The drama based on Dan Brown's novel made its way to the streamer after initially being developed for NBC. By Rick Porter Television Business Editor Peacock is stopping the search for The Lost Symbol.
Promising young Harvard professor Robert Langdon finds himself pulled into a complex mystery when his former mentor, Peter Solomon, is kidnapped. Armed with knowledge of history, symbols, and dead ...
We have a feeling this won't be the last time we hear from Robert Langdon... Dan Brown’s beloved hero Robert Langdon is back to solve another dark and deadly conspiracy. 'The Lost Symbol' will ...
Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Based on Dan Brown’s international bestselling thriller The Lost Symbol, the series follows the ...
It’s been five years since audiences last saw Dan Brown’s character Robert Langdon in the 2016 feature film “Inferno” and it honestly feels like a moment in time that can’t be recreated. It’s hard to ...
National Archives, FBI's files rival "Lost Symbol." Sept. 19, 2009— -- Dan Brown's latest novel, "The Lost Symbol," is flying off the shelves -- but some of the greatest conspiracy stories can be ...
The plot of Dan Brown's "Lost Symbol" was kept secret until its release. Sept. 15, 2009— -- This time, it's not a fanciful yarn about the holy father's deep dark secrets. Instead, the ...
Six years after Brown intrigued millions of readers with "The Da Vinci Code," he has set his new novel, "The Lost Symbol," in Washington and probed the Freemasons, a fraternal order that well suits ...
Since its launch, questions about how to watch, and a few other aspects of the series’s presence on Peacock, have become some of the most popular search trends on Google. Here is everything you need ...
Steven Weintraub launched Collider in the summer of 2005. As Editor-in-chief, he has taken the site from a small bedroom operation to having millions of readers around the world. Over the years, he ...
The wait is over. “The Lost Symbol,” the follow-up to Dan Brown’s 2003 mega-seller, “The Da Vinci Code,” is here -- and you don’t have to be a Freemason to enjoy it (although it wouldn’t hurt). Like ...