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[[caption-width-right:350: [[ItMakesSenseInContext "I’m gonna steal the Declaration of Independence".]]]]

->'''Riley:''' So let's recap: We've broken into Buckingham Palace and the Oval Office, stolen a page from the President's super-secret book and actually kidnapped the President of the United States. What are we gonna do next, short-sheet the Pope's bed?\\
'''Ben:''' Well, you never know.
-->-- ''National Treasure 2: Book of Secrets'' trailer ([[MissingTrailerScene lines cut]] from the finished film)

A couple of Disney films from Creator/JerryBruckheimer that can be best described as ''Literature/TheDaVinciCode'' [[JustForFun/XMeetsY meets]] ''Franchise/IndianaJones'' with a side order of ''Franchise/AssassinsCreed'' (though the films do predate the games a bit by a few years).

'''''National Treasure (2004)'''''\\
Ben Gates (Creator/NicolasCage) is the latest in a long line of the "treasure hunter" Gates family. The family myth is that the Founding Fathers of the United States hid a treasure that was gathered over the course of thousands of years and protected by UsefulNotes/{{the Knights Templar}} (although sympathetic in this story). Finding a financial backer in the form of the English Ian Howe (Creator/SeanBean) and with his close friend and resident tech guy Riley Poole (Creator/JustinBartha) they find the missing clue to lead them to the treasure's location. What they realize is that the next clue resides hidden on the back of The Declaration of Independence, and Ian reveals his EvilBrit side and intentions to steal it.

Ben and Riley decide to steal the Declaration first so that Ian can't. Doing this not only makes them an FBI target, led by Director Sadusky (Creator/HarveyKeitel), but they also have to dodge Ian and his team of mercenaries. Along the way they accidentally pick up the historical records agent Abigail Chase (Creator/DianeKruger) and Ben's sarcastic father Patrick Gates (Creator/JonVoight). The rest of the story leads to a LinkedListClueMethodology that takes them across many patriotic landmarks and (of course) finding "the treasure to end all treasures."

'''''National Treasure 2: Book of Secrets (2007)'''''\\
After the Templar treasure find, Ben and his father are well-respected historians making rounds at various universities and lectures. During one of their lectures, Mitch Wilkinson (Ed Harris) shows up with a missing page from John Wilkes Booth's diary that implicates their ancestor Thomas Gates being involved with the GovernmentConspiracy to kill UsefulNotes/AbrahamLincoln. The crux of the accusation involves the idea that Thomas was actually plotting to kill Lincoln instead of eliminating a part of a map to a treasure that would have given the South the financial ability to win the Civil War.

If the treasure exists, it will prove Thomas Gates' story. [[FamilyHonor To restore his family's reputation]], Ben reunites with Riley to set out on yet another set of clues leading to yet another treasure. Of course, the rest of his team show up eventually, including Ben's mom Emily (Creator/HelenMirren). But at one point they run into a jam with the clue list, which requires a (highly illegal) meeting with the President of the United States to locate his "Book of Secrets."

A third installment had been discussed since the second film was released and remained in DevelopmentHell for almost 15 years. In May 2020, Creator/JerryBruckheimer announced that not only was the third film's script finished, but a series for Creator/DisneyPlus was also in development; the latter was officially greenlit in 2021. Currently, the third film will feature the original cast, while the series (to be directed by Creator/MiraNair) will have a separate cast centered around the new character Jess Morales. In 2022, it was revealed that Bartha would reprise his role as Poole for the series. Later that year, the full title for the series was announced as ''Series/NationalTreasureEdgeOfHistory''. It was announced to be cancelled in April 2023 after airing its first and only season. Nicholas Cage has revealed in March 2024 that the third movie will not be made, as he personally stated "there is no third National Treasure."

----
!!These films provide example of:

* AccentInterest: Ben notices Abigail's distinct Saxony German accent, but initially mistakes it for Pennsylvania Dutch.
-->'''Abigail:''' I am an American, I just wasn't born here.
* AffablyEvil: Ian is a dangerous man who is fully willing to murder Ben, but also seems to genuinely prefer to work with Ben, and is visibly distraught when he believes Ben has died in the explosion of the ''Charlotte''. Even his Mooks get in on it, being generally personable and willing to work with and talk things out with the heroes. More justified than normal in that they spent a while working together on the expedition to find the ''Charlotte'', so they're a lot less willing to immediately resort to violence than most evil gangs.
* AgentScully: Ben's father Patrick is the family skeptic, unlike his father or Ben.
* AlwaysSaveTheGirl: Subverted. When the wooden stairs in the mineshaft begin to fall apart, Ben has the choice to [[spoiler:save the Declaration of Independence or Abigail from falling to their doom. It seems he's chosen the Declaration over Abigail, but he actually TakesAThirdOption.]]
* AncientConspiracy: The questionable existence of the [[TitleDrop "national treasure"]] which has been in the possession of numerous historical rulers and individuals over the years including the Founding Fathers. Oh and the Knights Templar actually smuggled this treasure to America where they rebranded themselves as the Freemasons.
* ArsonMurderAndJaywalking: Ian Howe is arrested on the charges of "kidnapping, attempted murder, and trespassing on government property."
* ArtisticLicense: Despite what some people would like to complain about, much of the film is a ShownTheirWork regarding history (a stark contrast when compared to Creator/JerryBruckheimer's previous [[Film/PearlHarbor history-based work]]). There were a few things made up solely for the sake of a {{plot point}} to keep the story moving. A lot of the geography, on the other hand…
* ArtisticLicenseHistory:
** The second film contains a very common misconception. Ben states that Dr. Samuel Mudd, a coconspirator in Lincoln's assassination, is who the expression "His name is mud," is referring to. This is actually not correct, as the phrase was used at least 2 decades before Lincoln's assassination.
** Ben's comment about the Declaration not being in Independence Hall since it had been signed is incorrect, as it was brought back there for its hundredth anniversary. A historian like Ben ought to know that.
** In the second movie, they get the ''Resolute'' desks wrong. For one, there were at least three desks made, not two. One is in the White House, one is in the New Bedford Whaling Museum in Massachusetts, and one is part of the Royal Collection. None are used by Queen Elizabeth II. Furthermore, none of the desks were identical: the White House one is a large partner's desk, the museum one is a smaller lady's desk, and the third one is a writing table.
