THE SCOOP Director: David Fincher
Plot: Journalist Mikael Blomkvist is aided in his search for a woman who has been missing for forty years by Lisbeth Salander, a young computer hacker.
Genre: Crime/Drama/Mystery
Awards: Won 1 Oscar - Best Film Editing. Nom. for 4 Oscars - Best Lead Actress, Best Cinematography, Best Sound Mixing, and Best Sound Editing.
Runtime: 158min
Rating: R21 for brutal violent content including rape and torture, strong sexuality, graphic nudity, and language.
TRAILER:
OST:
IN RETROSPECT
It is difficult to review David Fincher’s The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo without a comparison to its Swedish screen adaptation by Niels Arden Oplev in 2010. Contrary to popular belief, Fincher’s film is not a Hollywood remake of an acclaimed foreign language feature. Rather, it is an auteurial re-imagination of author Stieg Larsson’s bestselling novel. The dark and disturbing material of Larsson’s book is a match made in heaven for Fincher, who has directed his fair share of similarly-themed films in Seven (1995) and Zodiac (2007). In other words, you won’t find a more perfect filmmaker to helm Dragon Tattoo than Fincher.
This is the plot in two sentences: Mikael Blomkvist
(Daniel Craig) is a journalist who is tasked by Henrik Vanger (Christopher
Plummer) to solve the mystery of a death in the family that happened many
decades ago. Lisbeth Salander (Rooney Mara) is a young computer hacker who
helps him with the task. Things get deadly as they race against time to put an
end to the uncertainty. Now, that’s just the gist of it. For those unfamiliar
with the book and Oplev’s film, you are in for a treat because this is one of
the most layered of all screen mysteries in recent years, and it is tough not
to be engaged by it.
The most striking aspect of Fincher’s film that sets
it apart from its screen counterpart is its handling of mood and tone. A
technical masterclass, Dragon Tattoo
features bleak cinematography that chills you to the bone as shots of the cold,
wintery setting give a strong sense of isolation. The camera is also used
brilliantly to create unsettling moments that increase in frequency as the film
plays on. Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross’ second musical collaboration with
Fincher after The Social Network
(2010) is also more atmospheric, and at times, menacing, providing a unique
metallic sound to the dark imagery.
In terms of performances, Craig and Mara give adequate
displays, but they are nowhere as potent as Michael Nyqvist and Noomi Rapace’s
world-weary interpretations of their characters in the Swedish film. There is a
feeling that Craig and Mara are too comfortable with each other’s character,
hence the rawness of their interactions is sorely lacking. Both films however
share a common trait: A lackluster and draggy ending that peters off into the
end credits. I expected Fincher to give us a more urgently-paced epilogue that
makes use of the screen momentum generated from the first two hours or so;
after all, he managed to make a movie about Facebook engaging even till the
very end.
Despite its flaws, Dragon Tattoo is an excellent take on the theme of isolation – both
geographic and character-wise. But what emerges from the hellish amalgam of
masochistic and anti-Semite elements is Lisbeth’s confident, assured character.
An anti-heroine of sorts, Mara’s Lisbeth is not just the face of a new breed of
young, empowered women gracing our cinema screens (think Hailee Steinfield in True Grit (2010), or Jennifer Lawrence
in the upcoming The Hunger Games (2012)),
but is perhaps the most strangely attractive of the lot. Yes, it really is the
Goth makeup.
GRADE: B+ (8/10 or 3.5 stars)
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2 comments:
It’s certainly worth seeing if you missed the original. If you saw it, however, there’s no way of unseeing it, and nothing in the new one to top it. Craig and Mara are great here though and Fincher brings so much more to this film like I was expecting too. Good review.
Hi there, thanks for reading. What you say is perfectly true. Anyone who has not read the novel or seen the Swedish original would be in for one solid experience of a movie.
Pity the rest, including myself, who are unable to watch Fincher's film with a blank mind.
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