Buoyed by the box-office success of "The Da Vinci Code," Columbia Pictures is 
planning to turn author Dan Brown's first best-selling religious thriller, 
"Angels & Demons," into a movie, the studio said on Tuesday. 
 
 
   A Bahraini family 
 passes by an advertisement for the movie 'The Da Vinci Code' on Tuesday, 
 May 23, 2006, in a shopping mall in Manama, Bahrain. Some Christians in 
 Bahrain, which is an overwhelmingly Muslim country, are urging the 
 government to ban the movie which they reportedly say defames Jesus 
 Christ.[AP] | 
The Sony Corp <6758.T>. -owned film distributor has signed a deal with 
Oscar-winning screenwriter Akiva Goldman, who adapted "Da Vinci Code" for the 
big screen, to create a script for a sequel based on "Angels & Demons," a 
Columbia spokesman said. 
"Angels," a bestseller published in 2000, was Brown's first novel to 
introduce the character of Robert Langdon, the crime-solving Harvard professor 
of iconography and religious art played by actor Tom Hanks in the "The Da Vinci 
Code." 
A studio spokesman confirmed a report in Daily Variety that no deals have yet 
been reached for Hanks or "Da Vinci" director Ron Howard to return for the 
"Angels" project, but that both would have first crack at the new film. 
Variety also said the studio was planning to reunite the producing team of 
Brian Grazer and John Calley for the "Angels" project. 
In addition to "The Da Vinci Code," Goldman's screen credits include "Batman 
& Robin," boxing drama "Cinderella Man" and "A Beautiful Mind," for which he 
won the Academy Award for best adapted screenplay. 
Columbia acquired feature rights to "Angels" and all future novels involving 
the Langdon character, as part of its 2003 acquisition of film rights to Brown's 
"Da Vinci Code." 
Despite mainly negative reviews from critics at its world premiere at the 
Cannes film festival last week, "Da Vinci" went on to score the second-biggest 
opening tally of all time at the global box office, raking in nearly $232 
million worldwide. 
The film, like the book, teams up Langdon with a young French cryptologist 
(played in the movie by Audrey Tautou) to solve a murder mystery entwined in the 
works of Leonardo Da Vinci and a supposed alternate history of Christianity. 
A central premise of the story is that Jesus fathered a child by Mary 
Magdalene, and that a clandestine society has for centuries protected the 
identity of Christ's living descendants from agents of the Christian Church. 
In "Angels," another murder investigation leads Langdon on a quest to thwart 
a plot by an ancient group, the Illuminati, to blow up the Vatican during a 
papal conclave. 
After grossing $77.1 million domestically in its first weekend, "Da Vinci" 
generated another $8.9 million on Monday, an extremely robust weekday box-office 
figure for a film primarily aimed at an adult audience.