Did Dan Brown do a 3rd book in that series that would warrant a 3rd movie? was there a book after DVC that follows the same guy?
Last I heard he was planning on writing one. Don't know if it has materialized yet.
It came out last year and is called
The Lost Symbol. I am actually reading it right now. It's set in Washington, D.C. and has Robert Langdon trying to track down his missing mentor Peter Solomon and figuring out this Masonic Pyramid that the villain of the book wants. It deals with stuff like Noetic Science (like most concepts in Brown's books, this is actually a real thing). I bet Ron Howard can't wait to film the movie as the book is set in places like the Smithsonian Museum Support Center, the U.S. Capitol and it's crypts, and other places in the D.C. Area. I love the book so far.
Some more movies i've seen since my last update:
Child's Play - It's been years since i've seen it. I have all the other movies in a box set, which doesn't include the original since MGM released it while Universal Studios released the others. Good movie, although I like the second one better. Like the good horror movies, it's like 75% through the movie before you actually see Chuckie come alive (although it's implied earlier).
Black Hawk Down - For those who don't know, the movie is based on a real life event from 1993. Great movie, you naturally find yourself hoping for the good guys (the US) to win even though you already know what happened in real life.
Demolition Man - By far a popcorn movie. You will feel like Stallone's character (John Spartan) does with how annoying that future is (no sex, no kissing, no salt, no meat, no contact sports, no cursing, nothing that is considered "bad"). Wesley Snipes does a great job as deranged killer Simon Phoenix.
The Running Man - If you didn't know, you will quickly find out that this was a 80s movie. It doesn't age as well as you would hope, but I still enjoyed it and think it's worth watching through a streaming service since I don't think I would watch it again (I don't buy movies that I expect to only watch once).
Also, how did DS9 have a corrupt Federation? Are you talking about the Starfleet Admiral who attempted a coup? He was stopped after Sisko convinced his followers that he was misguided. If you meant Section 31, they are basically a rogue organization that operates without the support of Starfleet or the Federation. I won't even get into how Sisko could be considered wooen (especially later seasons when he showed more passion and emotion than anyone in TOS or TNG).