** UsefulNotes/GeorgeWashington didn't have "campaign buttons", because he didn't publicly campaign either of the times he ran for President; he ran unopposed in both elections, and was unanimously elected by the Electoral College both times.[[note]]Since the United States didn't have political parties during most of Washington's tenure as President, he had no need to campaign against a nominee from an opposing party--and almost nobody had any serious desire to run against the hero of [[UsefulNotes/TheAmericanRevolution the War of Independence]]. Even if Washington did have serious opposition, the Electoral College voted independently from the people at the time, so popular support was less of a factor in Presidential elections. The office of Vice President was the position that proved to be seriously competitive in the Presidential elections of 1788 and 1792, since Vice Presidents were elected separately from the President in the late 1700s.[[/note]] The buttons framed in Abigail's office in the first movie are actually "inauguration buttons" made to celebrate his two inaugurations.
* AutobotsRockOut: In the first film, rock music is played when Ian and his minions are being bad.
* BadGuysDoTheDirtyWork: The '''entire plot''' of the first movie revolves around this as a plot device. Ian turns on Ben and Riley when Ben refuses to allow Ian to steal the Declaration of Independence. Then ''Ben and Riley'' end up stealing it to 'keep it safe' and out of Ian's hands... which also gives them the moral justification they need to steal the very document they need and can use to find the Templar Treasure as a side bonus. In other words, what this all comes down to in the end is that Ben and Riley couldn't have ever even ''gotten close'' to finding the treasure had Ian ''not'' betrayed Ben for opposing the very action he and Riley are forced to do later in the movie.
* BaitAndSwitch: In the first film, a shot of one of Ian's men on the ''USS Intrepid'' looks like he's about to shoot Ben. Instead, he draws a device to generate interference so Shaw can give instructions to Ben without the FBI hearing them.
* BaldOfEvil: Shaw is bald and Ian's main henchman.
* BatDeduction:
** Ben does a bit of this when following clues. Made painfully obvious by the fact that he's ''never'' wrong. [[JustifiedTrope He does, however, have the benefit of generations of research into the very mysteries he's trying to solve.]] It happens enough that he was able to falsify a new clue to get Ian off their back and it was no more or less valid than anything they had done previously. He gets called out on it by Abigail who got tired of him considering himself right.
--->'''Ben:''' If I'm right after I assume I'm right, then I'm correct.\\
'''Abigail:''' When you get to a conclusion without asking, and you happen to be right, you got lucky.\\
'''Ben:''' I get lucky a lot.
** The first movie has Riley quite gleeful when he realizes that he has knowledge and a deduction about the current clue that Ben didn't think of.
* BeethovenWasAnAlienSpy: The past and present presidents of America, especially the Founding Fathers, were members of the Freemasons and guarded a secret treasure that contained valuable artifacts that have been fought over by numerous aristocrats and other individuals for centuries.
* BetaCouple: Ben's divorced parents, Patrick and Emily, in ''Book of Secrets''. They turn out to have split up for similar reasons to Ben and Abigail - once the adventure was over, they had a hard time getting along. [[spoiler:[[DivorceIsTemporary It doesn't last.]]]]
* BigBrotherMentor: Ben tends to have sprinklings of this trope along with some BigBrotherInstinct towards Riley.
* BigWhat: Sadusdky pulls one when he hears of The President's absence.
-->'''Sadusky:''' ... The President's been WHAT?"
* BirdsOfAFeather: Ben and Abigail both have a passion for history.
* BlackTieInfiltration:
** In the first film, Ben Gates sneaks into the National Archives during a gala event to steal the Declaration of Independence which is believed to contain a treasure map to a lost Templar Treasure. Combined with a JanitorImpersonationInfiltration in this case: Ben dresses up as a custodian to get in the service entrance, with a tuxedo on under his coveralls.
** In ''Book of Secrets'', Ben gatecrashes the President's birthday party at Mount Vernon so he can get him alone in a secret area of the estate and convince him to let Ben see the President's Book.
-->'''Ben:''' Maybe one day, I'll wear this to a party I'm actually invited to.
* BlatantLies: The President when he said, "What book?" to Riley.
* BluntYes: Early in the second film, Mitch Wilkinson says that Patrick is calling him a liar; Patrick responds "Yes. I am."
* TheBookCipher: Referred to by its proper name, the Ottendorf cipher. The various numbers hidden on the back of the Declaration of Independence; these correspond not to a book per se, but to the 'Silence Dogood' letters Ben's father donated to a museum.
* BookSafe: Patrick keeps a pair of $100 bills in a copy of ''Common Sense''; Ben and Abigail use the money to buy new clothes to disguise themselves.
* BorrowedBiometricBypass: On their way to steal the Declaration of Independence, Ian and Ben steal the fingerprint access of others. Ben uses Abigail's thumbprint lifted from a glass and placed on a rubber thumb glove. Ian just knocks out a guard and holds his thumb to the scanner.
* TheBrute: Victor Shippen for Ian. He's big, quiet, and typically called on to do the heavy lifting, such as smashing a grave open with a hammer.
* CallingShotgun: Reversed in the second film when Riley calls the driver's seat when the trio are escaping from Buckingham Palace, only to be confronted ''with'' the shotgun seat since they're in Great Britain and the steering wheel is on the right side of the car.
* CameraSpoofing: Riley does this when Ben steals the Declaration of Independence.
* CannotTellALie: Ben, who manages to come up with a pseudonym to Abigail but noticeably falls apart after.
-->"[[LampshadeHanging We play poker together, Ian, you know I can't bluff...]]"
* CantKillYouStillNeedYou: Invoked. In the first film, Patrick Gates knows that the villains will only keep them alive so long as they need help finding the treasure, and so encourages Ben to maintain that status quo.
* CassandraTruth: Lampshaded in the scene where Ben and Riley go to Abigail's office to try and warn them about Ian's plan to steal the Declaration--not only does she not believe them (and in fact mocks them) when they explain why Ian wants it, but Riley notes that telling the truth also got all the other government agencies they went to for help to turn them away too.
* ChainPain: Ian's gang throw a chain into a rotating fan to stop it, allowing them to pass through.
* ChekhovsBoomerang:
** The meerschaum pipe. Also, [[ArcWords "the secret lies with Charlotte."]]
** On a smaller scale, the ultraviolet ink on the campaign button.
* ChekhovsHobby: A surprising subtle one in the first film. When the FBI rattle off Ben's history they mention he was in the Navy ROTC and a certified Navy Diver. Later when getting a change of clothes and looking up the clue to the Liberty Bell, Ben mentions his watch was a rather expensive diving watch. It is all suggested so quickly it doesn't come across as "In Your Face" but only adds validity to the moment when Ben escapes the FBI. TruthInTelevision, as large number of treasure hunters are certified divers because a great deal of treasure hunting involves shipwrecks.
* ChekhovMIA: Ben's mother was briefly mentioned in the first movie, and the dialogue implied (though did not actually state) she had passed away. She appears as an actual character in the second film. The dialogue could be interpreted as having enough of treasure hunting rather than dying, however.
