
It's one adventure sequence followed by another, a modern day Indiana Jones, with set pieces and jokes hitting hard and fast, paying scant attention to history or fact - apparently Queen Victoria supported the confederates in the US Civil War. Gosh. And at one point in the film it talked about a Spanish seaman being shipwrecked in Florida and being taken to a golden city in Dakota to recover - have the writers ever seen a map of America? And the golden city is full of Inca and Aztec type of images built under Mount Rushmore, a couple of thousand miles north of the most northerly point where they ever lived. Um. OK.
So, leaving aside the ever so slight historic and geographic inaccuracies, it was good fun. Whizzing from New York to Paris to London to Washington to goodness knows where else, shoot-em-up car chases in the London streets (did you know there's a Georgian mews right in front of Buckingham Palace? Obviously they've built over the Mall and Green Park without me noticing), conspiracy theories and plot twists galore and the mandatory comic character and love story.

It was good mindless fun in lots of respects but I have a slight niggling worry that some people might have left the cinema last night thinking that Custer really was killed for trying to find the lost city of gold and not as part of a war with native Americans, that Britain supported the slave trade in America despite having abolished slavery decades earlier and that the real reason for France giving the Statue of Liberty to America was to hide a clue to a secret treasure map in Liberty's torch. Or maybe that's all true and I've believed the wrong conspiracy theory all these years...?
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