narrated by director Peter Winther
Introduction:Introduction by Noah Wyle
Photo gallery

Amazon.com

Broadcast to record ratings on the TNT cable network, this Raiders-esque adventure does not go by the book, staring with its atypical action hero and his decidedly uncool profession. Flynn Carsen (Noah Wylie from E.R.) is a thirtysomething perpetual student who still lives with his mother (Olympia Dukakis). When his exasperated professor finally ejects him into the real world, Carsen's Holmesian deductive acumen lands him a job as the librarian at the Metropolitan Library. This is not an ordinary library. It houses history's most mythic artifacts, including the Ark of the Covenant, Pandora's Box, and the sword Excalibur. The fate of the world is in Carsen's hands ("That's so sad," he observes) when the dread Serpent Brotherhood steals the library's Spear of Destiny, and Carsen must retrieve it. His reluctant, and antagonistic, partner is Nicole (Sonya Walger), who is as skilled in martial arts as Carsen is schooled in the Dewey Decimal System. Bob Newhart and Jane Curtin add welcome comic relief, with Newhart, of all people, getting into the action by film's end. The humble hero (who would rather be known as "Flynn, the rather pleasant at parties"), somewhat cheesy special effects, and corny comedy make The Librarian a fun guilty pleasure. As Carsen proclaims, "Being a librarian is actually a cool job." This looks like the beginning of a beautiful franchise. --Donald Liebenson

Customer Reviews

I have no idea why I like this movie so much - Reviewed on 2008-10-13
* * * * *

Me and my girlfriend rented this movie out of boredom (the new Indiana Jones movie was coming out so we wanted to refresh our memories of the first ones but our movie rental place didn't have them all so our friend who works there recommended this saying it was "almost" Indiana Jones). Now, normally, we're (mostly my girlfriend) are very critical about the movies we watch (Highland the source, Indiana Jones: The crystal skull both got very low thumbs down). We knew the ending before the movie even began and the special effects just weren't that special. But we watched it anyway. Then we watched it again. For some reason, this movie is amazingly addicting. The theory is that the actors relationships between one another and easy plot line make up for the not-so-special effects and the historical inaccuracies (though my girlfriend would argue with Joshua Koppe saying that most of ancient Christianity is based on Pagen theology so it makes it slightly more accurate). Newhart is phenomenal in his role (memo to self next time I want to call in the Marines) and Wyle/Flynn makes an amusing contradiction to the seriousness of surrounding characters. We also were impressed with the producers' ability to keep the flow going in between movies (there are just some sequels that should never have happened) We are hoping that a new Librarian comes out soon. Definite must see if you want to relax after work and don't want to think really hard about what your watching.
Fun for everyone - Reviewed on 2008-09-27
* * * *

This is a fun movie. It is well balanced entertainment for older kids and adults.
Great fun! - Reviewed on 2008-06-05
* * * *

Flynn Carson is the classic professional student. He's 32, lives with his mother, doesn't date, reads voraciously, and has racked up 14 years in college and 22 degrees. Then, halfway through a project to build an exact one-tenth replica of the Great Pyramid (including the long-missing golden capstone), his professor throws him out of the class with no comprehensible (to Flynn or the viewer) reason except that it's time for him to go out and experience life in the real world. Less than 24 hours later, he receives a magical-seeming letter (somewhat reminiscent of Harry Potter's acceptance to Hogwarts) that tells him he's been invited to interview for "a prestigious position at the Metropolitan Public Library." When he gets it, he learns to his amazement and delight that the Library is a lot more than just a repository for books: it's the latest incarnation of an institution whose history goes back to Alexandria, and among its treasures are wondrous and magical objects ranging from the Ark of the Covenant and Excalibur (how the sword was recovered from the mere is never explained), through a live unicorn and the Goose That Lays the Golden Eggs, to a functioning jet-pack and H. G. Wells's original Time Machine. And it has its enemies, including the ruthless Brotherhood of the Serpent, which longs to possess some of those treasures for the sake of the occult power they contain. On Flynn's first day on the job, he finds that one of them--a piece of the Spear of Destiny, the weapon that pierced Jesus' side on the cross--has been stolen by a Serpent task force. And it's up to him--geeky, clumsy Flynn--to get it back. Why? Because he's "The Librarian." What follows is a chase from the Amazon Basin to the Himalayas and back to New York, infused with elements of Indiana Jones, Harry Potter, and Young Sherlock Holmes in about equal measure, and with the Serpents ever breathing down his neck. Accompanying him as bodyguard is the gorgeous and deadly Nicole Noone, who blames herself for the supposed murder of Flynn's predecessor. And Flynn, somewhat to his own amazement, proves more than equal to the challenge thanks to his broad store of esoteric knowledge. (He discovers romance too).

Flynn is a charming character, and his improbable adventures are so well done that suspension of disbelief is very easy. The movie was originally a TNT presentation and therefore, despite several hard-charging martial-arts sequences, no scarier than a Potter or Jones movie and suitable for all but the youngest and most sensitive children. It may also inspire interest in some of the artifacts the Museum owns, and parents who buy it may find that they've inspired a Flynn of their own. I enjoyed it tremendously and definitely plan to get the sequel The Librarian - Return to King Solomon's Mines as soon as I can.
Unsophisticated But Very Entertaining. - Reviewed on 2008-05-25
* * * *

The plot, actors and production are unsophisticated, and even predictable. But there is a continuous mix of comedy and action that keeps viewer interest and makes the movie entertaining. It is also more family friendly than most contemporary movies.
I want more!!! - Reviewed on 2008-04-05
* * * * *

Loved Noah Wyle as reluctant Indiana Jones, I just hope there are more of these to come!!
great fun movie!!!!
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