-->'''Patrick Gates:''' At least I had your mother, for however brief a time! At least I had you! What do you have? Him? ''(referring to Riley, who is shown with a piece of pizza in his mouth at that moment)''
* ChewingTheScenery: In the sequel, Ben runs into Abigail in Buckingham Palace, almost derailing the plan. To get it back on track, he starts making a scene as only Nicolas Cage can.
* ClueOfFewWords: The first clue that sets the film into motion which Bill Gates sought out to find. "Charlotte. The secret lies with Charlotte." A clue which would eventually lead to the quest to obtain the Declaration of Independence.
* CobwebJungle: The cast encounters many of these in the first movie as they get close to finding the treasure, since no one has been there before them for hundreds of years.
* CollapsingLair: Deconstructed in the sequel, [[spoiler:the ancient buried treasure is discovered just in time for massive amounts of water to flood in, forcing the heroes to run for it. It seems like it will be a classic 'discover the treasure only for it to then be lost to the world forever' ending...and then cut to one of the main characters cataloging items in the now-drained treasure chamber. Because unlike a lot of hidden treasures, which are in places like forgotten temples in the middle of nowhere, THIS treasure is buried right in the middle of the United States, under a national landmark, and it's the 21st Century. Of COURSE they can just re-excavate it!]]
* TheComplianceGame: When fugitive Ben Gates can't get into the Smithsonian see the Silence Dogood letters, he recruits a couple of young boys to go in and out, searching for the exact letter of the alphabet he needs from particular words in particular rows so that he can crack a code. He pays them for each sequence they bring him back, so they're excited to do it for him.
* ContrivedCoincidence: In the 2nd film, what are the odds the President would be having a birthday party, giving Ben an opportune moment to speak to him about The President's Book?
** Depending on whether the party was held on his birthday or merely at some point within a week of his birthday, 1/365 or 1/52, or in layman's terms [[RealityIsUnrealistic slightly worse than the odds of getting a straight or three-of-a-kind respectively in poker]].
* CoolShades: Benjamin Franklin's multi-colored-lensed ocular device from the first movie. Come on, you gotta admit they look cool.
* CurrencyConspiracy: To figure out when the shadow of Independence Hall will reveal the next clue to find the Templar Treasure, Ben Gates magnifies the painting of Independence Hall on the back of a $100 bill to read the time on the clock tower. The fact that they do find the next clue at the time depicted (adjusted for Daylight Savings Time) lends further proof that the secret treasure might be real.
* DeadlyRotaryFan: Ian's crew encounters a large fan blocking a passageway through the National Archives, but get around it by throwing a chain and jamming the works.
* DeadpanSnarker: Riley Poole is this in just about every single one of his lines.
%%** WorldOfSnark:
* DisneyVillainDeath: Shaw, when the wooden stairway in the mineshaft crumbles under his weight. It ''is'' a Disney movie, after all.
* DisposableFiance: Connor, the White House guy in the {{sequel}}.
* DistractedByTheSexy: In the sequel, [[DoggedNiceGuy Riley Poole]] is holding a bag full of indiscriminate ([[RuleOfFunny but obviously breakable]]) objects when a pretty girl walks by and asks for his autograph. He's so excited that he's finally recognized as himself (rather than as TheLancer to [[TheHero Ben]]), and a girl is actually paying attention to him, that he drops the bag immediately.
* TheDragon: Shaw to Ian in the first film.
* DramaticDrop: Riley, on being asked for an autograph by a pretty girl, at the end of the second film. Made even better after two movies of essentially being the ButtMonkey of the good guys' crew and getting very little respect, he finally has a BrainyBrunette focused on him.
* DramaticIrony:
** Ben having to pay $35 for...the real Declaration, thanks to ducking into the souvenir shop to avoid Abigail and the clerk spotting it and thinking he was trying to steal one of the reproductions.
** When the time comes to read the map on the back of the Declaration with the spectacles, it takes place in the Signing Room at Independence Hall. Lampshaded by Ben himself, with Abigail grinning at the awesomeness of the moment and Riley being his usual DeadpanSnarker self.
* DrivesLikeCrazy: Invoked in the sequel; the villains are chasing after Ben for a piece of wood with a clue on it. Ben runs a red light, holds the wood up to the traffic camera so that it gets a picture of it, and has Riley hack the police database so that he can pull the picture up. Ben then fakes giving the wood to the bad guys before chucking it into the Thames to delay them.
* DurableDeathtrap: Played straight in the second film, but averted in the first. [[spoiler:The mineshaft leading down to the treasure room is a deathtrap specifically because the wooden stairway and elevators the Freemasons built to get down safely have rotted away after two hundred years.]]
* DyingClue:
** The entire Gates family treasure hunt started like this, when Charles Carroll of Carrollton was dying from old age. When he was unable to reach President Jackson, he told his stableboy, Thomas Gates, of the treasure, including "The secret lies with Charlotte", the vessel where the pipe was found.
** At the end of the prologue for the second film, Thomas Gates tells his son Charles "The debt that all men pay" while dying from gunshot wounds inflicted by Michael O'Laughlin. This turns out to be the answer cypher that leads Ben and Riley to a clue in Paris.
* EagleEyeDetection: A necessary skill to find the various clues and advance the plot.
* EnemyMine:
** In the first movie, after Ian gets away with the Declaration but Ben (with the spectacles) gets caught by the FBI, Abigail realizes they have no choice...so she and Riley go to Ian for help in rescuing Ben in return for the treasure. Thanks to both their being taken hostage and Ben's dad, they all end up having to work together to try and reach the treasure room.
** In the second movie, this is enforced by the villain himself after he takes Mrs. Gates hostage--Ben has the second half of the coded message thanks to the Book of Secrets, but the villain has the last extra clues needed to find the hiding place thanks to a letter his ancestor received from Queen Victoria. Thus they have to work together both to spare Mrs. Gates' life and have all the needed clues.
* EstablishingCharacterMoment: When Ben, Riley, Abigail, and Ben's dad are looking for Ben's mom's office at the university (she's a professor), they aren't sure whether they've found it, until one of her frustrated students angrily storms out of the office shouting "I hate her!" Ben's dad looks at the others and says "We're in the right place."
%%* EurekaMoment: Lots of them.
* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: Ian is quite visibly devastated at the [[spoiler:death of Shaw - unusual given that Shaw's a {{Mook|s}}.]]
-->'''Ian:''' [[spoiler:Can you imagine that any one of your lives is worth more to me than Shaw's? We go on.]]
* EvilBrit: Ian Howe, the villain of the first movie, has a British accent, as do most of his {{Mooks}}.
* ExactWords: How Ben convinces Agent Sadusky not to take him in at the end of the film.
