Remember back in my
Sicario: Day of the Soldado review (this past July) I said that there
were three movies this year – Sicario 2, Tomb
Raider, and Venom – I was going to watch out of pure
curiosity in how the studios were going to pull them off? It turns
out that I should've made that number four instead because as I found
out only a couple months ago another movie was being made of the
Millennium series of books, The Girl in the Spider's Web.
Anyone who reads Arnold's Benediction knows that 2011's The Girl
With the Dragon Tattoo is one of my favourite movies ever. Can
The Girl in the Spider's Web match
the high standard the previous film established? Let's take a look.
TGITSW
serves as a soft reboot of TGWTDT, with an all-new cast, with a new
director and crew, and taking place at least three years after the
original (with a slight retcon of Lisbeth Salander's backstory).
Mikael Blomkvist and Lisbeth Salander have become estranged after he
cashed in on his experiences with her to publish some best-selling
articles that may or may not have made her famous (the movie doesn't
really make it clear). But the two must now work together to stop
some bad guys from stealing some computer program that allows its
user to hack into the world's missile control systems. That's right,
the series has made the jump from mystery-thriller to
espionage-action-thriller. Admittedly, I have not read the book this
film is based on but this type of action story seems very out of
place when compared to Dragon Tattoo.
I've seen people unfavourably comparing Spider's Web
to 2016's Jason Bourne
and while I don't think this film is nearly that dull it is easy to
see similarities in tone, the focus mostly on one character (in this
film Blomkvist has been reduced to a mere side character in favour of
Lisbeth), and in the action scenes. It's a plot that features tons of
vibrating phones, people not paying attention to things in plain
sight, and momentary lapses of judgment from characters who are
supposed to be smart. For example, why did that whiz kid who just saw
[SPOILER] die answer a phone call from [SPOILER] even though he knows
that dangerous people are trying to find him? In the words of Carl
Brutananadilewski, “you're stupid for a genius.”
As
mentioned earlier, Lisbeth is the sole main character this time
around and she's played by Claire Foy. While Foy's performance isn't
as haunting or nuanced as Rooney Mara's in Dragon Tattoo,
it's still very well done. Instead of a private investigator who
keeps to herself, Lisbeth is now a hacker-for-hire vigilante who goes
out of her way to reap vengeance on men who mistreat women. The new
version of Blomkvist, portrayed by Sverrir Gudnason, is way younger
and less prominent than in previous movies. Gudnason's performance is
OK, I guess. The only other character of note is the main villain who
is rather dull and barely makes any facial expressions (possibly due
to her hard-to-spot eyebrows).
Like
a lot of reboots, TGITSW cleans house. Without the likes of David
Fincher, Jeff Cronenweth, Trent Reznor, and Atticus Ross Spider's
Web's cinematography,
compositions, and musical scoring have a very different, much less
pronounced style. Opening credits aside, director Fede Alvarez does
his own thing. Really the only things of note are a couple long
tracking shots, plentiful handheld camera shots, and shaky fight
scenes with really choppy editing (speaking of Bourne...).
All
in all, The Girl in the Spider's Web reminds
me a lot of Sicario 2
in that they're both artistically downgraded, action-packed sequels
to critically lauded, stylish films; they don't stack up with the
originals but are entertaining enough. But on the other hand Spider's
Web – although I did enjoy it
– was only half as captivating as Dragon Tattoo
and is a debatably unnecessary film. I don't think audiences are
necessarily against another Millennium
film, they probably just wanted Fincher to direct it and they wanted
it six years ago when the books were still popular. That might
explain why Spider's Web
is doing so badly at the box office; the cinema was about 3/4 empty
when I saw it on opening
night! Unfortunately it
seems like the time for more English-language Millennium
films has come and gone and that this series' continuation can
officially be written off as a lost cause.
Grade:
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