Product Description
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The Stieg Larsson trilogy includes: The Girl With The Dragon
Aattoo, The Girl Who Played With fire and The Girl Who Kicked The
Hornets Nest.
.com
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The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo
Fans of Stieg Larsson's Men Who Hate Women may have been
concerned about how the Swedish author's novel would translate to
the screen, but they needn't have worried. Significant changes to
the source material have been made, but director Niels Arden
Opley's The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, as it's now called, is
mostly riveting. As the story begins, middle-aged investigative
journalist Mikael Blomkvist (Michael Nyqvist) has just been
convicted of a bogus charge of libel against a rich and corrupt
corporate hot when he's unexpectedly offered a most unusual
gig. An aging captain of industry named Henrik Vanger
(Sven-Bertil Taube) wants Blomkvist to figure out what happened
to Vanger's niece, who disappeared more than 40 years earlier;
not only is the old man convinced that she was murdered, but he
suspects that another member of his large and rather disagreeable
family (which includes several former Nazis) is the culprit.
Blomkvist takes the job, which includes spending at least six
months on Vanger's isolated island in the middle of winter. But
what he doesn't know is that he's being spied on by
twentysomething Lisbeth Salander (brilliantly played by Noomi
Rapace in a career-making performance), the titular Girl and the
possessor of remarkable skills as a sleuth and computer hacker.
With her gothlike piercings and all-black clothes, Lisbeth is a
vivid character, to say the least. While we don't exactly know
the details of her dark past, it's obviously still with her;
indeed, she's just been assigned a new "guardian" (like a parole
officer) to look after her finances and other matters. We also
know that she is not someone to mess with; when the guardian
turns out to be a thoroughly vile monster, Lisbeth gets back at
him in one of the more satisfying revenge sequences in recent
memory. That Lisbeth and Mikael should end up working together,
and more, isn't especially surprising. But the horrifying details
and depths of depravity they uncover while working on the case
(parallels to The Silence of the Lambs are facile but
appropriate) definitely are, and Opley does a nice job of keeping
it all straight. At more than two and a half hours, the film is
long, with its share of grim, graphic, and y moments, but The
Girl with the Dragon Tattoo is a winner. --Sam Graham
The Girl Who Played With Fire
The toughest chick in Sweden returns to action in The Girl Who
Played with Fire, the second film adaptation of the late author
Stieg Larsson's Millennium Trilogy novels. That would be Lisbeth
Salander, once again played with quiet, feral intensity by Noomi
Rapace. As Larsson's readers and anyone who saw the first film
(The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, also released in 2010) knows,
Lisbeth is small in stature but big trouble for any man who
crosses her--after all, this is the woman who set her her on
fire after he abused her mother and later, after being released
from a mental institution, took extreme revenge on her legal
guardian after he brutally assaulted her (those scenes are
briefly revisited for the enlightenment of those who missed the
earlier film). Also back is investigative journalist Mikael
Blomkvist (Michael Nyqvist), Lisbeth's erstwhile lover and
partner in solving the Dragon Tattoo mystery. When two of his
young colleagues are killed while at work on a story about sex
trafficking, followed shortly by the murder of the aforementioned
guardian, Salander is the prime suspect. But Mikael is sure of
her innocence; in fact, he's convinced she's the next victim,
leading to a tangled tale in which Lisbeth learns more about her
family and its very dark secrets than she ever wanted to know.
The story is compelling, if a bit slow to take shape, and
director Daniel Alfredson, taking over for Niels Arden Oplev,
skillfully sustains the mystery and tension (there are also doses
of nudity and violence, the latter much more graphic than the
former). But Lisbeth isn't on screen nearly as much this time,
and her relationship with Blomkvist, so central to Dragon Tattoo,
is almost an afterthought. Still, The Girl Who Played with Fire
will certainly whet fans' appetites for the next installment, The
Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest; and considering the overall
class and quality of these Swedish productions, one shudders to
think how they'll turn out in the inevitable American versions,
the first of which is due in 2011, with Daniel Craig as
Blomkvist. --Sam Graham
The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest
It takes a while, but the saga of one of the more fascinating
characters put on the page or the screen in recent years comes to
a satisfying conclusion with The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's
Nest, the last installment of the late Swedish author Stieg
Larsson's so-called Millennium Trilogy. That character is Lisbeth
Salander, the computer-hacking, Goth-loving, dark angel of
revenge, played by Noomi Rapace with the same black stare and
taciturn charisma that were so riveting in the first two films
(The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and The Girl Who Played with
Fire, both also released in 2010). When we last saw her, Lisbeth
was trying to kill her her, a Russian defector and abusive
monster; in the process, the girl was seriously wounded by her
half-brother, a hulking freak with a strange condition that
renders him impervious to physical pain. As the new film opens,
all three are still alive, and she's being taken to a hospital to
recover while waiting to stand trial for attempted murder.
Meanwhile, her champion and erstwhile lover, journalist Mikael
Blomkvist (Michael Nyqvist), sets about uncovering the full
extent of the conspiracy responsible for (among other crimes)
Lisbeth's being sent to an asylum at age 12 while her her was
protected by evil forces within the government. This
investigation, which puts not only Lisbeth but also Blomkvist and
his colleagues in considerable danger, leads to "the Section," a
thoroughly repellent bunch of aging liars, killers, thieves, and
perverts with a great many secrets they'd like to keep (the oily
Dr. Peter Teleborian, who was responsible for Lisbeth's
"" as a child, emerges as the most vile antagonist since
the guardian who brutally assaulted her in the first film).
Although much of the exhaustive detail about these and other
matters has been eliminated by director Daniel Alfredson (who
also helmed The Girl Who Played with Fire) and screenwriters
Jonas Frykberg and Ulf Ryberg for the purpose of adapting the
novel to the screen, The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest is
still quite long (148 minutes), and less kinetic and violent than
the earlier films; there are some exciting sequences, but
Lisbeth, previously an unlikely but magnetic action heroine, is
seen mostly on a hospital bed or in a courtroom, and much of the
film is spent on procedural matters. Still, the fact that the
loose ends are wrapped up in fairly conventional fashion doesn't
make the conclusion any less satisfying. In fact, the only real
letdown comes from knowing that we won't get to see Noomi Rapace
play Lisbeth Salander again. --Sam Graham