-->'''Sadusky:''' [[MeaningfulEcho Someone's got to go to prison, Ben.]]\\
'''Ben:''' Well, if you've got a helicopter, I think I can help with that.\\
''[GilliganCut to Ian working on the fake clue Patrick had given to him, unaware that the FBI will soon descend upon him]''
* ExpospeakGag: Ben uses very technical, roundabout language when describing to Abigail why he wants to examine the Declaration, presumably hoping to confuse her enough that she'll go along with it (or perhaps he's just trying to make it sound less dumb). It doesn't work even a little bit, and Riley mentions that they got similar reactions with the FBI and Homeland Security.
-->'''Abigail:''' What do you think you're gonna find?\\
'''Ben:''' We believe that there's an…encryption on the back.\\
'''Abigail:''' An encryption, like a code?\\
'''Ben:''' Yes, ma'am.\\
'''Abigail:''' Of what?\\
'''Ben:''' A…cartograph.\\
'''Abigail:''' A map?\\
'''Ben:''' Yes, ma'am.\\
'''Abigail:''' A map of what?\\
'''Ben:''' The location of… ''[clears throat]'' of hidden items, of historic and… intrinsic value.\\
'''Abigail:''' A…treasure map?
* EyeOfProvidence: The Eye of Providence over an unfinished pyramid, [[CurrencyConspiracy as depicted on the United States $1 dollar bill]], is used to represent the Freemasons who founded the US and secretly hid an ancient treasure trove. In the prologue, Ben's grandfather tells their origins dating back to ancient Egypt, and his face fades from view except for one eye over a pyramid missing its upper point, visually evoking the Eye of Providence.
* FakinMacGuffin: Ben is able to slip the baddies a souvenir Declaration of Independence instead of the real thing.
* FamilyHonor: While this appears to some degree in the first movie (finding the Freemason treasure will prove that the Gates family was right and weren't just crazy treasure-hunting loons), it is much more directly a motivation in the sequel, where finding [[spoiler:the City of Gold]] will prove why Gates' ancestor had his name on a page in the Booth diary (because the conspiracy appealed to him to crack the code for them) and thus exonerate the family of being connected with Lincoln's assassination.
* FamilyThemeNaming: The Gates family - Benjamin Franklin, Patrick (Henry) and Thomas (Jefferson) Gates are all named after American founding fathers. The credits reveal that Grandpa's real name is John Adams Gates.
* {{Fingore}}: [[CouldntFindAPen Due to the absence of ink]], Ben stabs his thumb with a knife to make a substance to read the stem engravings on the pipe in the first film. Riley is noticeably squicked out.
* FlatWhat:
** Ben responds with this when his dad tells him he doesn't have the Silence Dogood letters.
** Also used by Riley when Ben tells him he is going to steal the DOI and again in the sequel when Connor refers to him as "Ben's assistant."
* FoolsMap: Patrick is convinced the Templar treasure is just a story intended to keep the British going in circles looking for it.
* ForeignCussWord: When Ben and Abigail are fighting over the Declaration post-heist. ([[BrickJoke It's previously established that she was born in Saxony.]])
-->'''Abigail:''' ''[[GratuitousGerman Verdammt!]]'' Give me that!\\
'''Ben:''' You know something? You're shouting again.\\
'''Riley:''' I'm pretty sure she was swearing, too.\\
'''Ben:''' Well, we probably deserve that.
* ForensicAccounting: Ben is identified by the FBI in the first film because a clerk at the National Archive gift store thought he was trying to shoplift a reproduction of the Declaration rather than, you know, steal the ''real'' one. He didn't have enough cash on him to buy it so he used his credit card, which the FBI can track.
* {{Frameup}}: In the sequel, the BigBad deliberately makes it look like Gates' ancestor was involved in killing President Lincoln (and thus ruining the FamilyHonor)...all to force Ben to help him find the treasure as part of [[ClearMyName clearing his name]]. [[spoiler:Turns out that the evidence was just a forgery, which he anticipated would will Ben on to finding Cibola to restore his family honor.]]
* FrenchJerk: Subverted, for a change, in the second film, as two French police officers help translate a clue for Ben and Riley.
* FriendOrIdolDecision: Ben has to save either Abigail or the Declaration of Independence - he [[TakeAThirdOption Takes A Third Option]] and saves them both. It is subverted in that Ben makes it clear that the Declaration was his first priority, and Abigail ''supports'' this, saying she would have done the same thing had the situation been reversed. Which ''confuses Ben''.
-->'''Riley:''' [[DeadpanSnarker I would have dropped you both. Freaks.]]
* FugitiveArc: Given the litany of minor crimes Ben commits over the course of both movies, this catches up with him when the law gets involved.
* FunnyBackgroundEvent: In the sequel when Riley is discussing the Book of Secrets in front of the White House, the men on top of the White House in the background are real Secret Service snipers keeping eyes on the film crew.
* GambitPileup: Such gambits are pulled by Ben, Ian, and even the FBI ("Someone's gotta go to prison, Ben.") in the course of the first film. The last gambit had Ben [[TakeAThirdOption turning Ian and his Mooks in]] to cover his own ass.
* GenreBlind: Apparently none of our heroes have ever seen an Indiana Jones movie.
* GentlemanAndAScholar: Benjamin Gates.
* GirlOfTheWeek: At first seemingly played straight in the sequel, with an off-screen breakup with Gates and Chase, forcing Ben to break into his own Mansion-like house. Though she joins the other two about a half hour in for the rest of the film.
* GreaterScopeParagon: The American Founding Fathers and the Freemasons, the ones who realized that the eponymous treasure had to be kept out of the hands of the British or they'd use it against the Revolutionaries, and so hid it away in a place that only someone who found and understood the clues they left behind would be able to find it.
* GuileHero: Ben Gates is one of these. He gets through most of the first film by cleverness, only having to actually hit a {{mook|s}} once in the entire movie and even though he gets shot at several times, he [[spoiler:never holds a gun or other weapon and he lets the cops take care of Ian Howe instead of beating him up and killing or turning him over to them like an action hero would]].
** This in contrast to Ian from the first film, who's more direct and ruthless, and one of the main reasons for Ben stealing the Declaration of Independence before he does is that he expects that he'll destroy it trying to get the map off of it. This contrast is best shown when they both go after the document at the same time, with Gates infiltrating as a guest at a gala going on at the same time, and Ian and a squad of goons breaking into the building ''VideoGame/SplinterCell''-style, including tasering a guard for his fingerprints.
* HandInTheHole: Spoofed by Gates in the sequel. He sticks his hand in a hole to uncover a treasure, and then starts screaming bloody murder. Nothing happened, it was just a lever.
