Albinos condemn `Da Vinci' assassin as latest evil  stereotype 
By David Germain, AP Movie Writer  |  May 16, 2006
 LOS ANGELES --The notion of Christ as a family man is not the  only raw nerve "The Da Vinci Code" has touched. Albinos are bothered that one of  their own has yet again been depicted as a villain.
 Dan Brown's best seller begins its worldwide debut Wednesday with Tom Hanks  as the cryptologist pursuing a 2,000-year-old mystery that could reveal Jesus  and Mary Magdalene were married and that the Vatican covered it up.
 Among his co-stars is Paul Bettany, the British actor playing monk-assassin  Silas, an albino with red eyes who carries out a series of bloody murders to  secure the secret of the Holy Grail, a trove of lost Christian documents that  could prove Jesus had wed.
 Critics cite a long list of albinos cast as heavies by Hollywood: The  dreadlocked twins in "The Matrix Reloaded," a powder-haired hit man in the Chevy  Chase-Goldie Hawn crime romp "Foul Play," the pasty zombies in "The Omega Man,"  a sadistic killer in "Cold Mountain," even the wicked executioner in the  fairy-tale comedy "The Princess Bride."
 Michael McGowan, an albino who heads the National Organization for Albinism  and Hypopigmentation, said "The Da Vinci Code" will be the 68th movie since 1960  to feature an evil albino.
 "Silas is just the latest in a long string," McGowan said. "The problem is  there has been no balance. There are no realistic, sympathetic or heroic  characters with albinism that you can find in movies or popular culture."