![]() Piper discovers that Milton had to abandon his daughter to protect her from his former companions and that's why she was so easily manipulated by King. ![]() Milton and Piper then meet Milton's friend Webster (David Morse), who provides them a new car. Inside, Piper breaks free and fights King before jumping out of the RV and onto Milton's car. Piper is kidnapped and Milton is left for dead, but awakens and kills King's men before pursuing his RV once again. They then follow King to a church, which they enter, only to be ambushed by King and captured. Milton uses a gun labeled "The Godkiller" to shoot the Accountant out of the road. ![]() The Accountant appears with the police and chases after Milton and Piper, who are chasing after King's RV. Milton is able to kill most of them, all while still having sex with the waitress. At a shady hotel, while Milton is having sex with a waitress, and Piper is in another room, Milton is attacked by King and his men, who heard about his return. After interrogating Frank, he discovers that Milton and Piper are heading to Louisiana and tricks the police into helping him by impersonating an FBI agent. Meanwhile, a supernatural operative of Satan, The Accountant (William Fichtner), arrives on Earth with the mission to bring Milton back to Hell. Milton beats him up, knocks him out and steals the keys of his car, taking Piper along with him on a ride to Smithfalls. There, Piper sees Frank having sex with another woman and they get into a fight, with Frank beating her up. Milton's car is damaged, so he sabotages Piper's car and follows her to fix it in exchange for a ride to her home, which is on the way to Smithfalls. He heads there, but stops by a diner, where he meets Piper (Amber Heard), a waitress that is withholding sex from her boyfriend, Frank (Todd Farmer), so he will marry her. After interrogating some of King's followers, Milton discovers that the ritual will take place in Stillwater, a prison in Louisiana. So who’s right? The academic community or one renegade scientist? The answer may lie with Da Vinci himself, who once said, “The greatest deception men suffer is from their own opinions.John Milton (Nicolas Cage) is a criminal that has broken out of Hell to kill Jonah King (Billy Burke), a cult leader that tricked Milton's daughter into joining his followers in the wake of Milton's death, only to kill her and her husband and steal their daughter - Milton's granddaughter - to be sacrificed in a Satanist ritual. “But,” he added, “the idea that there is that picture as it were hiding underneath the surface is untenable.” In an interview with the BBC, Martin Kemp, a professor at Oxford, praised Cotte’s “ingenious” images for giving a sense of Da Vinci’s artistic process. Other experts are skeptical and argue artists frequently paint over images on their canvases, particularly for commissions. The Louvre, for its part, has declined comment. He also cites the presence of other figures with different physical features. Using reflective light technology, Cotte says he discovered a woman beneath Mona Lisa who is looking away instead of directly ahead and not smiling. ![]() “When I finished the reconstruction of Lisa Gherardini, I was in front of the portrait and she is totally different to Mona Lisa today. “The results shatter many myths and alter our vision of Leonardo’s masterpiece forever,” Pascal Cotte said in a statement. In the latest intrigue, a French scientist, who has studied the painting for a decade, has concluded that beneath the portrait that many believe to be Lisa Gherardini, the wife of a Florentine silk merchant, is a different woman entirely. Matt Yglesias later explains that the work’s purloiner was an Italian nationalist who was angry the painting lived in a French museum. Writing in The Atlantic in 1988, Arianna Huffington outlines the little-known subplot involving Pablo Picasso and the 1911 theft of the Da Vinci masterpiece. Songs, books, films, and pizza joints have all been named after the Mona Lisa while conspiracies eternally stir over her real identity, the meaning of her enigmatic smile, the position of her fingers, and even the absence of her eyebrows. There’s no rest for the world’s most famous painting. ![]()
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