* HeldGaze: The first variant occurs twice between Ben and Abigail. First, when they are arguing about her coming along with them to keep the Declaration safe: they gaze deeply into each other's eyes and Ben gives in to Abigail, with the Jefferson Memorial in the background. The second time it happens is when the adventurers are down in the tunnel beneath Trinity Church; Ben grabs Abigail, and they look deeply into each other's eyes soulfully before they [[BigDamnKiss kiss.]] Which is then hilariously {{lampshade|hanging}}d by Powell:
-->'''Powell:''' Why does that never happen to me?
** You can almost hear the viewer's response in your head. "BECAUSE YOU'RE A BAD GUY!"
* HeistClash: Ben and Riley steal the Declaration of Independence on the same night Ian and his crew make their own attempt.
* TheHero: Ben Gates. He wants to find the treasure and will do what he has to, but it's because of what we could learn about world history in the process rather than the financial value.
* HeroInsurance: Addressed and ultimately avoided in both films. In the first, [[spoiler:Ian was used as a scapegoat for the Declaration being stolen, mostly due to being an actual criminals in their general actions, including fighting against the FBI. The public doesn't know Ben and family were involved with that part. In the second, the President covered for Ben's actions. Absolutely massive bribes of money and history also helped.]]
* HeterosexualLifePartners: Ben and Riley. It's unclear how they met, but they've clearly known each other for a long time, completely trust each other, and are best friends.
* HeyCatch: Done with a flare in a room filled with gunpowder to escape being shot.
* HollywoodGeography: The National Archives does not have a ballroom or any rooms with the size of where they had that reception. The rear entrance where the two are shown are exiting, in fact, has very small rooms where researchers use microfilms and access historic documents. That's not even getting to how Washington D.C. even at night would never have such a lull in traffic along Constitution or Pennsylvania Avenues where a car chase would take place
* HollywoodHistory: There were Founding Fathers, and several were part of an organization known as the Freemasons, which some claim was related tangentially to the Knights Templar. But part of the movie's premise is that there was a SecretHistory of the Freemasons and the Knight Templar, so it can also be labeled under ArtisticLicense.
* HollywoodSilencer: All of Ian's men equip their handguns with suppressors that make the stereotypical "thwip".
* HotLibrarian: Abigail, given she works at the National Archives.
* HyperAwareness: Ian is able to see Ben, Riley, and Abigail while they're ascending a dark belltower, while he's across the street.
* IHaveYourWife:
** Or rather your girlfriend and funny sidekick. Plus your dad.
** The sequel plays it more straight...sort of. Wilkinson holds Gates Sr.'s ''ex''-wife hostage.
* ImperialStormtrooperMarksmanshipAcademy: Every single one of Ian's Mooks. Three shootouts, no casualties. {{Justified|Trope}} in the first two cases: in one of them, they couldn't shoot without the risk of a gunpowder-hauling ship blowing up, and in the second, the shooter was on target. Ben just blocked the bullets with the Declaration's bulletproof glass shield. The third case took place in a cemetery, and although Ben had cover for the first part of it, at one point one of the mooks outflanks him and misses with several shots from twenty meters or less ([[RealityIsUnrealistic but granted, this is pushing the accurate range of the average pistol shot]]).
* ImpossibleMission: Some of the loftiest ever devised, from stealing the Declaration Of Independence to kidnapping the President of the United States.
* ImprovisedArmor: Ben uses the Declaration of Independence as a shield when he's being shot at (or rather, the case fitted with bulletproof glass the Declaration was being kept in).
* ImprovisedWeapon: When Gates has to get up close with one of Ian's men, he first hits the guy with the Declaration's case before following it up with a punch.
* IndyPloy: While Ben usually plans things out, he's not above making it up as he goes if things go off the rails.
* InvisibleWriting: A secret message was written on the Declaration of Independence with invisible ink that was revealed with heat. Further clues were embedded in the Declaration of Independence, visible only through a pair of glasses with switchable chromatic filters.
* {{Jerkass}}: Shaw isn't nice to anyone, as shown when he's asked by a vendor (who is hiding Abigail, thinking Shaw is Abigail's ex-husband) if he wants something. Shaw replies "Shut up." The vendor's remark to Abigail: "I see why you left him."
* KarmaHoudini: Ben steals the Declaration of Independence and kidnaps the President of the United States of America, both of which would net someone a lengthy prison sentence, life in the latter's case, but Ben is never tried or even formally accused of either. As stated above, [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney massive donations of cash and cultural artifacts]] thought lost for eternity help immensely, though Ben acts significantly humbler than one would expect of someone using this method to get out of trouble would since he's TheHero, and a GuileHero at that.
** Despite his appearance to be nothing more than the figurative dog set on Ben's scent throughout the first movie, Sadusky, being a ReasonableAuthorityFigure and a supreme DeadpanSnarker, is willing to discuss Ben's terms of surrender at the end[[spoiler:, revealing that he's a Mason himself]].
* KeepTheReward: [[spoiler:Double subverted. It's mentioned they were offered 10% of the worth of the treasure, but they turned it down. Then it's revealed they accepted 1% of ten billion dollars, which is 100 million. Riley himself got half of 1%, which is 50 million. Enough to buy a Ferrari.]]
* KissOfDistraction: In the second movie, Abigail and Ben have to search the US President's antique Resolute desk. Abigail gets them into the Oval Office via a White House staff member she's dating, then pretends to lose an earring which they both crawl about on the floor trying to find, while Gates secretly checks out the desk. The staff member 'finds' the earring, and when Abigail sees Ben still needs more time, she begins to snog him passionately to show her 'gratitude', [[WomanScorned partly to piss off Ben]].
* KnownOnlyByTheirNickname: It's easy to miss, but when Ben is chained up with the FBI (just before Ian calls them up), an agent can be heard saying, "Looks like Ian Howe is a false identity". Ian's true name never gets mentioned at any point in the film.
* LandmarkingTheHiddenBase: Invoked for [[spoiler:Mount Rushmore]] in the sequel. It is said from a document that it was deliberately made to hide a clue.
* LandmarkOfLore: Landmarks typically serve as backdrop for some of the set pieces. In the first film, Ben explains his plan to burgle the National Archives in the Library of Congress and the ocular device is recovered from Independence Hall. For the second film, Ben, Riley and Abigail find a clue from a desk in Buckingham Palace, Ben kidnaps the President at Mount Vernon, the President’s secret book is stored at the Library of Congress, and the entire third act plays out inside Mount Rushmore.
* LemmingCops: The car chasing them out of the library of Congress in NT 2 get stuck on a barrier.
* LetsSplitUpGang: When Ben realizes that Ian’s men are waiting for him and his friends outside Independence Hall, he decides to "separate the lock from the key" so to speak, with him taking the ocular device and Riley and Abigail taking the Declaration, and going in opposite directions from Independence Hall, with the intention of making Ian’s men split up as well. It works... for awhile.
