Opinion 
 Blogs 
 Movies Ate My Life 
 Review: The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo 

Review: The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo

(MA15+) ****

Director: Niels Arden Oplev.

Cast: Michael Nyqvist, Noomi Rapace, Peter Haber, Sven-Bertil Taube.

THE movie version of the first of Stieg Larsson's mega-selling Millenium trilogy has made it to DVD, with the other two on the way soon.

It's good news for fans of the late Swedish writer's dark crime novels, especially if books two and three are adapted as finely as The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo.

Nyqvist stars as Mikael Blomkvist, an investigative journalist who is sentenced to jail for libel over an article he wrote. With six months before he has to go to prison (it must be a Swedish thing), Blomkvist is hired by powerful industrialist Henrik Vanger (Haber) to investigate a 40-year-old cold case - the disappearance of his niece Harriet.

Blomkvist's search is aided by Lisbeth Salander (Rapace), a young goth hacker with a troubled past, but the two soon discover that Harriet's disappearance could be linked to a series of unsolved murders that may be the work of a serial killer.

As with the superlative Swedish film Let The Right One In, Hollywood has snatched up The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo for a remake instead of just spending money to promote and release the original version to a wide audience (like they no doubt will with their own version).

It's not surprising David Fincher has put his hand up for the remake, as the subject material is right up his alley, a la Seven and Zodiac but an English-language remake seems so pointless (as usual) given the quality here.

Nyqvist is good as Blomkvist, but Rapace is astounding as the grim hacker Lisbeth. While the ordeals she faces during the film are harrowing and difficult to watch, it makes for a gripping and fascinating character, and it's her compelling presence that elevates what could have been an otherwise bog-standard mystery.

The film wisely takes its time setting up the dynamic between the two leads, not uniting them until about 70 minutes into this lengthy drama. But it's time well-spent because of the engrossing way the story unfolds and the passion we develop for the investigators.

Shot with that icy blue-white look of many Scandanavian films, this is an at-times harsh film (the Swedish title's direct translation - Men Who Hate Women - should give you some idea of the truly f***ed-up misogyny that lies ahead) that treads a well-worn path excellently thanks to a sharp script and two brilliantly realised characters.

Print
Increase Text Size
Decrease Text Size

comments


Date: Newest first | Oldest first
It's not surprising that hollywood has decided to do a remake of the girl with the dragon tattoo because the swedish director screwed it up the first time. The swedes totally screwed it up. The reason Blomkvist takes the job in the first place is not to try to find what happened to harriet its to get back at wennerstrom for his libel conviction. Fincher probably read the novel which is why he is wants to do it. I wonder if the director of the first attempt at the movie read the book? I bet he didnt! That is the only logical reason. Lets face it Steig Larsson had to give approval for a remake right? Why would he agree to a hollywood version if the swedish was so good? Money? No its because he knew the swedish version didnt even come close to what the book was about. The swedish version sucked plain and simple! I cant wait to see if the hollywood version can live up to the potential of the book!
Posted by jedimattster, 5/10/2010 3:24:14 AM, on The Warrnambool Standard
Sorry to break this to you jedi mattster, but Steig Larsson died in 2004 so I doubt he approved the original or the remake, and seeing as this information takes up a full page at the beginning of the book I do wonder if you yourself have read it?
Posted by chuff, 6/10/2010 11:32:51 PM, on The Warrnambool Standard
Movies Ate My Life
The Standard's movie reviewer MATT NEAL rants and raves and reviews.
Lisbeth Salander (Noomi Rapace) faces some harsh treatment in The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo.
Lisbeth Salander (Noomi Rapace) faces some harsh treatment in The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo.

Most popular articles

TAFE - MREC's

 
 
 


The Warrnambool Standard







Weather brought to you by:

Weatherzone

Front Page

Current Issue
Privacy Policy | Conditions of Use | Advertising Terms | Copyright © 2012. Fairfax Media.
 SEND...
 SAVE...
 SHARE...