Home Blog Media Room Advertise Directory About Us Contact Us Login Login
new_1.jpgnew_1.jpgnew_1.jpgnew_1.jpgnew_1.jpgnew_1.jpg

Newsletter signup

Let us keep you up to date and informed

First Name*
Last Name*
Email Address*

The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo

 

http://www.flicks.co.nz/movie/the-girl-with-the-dragon-tattoo/
Adaptation of Part 1 of sensational Swedish crime trilogy is compelling.

View the Trailer, Read the Review, Post your Comment below, Share this page with a Friend

noomi_2.jpgSwedish thriller based on Stieg Larsson's novel about a journalist and a young female hacker. The native title (Män som hatar kvinnor) is Swedish for 'men who hate women'.

16-year old Harriet Vanger disappeared without a trace, on September 29th 1966. Nearly forty years later, a journalist gets contacted by an industrial leader who wants him to write the history of the Vanger family. The family chronicle is just a cover for the real assignment: to find out about what really happened to Harriet.

Flicks.co.nz movie review:
A 40-year-old cold case might sound as dusty as old drapes but throw in an exiled reporter, a hard-as-nails genius and a family of ageing eccentrics living in the icy wiles of Sweden and you’ve got a mystery as sprawling and wild as the landscape. Stieg Larsson’s gripping yarn is a tale within a tale sporting a tail that chases itself relentlessly. The film has everything: intrigue, murder, fraud, sadistic violence, romance, religious themes, horror, tear-jerking sadness and a web of storylines that merge within a climactic second half.

Parts of the murder mystery play out like a far-fetched episode of CSI with some of the clues coming together too conveniently. But holding it together are the characters, all of them deeply dysfunctional or emotionally scarred. It’s impossible to escape the chilling sense the two leads are never safe from any of them. Actress Noomi Rapace gets the best role in unpredictable Lisbeth Salander, the ultra-intelligent but angry young hacker whose true essence is revealed layer by layer throughout the film.

But what sets this apart is the gender role reversal and the wider themes of corruption, family betrayal and trust. It’s the chick who’s the real kick-ass hero, as sick as her brand of revenge is, and as warped as her history leads her to be. And it’s the society in which the characters dwell that leads us on this wildest of goose chases.

By Rebecca Barry, Flicks.co.nz

 

1 Comments

Join the conversation......

Raewyn says ...
without a doubt, this is the best adaptation I have seen of a fairly dark book that didn't put me off in the difficult scenes. I thought the casting was exceptional. Just how I had imagined the characters. Truly worth sitting through thenearly 2 1/2 hours