* LinkedListClueMethodology: Lampshaded/deconstructed in the original. Ben's Dad points out that there are a ''lot'' of clues, and ''everyone'' who's tried to follow them ended up wasting their life.
* LivingOutAChildhoodDream: Ben Gates wanted to be a treasure hunter from the time he was first introduced to the legend of the Knights Templar treasure in his AMinorKidroduction. This is reflected in his adult education (American History, archaeology, cryptology, mechanical engineering, and scuba diving), and lampshaded by the FBI. While people around him question his idealism, and his father in particular disapproves of his choices, it ''does'' end up working out for him.
-->'''Sadusky:''' What in the world did this guy want to be when he grew up?
* LoadBearingHero: More like [[spoiler:AntiVillain, but this applies to Mitch Wilkinson holding open the drainage door at Cibola]]. Although also played straight for a time, since Ben was assisting.
* AMacguffinFullOfMoney: The treasure. Downplayed as it includes things like scrolls from the Library of Alexandria, which are worth more than just money but everyone still looks for it because it's worth a lot of money.
* MacGuffinTitle: Both movies.
* MakingASpectacleOfYourself: (See CoolShades above) Again, Benjamin Franklin's Ocular Device glasses, not only are they colonial-style, but there are four other lenses, three colored, attached to the frame, all of which can be adjusted to [[spoiler:read the hidden messages on the back of the United States' Declaration of Independence.]]
* MatchCut: The second film features a dissolve between the dome of St. Paul's Cathedral in London and the Capitol Dome in Washington D.C.
* AMatchMadeInStockholm: Ben and Abigail.
* MeaningfulName:
** In the first film, the characters' names are nods to [[UsefulNotes/TheAmericanRevolution Revolutionary War]] figures.
** [[NamedAfterSomebodyFamous All the Gates men in the series are named after them]]. Thomas Gates (middle name unknown, could be any of the five Thomases that signed the Declaration of Independence), Charles Carroll Gates, John Adams Gates, Patrick Henry Gates, and Benjamin Franklin Gates. All of which are {{justified|Trope}} given the family's links and history.
** Abigail Chase, likely named after America's most famous Founding Mother, Abigail Adams, combined with Samuel Chase, who was a signer of the Declaration of Independence.
** BigBad Ian Howe shares his last name with the British general, Sir William Howe who was Commander-in-Chief of British land forces during the American Revolution.
* MetaGuy: Riley
* MeetingTheParentsSequel: Ben's father was already significant to the plot of the first film, but in the sequel, his mother joins the cast too. Since his parents are divorced, this is a recipe for trouble.
* AMinorKidroduction: The first film opens with Ben searching his grandfather's attic for books on the treasure. When his grandfather finds him, he decides to tell Ben the story of the treasure the family has been searching for more than 100 years.
* MissionControl: Riley acts as this for Ben while he steals the Declaration of Independence.
* MobstacleCourse: Late in the chase through Philadelphia in the first film, Riley gets trapped by a crowd, separating him from Abigail. This leaves him unable to help her when she drops the Declaration after colliding with a biker and Ian is able to take it.
* MortonsFork: Sadusky tells Ben he can either go to prison, or help get the Declaration back, and ''then'' go to prison. "Someone's got to go to prison, Ben."
* MyRuleFuIsStrongerThanYours: To [[spoiler:sneak Ben onto Mount Vernon]] Patrick fishes in the Virginian waters. When approached by Secret Service on a boat, they tell him to leave. Patrick tells them that the state constitution allows him to fish in any public water area. The agent tells him he has the right to detain Patrick for 48 hours without cause. Patrick nervously chuckles and leaves.
* MythPrologue: The movie begins with young Ben Gates searching his grandfather's attic for something. His grandfather catches him, but then decides he's old enough to know the truth of their family's secret, a secret entrusted to their ancestor by Charles Carrol, the last signer of the Declaration of Independence. A clue to a treasure from antiquity that had been built up and fought over by kings, pharoahs and emperors, growing larger each time, was rediscovered by knights of the First Crusade, who formed the Knights Templar and the Freemasons. They then spirited the treasure away to the Americas where it was hidden by the American Founding Fathers, with a series of clues and maps to reveal its location, but which have all been lost except the one clue that the Gates family possesses: "The secret lies with Charlotte".
* NeverTrustATrailer: [[spoiler:The Book of Secrets, despite containing [[GovernmentConspiracy all the nation's best-kept secrets]], is actually not the major goal of the second movie. It's really just a small piece of a [[CityOfGold bigger puzzle]].]]
* NoodleIncident: After being told the titular Book of Secrets exists by no less than the President himself, Ben is asked to look at Page 47 for something not specified. The audience is never shown what exactly the page holds, but Ben tells him at the end that its contents are "life-altering."
* NotEvenBotheringWithTheAccent: {{Justified|Trope}} with Abigail, who is said to have a distinct Saxony German accent (which Ben initially mistakes for Pennsylvania Dutch, i.e. American of German descent): "I ''am'' an American, I just wasn't born here." Given her Anglophone name, it's possible she was in fact born to US parents based in Germany, but it's mainly there to let Creator/DianeKruger use her native accent.
* NotSoRemote: Ben and Riley are left for dead in the Arctic by Ian, seemingly in the middle of nowhere. But once they're clear of the wreckage, Ben reveals that there's actually an Inuit village about ten miles away where they can catch a ride with a bush pilot.
* NuclearCandle: Generally averted. In the first film in particular, when they [[spoiler:find the Templar's treasure]], the light from their torches only illuminates the immediate area; it takes the fire burning all of the gunpowder supply line, spread across the entire cavern, to reveal the entire place.
* OhCrap: Ian's henchman Victor does one of these when he realizes he's about to drive through a construction site, at speed.
-->'''Victor:''' ''Oh no.''
* OurPresidentsAreDifferent: Bruce Greenwood as the President. More specifically, Greenwood is a President Personable, and is depicted as being a genuinely noble person who is sympathetic to Gates's quest.
* ThePasswordIsAlwaysSwordfish: Abigail's password is "VALLEYFORGE", which Ben is able to guess after Riley's anagram program produces a close approximation (the program failed to take into account multiple letter uses).
* PeekABooCorpse: Riley stumbles across one of the frozen corpses of the ''Charlotte'''s crew still in his hammock. There's also Mr. Parkington Lane falling out of his coffin, but the circumstances there make his appearance to be expected.
* ThePlan: This is how Ben operates. He makes a plan and follows through it.
* PlayingDrunk: In the second film, Ben pretends to be drunk so he can sneak into Buckingham Palace security and into the nearby dumbwaiter to the Queen's study.
