Wednesday, February 15, 2012

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (Three-Disc Combo Blu-ray / DVD + UltraViolet Digital Copy) (2011)


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A murder mystery rife with suspense, scandal, sexual abuse, and several supremely intriguing characters, The Woman using the Dragon Tattoo is an excellently crafted film adaptation of Stieg Larsson's equally fascinating book in the same name. Larsson's book was also the basis of your 2009 Swedish film (also using the same title), even though the Swedish film was good, this American version is much superior, thanks to fantastic cinematography and livelier pacing that results in a very constant, electric tension that drives every second with the movie. The breathtaking footage of an snowy, remote island in Sweden thoroughly exudes bitter cold, and also the attention for the smallest details, such as the whistling of the wind by method of a door left ajar, helps make the hairs for the back of viewers' necks absolutely prickle. Like the book, the film is long (158 minutes), there's an abundance of dialogue which is never awkward and try to efficient, and there are a lot of false endings. The suspense and the intricacy of the mystery are stellar, as well as viewers who understand the story well will see themselves sucked in to the riddle being investigated by journalist Mikael Blomkvist (Daniel Craig). The casting is great, as would be the performances of most the main element actors, but undoubtedly the smartest thing relating to this film is Rooney Mara, that is utterly believable since the incredibly strong, extremely disturbed Lisbeth Salander, Blomkvist's unlikely assistant. Mara's performance is chillingly real and completely riveting. Yorick van Wageningen is perfectly despicable as Nils Bjurman (though his scene with Salander is likely to prove highly disturbing for some viewers), Christopher Plummer is surely an effective Henrik Vanger, and Stellen SkarsgÄrd is eerily frightening as Martin Vanger. Viewers are only able to hope that director David Fincher, screenplay writer Steven Zaillian, and actors Craig and Mara continue their collaboration to make films based on the final two books of Larsson's Millennium trilogy. --Tami Horiuchi






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