* PlotTriggeringBook: The film starts when a young Ben Gates comes across an old tome in his grandfather's attic. After his grandpa discovers him with the book, he tells him the family lore about the treasure that was hidden somewhere in the Thirteen Colonies by the Freemasons among the Founding Fathers during the UsefulNotes/AmericanRevolution, setting up the rest of the story.
%%* PluckyComicRelief: Riley Poole.
* PopStarComposer: Music/TrevorRabin of Music/{{Yes}} did the soundtrack for both movies.
* PragmaticVillainy: Unusual example of this trope applied to ''HeroicSacrifice''. [[spoiler:Mitch has a choice of sacrificing himself to save Ben or letting them both die. Knowing he's screwed either way he lets Ben live so he'd be remembered as the one who found Cibola, rather than letting him die and gaining nothing.]]
%%* RedemptionEqualsDeath: [[spoiler:Mitch Wilkinson]]
* RiseFromYourGrave: PlayedForLaughs with when [[spoiler:Ben bursts out of a Freemason crypt after finding the treasure]], freaking out a guy examining the [[spoiler:the skeleton and disintegrating wood coffin]] that they left when they entered.
-->'''Ben:''' Hi. Do you have a cell phone?
%%* RuleOfFun
* RuleOfSymbolism: When Ben's grandfather tells him the story of the Templar treasure, the fadeout causes his eye to appear over the top of a broken-off pyramid, thus creating the Freemasons' All-Seeing Eye.
* SassyBlackWoman: One helps Abigail hiding behind a meat counter when she is being chased by Ian's goons.
-->'''Meat Counter Lady:''' [[DeadpanSnarker If you're not a steak, you don't belong here.]]\\
'''Abigail:''' I'm just trying to hide from my ex-husband....\\
'''Meat Counter Lady:''' Who, [[BaldOfEvil baldy]]?\\
'''Abigail:''' *peaks over and sees [[TheDragon Shaw]]* ... Yeah.\\
'''Meat Counter Lady:''' *leans back slowly with disgust* Honey, you can stay as loooong as you like.
** And when he shows up at the counter:
--->'''Meat Counter Lady:''' ''[to Shaw]'' Do you want something?\\
'''Shaw:''' Shut up.\\
'''Meat Counter Lady:''' ''[to Abigail]]'' I see why you left him.
* ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney: Ian Howe, whom Ben refers to as having "nearly unlimited resources". To some degree acknowledged by Ben when he [[spoiler:finds the treasure.]]
* SecretKeeper: Variation. When Ben first tells the story of the Templar treasure to Sadusky, he seems to dismiss it as a fable and myth just like all the other government officials, but later after the treasure has been found Sadusky reiterates the Freemasons' motivations in hiding the treasure and stresses how it is too great for any one man to decide its dispensation...and right as he's saying this, Ben notices he's wearing a Mason ring. While Sadusky clearly didn't know where the treasure was, his membership plus his words suggest that he actually ''did'' believe the treasure was real, and was acting as a protector of sorts until Ben had proven himself worthy--which he does not just by finding the treasure but by insisting it be given back to the people by dividing it between various reputable museums.
* SequelHook:
** The original ending of the first film was changed because it was actually mistaken for a sequel hook, when it was meant to just be a funny ending. The Alternate ending can be still viewed at the extras of the DVD release, however.
** The second film has a more traditional one in the form of "Page 47."
** [[DevelopmentHell Back when there were plans for a 3rd film]], the writers stated they wanted the next sequel to be about "Area 51", or Atlantis. It's worth noting that Riley mentions at one point that his book contains secrets regarding both topics. So, it's clear the writers were laying the groundwork for a 3rd film, and Riley's book was serving as ChekhovsGun.
* SequelReset: The Gates family reputation, restored by finding the Templar treasure, is once again ruined by the revelation about the Booth diary, forcing Ben to find another treasure to clear the family name. (Riley didn't get the fame and respect the Gateses did, though, due to being just the assistant; this time around he finally gets some proper recognition). And Ben and Abigail broke up, only to fall in love and get back together again. Lampshaded by Patrick:
-->"For one brief moment, the Gates family could hold its head up. Now we're a bunch of crazies."
* ShoutOut: In the second film when Ben sticks his hand into an opening he plays a prank reminiscent of ''Film/RomanHoliday''.
-->'''Ben:''' ''(feels around for a minute, then suddenly yells)'' GHAAAAH!\\
'''Everybody else:''' GAAAAAH!\\
'''Ben:''' Sorry, couldn't resist.
* ShownTheirWork: In comparison to ''Literature/TheDaVinciCode'', the film shows a more closer to reality version of both the Knights Templar and the Freemasons. The Templars in question are shown to be more along the lines of an international banking system across the Eastern Mediterranean with the treasure from Solomon's temple being the basis for their money. The Freemasons are also stated to be a successor to the Templars, which is considered fact by members of the Masonic Temple, even including how the Founding Fathers were Freemasons themselves and that members of the Masonic Temple are part of the government to this day.
** Discussed in the film. Ben's father leads Ian on a wild goose chase to Boston to find a non-existent clue to the treasure's location, referring to both the Beacon of Truth in Solomon's Temple and Paul Revere's midnight ride. Ian never did his research on the midnight ride, so he couldn't double check if the information was correct.
* SignatureItemClue: Invoked by Abigail in the second film when she deliberately drops one of her earrings in the Oval Office, then uses that as a distraction for Ben to examine the President's desk, on the grounds that it wouldn't do for an earring belonging to her to be found there.
* SmallRoleBigImpact: The cashier that catches Ben with the Declaration is single-handedly responsible for both the FBI getting Ben's identity right away and, as a result of Ben and Riley having to change their plans, Ian catching on to them and capturing them in the third act.
* SoftWater: Used and [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] both at the New York Harbor in the first movie and the Thames River at the second. Justified, since they showed Ben diving the correct way, feet first with arms crossed. There was an earlier mention that Ben is both a Navy veteran and studied underwater archaeology — he would likely have learned how to dive from heights ''correctly'' to avoid worse injury. {{Lampshade|hanging}}d as well when Ian shortly after observes that a fall like that can kill you.
* SomeoneHasToDie: [[spoiler:The only way to escape the flooding city is for one person to hold open the drainage door and close it once the rest are though]].
* SoProudOfYou: After being the one man in the family who didn’t believe the legend, Patrick being proven wrong and finally seeing the treasure room was what it took to see his son for the passionate genius he truly is.
-->'''Patrick:''' You did it, Ben. For all of us. Your grandfather, and all of us. And I’ve never been so happy to be proven wrong.
* SpannerInTheWorks: Ben doesn't get to use the setup for the Declaration in his home because the cashier in the gift shop he ducks into catches him with it and, thinking he's trying to steal a reproduction, makes him pay with a card. The result is that the FBI is onto Ben from the beginning and Ian gets the clue he needs to catch up to Ben for the rest of the movie.
* SpottingTheThread: Ben finds the Meerschaum pipe because the captain of the ''Charlotte'' is cradled around the gunpowder barrel containing it.
-->"Why would the captain be guarding this barrel?"
* SpyTuxReveal: Ben does this in both movies. The first time he dresses as a janitor to get in the front door. The second he uses a wetsuit to cross a river to the party then sheds it to pretend he was already at the party. He then lampshades, "Maybe someday I'll get to wear this to a party I was actually invited to."
* StartXToStopX: Discussed; Ben decides to protect the Declaration from Ian... by stealing it. He even lampshades it by saying the logic is upside-down.
* StatusQuoIsGod: Riley gets audited and loses his fortune so he actually has a reason to tag along. [[spoiler:He gets the car back thanks to a pardon from the President but ends up crashing it five seconds after starting it up because he didn't check which gear it was left in.]]
* StealItToProtectIt: Ben and Riley warn both the FBI and Dr. Abigail Chase that Ian plans to steal the Declaration of Indepence [[CassandraTruth but their story is dismissed]]. This prompts Ben and Riley to steal the Declaration themselves to protect it from Ian.
* StealTheSurroundings: Ben does this with the frigging Declaration of Independence! After breaking into the National Archives Building (during a gala), he becomes pressed for time, due to the bolts securing the display case taking longer than he anticipated. When Riley loses his video feed, Ben forgoes the original plan and takes the whole damn thing! At least as far as the elevator, where he finally removes the Declaration from its display case.
* StockAesop: Subverted. Near the end of the first film, after [[spoiler:being left underground by Ian, Ben and his group find a medium-sized, underground room with nothing in it. They think someone else found and looted the treasure already, and Ben's father tells him that the room is real, the clues leading there were real, so the treasure itself has to be real; in essence, "It's not the destination, it's the journey." Ben accepts that, but points out that the original diggers would have dug another tunnel for air and in case of cave-ins. Scouring the room more closely leads them to the ''real'' treasure room.]]
* SummonBiggerFish: To [[spoiler:get Mitch to agree to his terms, Ben called the FBI, after he kidnapped the President,]] and noted if what he summoned got there, neither side would win.
* SundialWaypoint: One clue requires observing the shadow of a particular landmark at the right time of day to fall on a wall where the next clue was hidden behind a loose brick. While the sun's exact position would change over the course of the year, for the majority of the year it would land upon said wall where the hiding place was. Ben still has to look around for the right brick, though, which is helpfully marked.
* SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome: Ben shakes his wrist in pain after punching out Powell. Wrist injuries are a common result of punching, especially if one isn't used to it.
* TakeAThirdOption:
** Lampshaded in the first movie. Also see GambitPileup above.
--->"Mr. Sadusky, I'm still not against you... But I found door no. 3, and I'm taking it."
** Subverted in the second movie, however.
--->'''Ben Gates:''' "We can figure this out! We can all get out!"\\
'''Mitch Wilkinson:''' "It's not a puzzle! No more puzzles Ben! We're all gonna die, [[spoiler:or it could just be me!]]"
* TaxmanTakesTheWinnings: In between the first and second movies, this happens to Riley Poole and at the beginning of the second film, his Ferrari is impounded by the IRS while he is signing copies of his book.
-->'''Riley Poole:''' [to Ben] Do you know what the taxes are on 5 million dollars? 6 million dollars.
* TearsOfAwe: Subverted and parodied when the group is looking out at the treasure.
-->'''Abigail:''' Riley, are you crying?\\
'''Riley:''' Look... ''[camera pans to the escape stairs]'' ''[[TearsOfJoy Stairs]].''
* ThemeNaming: Creator/BenjaminFranklin Gates, UsefulNotes/ThomasJefferson Gates, UsefulNotes/JohnAdams Gates, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Carroll_of_Carrollton Charles Carroll Gates]], [[GiveMeLibertyOrGiveMeDeath Patrick Henry]] Gates... see a pattern?
* TokenMinority: A nationality variation with Shippen (the driver of Ian's van), who is Russian compared to his British compatriots.
* TrainEscape: Ben uses the foot chase/street traffic variation of Type 1 in the first movie, walking hurriedly across a busy Philadelphia street ahead of Ian's men--and as soon as the vehicles are past, he's revealed as running pell-mell down the sidewalk on the other side, setting off the chase.
* TreasureRoom:
** In the first movie, and it's ''really'' big.
** The second movie [[SequelEscalation upgrades]] it to a CityOfGold.
* TrueCompanions: Abigail, Ben and Riley, by the end of the first film.
* UnspokenPlanGuarantee: While the beginning of the plan to steal the Declaration is explained (getting it moved to the Preservation Room so it is away from both the crowded public display room and the highly-secure vault), the rest of what Ben and Riley intend is not explained. Unusually, [[SubvertedTrope despite this]] the plan ''doesn't'' work out, since a) Ian and his men get in before Ben can escape and b) Abigail, suspicious of him, follows and eventually corners him outside his van (with a detour into the souvenir shop to evade her that gets his real identity revealed to the FBI thanks to the credit card purchase of the "reproduction" Declaration).
* VillainInAWhiteSuit: [[BigBad Ian]] wears a white parka throughout the first scene, to make him stand out amongst the dark-parka-clad members of the rest of the crew, including Ben.
* VillainousFriendship: A notable one between [[BigBad Ian]] and [[TheDragon]].
* VisualPun: Ben holding up the Declaration's bulletproof case as a shield from Shaw's gunfire. [[spoiler:"Hiding behind the Constitution."]]
* WealthyEverAfter: The first film's ending.
* WellDoneSonGuy: Ben's relationship with his father, in the mode of ''Franchise/IndianaJones''.
** In the first film, you get a sense that Patrick had this going with his own father as well.
--->'''Ben:''' "Well, maybe that's the ''real'' Gates family legacy. Sons who disappoint their fathers."
* WhoShotJFK: It's written in the President's Secret Book.
* XanatosGambit: The Masons in the Founding Fathers' goal was to protect the hidden treasure. Then their plan to use the Declaration of Independence works to ensure it regardless how the War of Independence comes out. If the Revolutionaries won, then the Declaration would be protected as an important piece of the new nation, and Masons can move it to protect it from thieves. If they lost the war, the Declaration would have been destroyed as it is treasonous material. So the cipher on its back would be destroyed forever. Either way, it protects the treasure's location.
* YouHaveGotToBeKiddingMe: After Ben punches out Powell, one of the other {{Mooks}} Phil rounds the corner to resume the case.
-->'''Ben:''' Oh, come on!
* ZillionDollarBill: Used as a joke by Riley, first asking if the pipe is worth a billion dollars, and then if it is worth a million dollars.
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