Review Thomb Rider Movie
Info Film
Lara Croft is the fiercely
independent daughter of an eccentric adventurer who vanished when she was
scarcely a teen. Now a young woman of 21 without any real focus or purpose,
Lara navigates the chaotic streets of trendy East London as a bike courier, barely
making the rent, and takes college courses, rarely making it to class.
Determined to forge her own path, she refuses to take the reins of her father's
global empire just as staunchly as she rejects the idea that he's truly gone.
Advised to face the facts and move forward after seven years without him, even
Lara can't understand what drives her to finally solve the puzzle of his
mysterious death. Going explicitly against his final wishes, she leaves
everything she knows behind in search of her dad's last-known destination: a
fabled tomb on a mythical island that might be somewhere off the coast of
Japan. But her mission will not be an easy one; just reaching the island will
be extremely treacherous. Suddenly, the stakes couldn't be higher for Lara,
who--against the odds and armed with only her sharp mind, blind faith and
inherently stubborn spirit--must learn to push herself beyond her limits as she
journeys into the unknown. If she survives this perilous adventure, it could be
the making of her, earning her the name tomb raider.
Rating : PG-13
(for sequences of violence and action, and for some language)
Genre : Action
& Adventure, Drama, Science Fiction & Fantasy
Directed By : Roar
Uthaug
Written By : Geneva
Robertson-Dworet, Alastair Siddons
In Theaters : Mar
16, 2018 Wide
Runtime : 122
minutes
Studio : Warner Bros. Pictures
Review
When it was announced that the
Swedish actress Alicia Vikander would star in a reboot of “Tomb Raider,”
playing the bungee-plunging, chasm-leaping adventurer Lara Croft in a movie
that told the story of how she first became…Lara Croft, I’ll confess that my
heart didn’t exactly do a flip of anticipation. I’m a major fan of Vikander’s,
and was glad to see this ferociously gifted and expressive actress reach for
A-list mega-stardom (she was marvelous, two years ago, in her first franchise
movie, the shockingly underrated “Jason Bourne”). But the Lara Croft series, in
its Angelina Jolie incarnation, always struck me as a hollowly relentless
action contraption, and I didn’t want to see Vikander plugged into the machine,
reduced to a “high-powered” video-game prop.
The exciting surprise of the new
“Tomb Raider,” directed by the Norwegian genre specialist Roar Uthaug, is that
it doesn’t tamp down Vikander’s inner flame, or the three-dimensionality of her
talent; it doesn’t fold and insert her into an overly gymnastic and CGI-happy
thrill ride. The movie is full of vine-swinging, bow-and-arrow-shooting,
ancient-spirit-meeting action, but most of it is staged on a convincing human
scale, one that’s been expertly tailored to its star’s understated directness.
Vikander, small-boned and
olive-skinned, has a delicate, contemplative quality that’s strikingly
European. In “Tomb Raider,” she doesn’t come off as an action star (the way the
toned and implacable Jolie did). She comes off as an imploring, impulsive young
woman who’s in over her head but will beat the odds anyway. Her Lara may be the
most grounded and believable cinematic video-game protagonist I’ve seen (she’s
based on the rebooted, origin-story version of the original game), and since we
buy her as a person, the movie is actually that much more immersive. Vikander
humanizes Lara Croft the way that Harrison Ford humanized her obvious
predecessor, Indiana Jones. That doesn’t make “Tomb Raider” anything more than
an engrossingly fanciful adventure lark, but it’s that rare thing, a propulsive
blockbuster with a bit of heart.
A handful of the movie’s set
pieces are lifted right out of the game, like one in which Lara shimmies over
the rusty-jointed carcass of a propeller plane, balanced over a mile-high abyss
that’s enough to give you vertigo. Yet “Tomb Raider” isn’t beholden to
sequences like that. It remains very much its own thing, starting with a “fox
hunt” bike race through the streets of London, where Lara, who works as a
courier, is the volunteer “fox,” wearing a tail and carrying a can that’s
dripping chartreuse paint. She has to escape a mass of bike-riding “hunters,”
and does it with the kind of split-second ingenuity that will serve her well
when she lands on Yamatai, a rocky fairy-tale island off the Japanese coast,
where her father disappeared seven years ago.
Lara, an heiress who doesn’t act
like one, is disconnected from her family’s vast holdings (she doesn’t, as of
yet, have access to her wealth), and it’s her relationship with her vanished
father, the tender, protective Richard Croft (Dominic West), that provides the
film’s unexpected emotional core. We meet Richard in color-desaturated
flashbacks, where he stands in the garden of Croft Manor (a place lordly enough
to evoke a mini Versailles), saying goodbye to the young Lara as he heads off
on yet another open-ended business trip. (What she doesn’t realize is that he’s
no mere global tycoon, any more than Indy Jones was just a tweedy
archaeologist.)
In outline, this all seems quite
standard, even a touch cliché. But now that it’s time, after seven years, to
legally declare Richard deceased, Lara discovers that he has left her a trail
of bread crumbs. The first raised letter on his crypt leads to his secret
study, where she learns where he went — to Hong Kong, and then to Yamatai, all
in search of Himiko, an ancient sorceress who was buried alive. What powers the
movie — and lifts it — is the way Vikander plays Lara’s yearning to discover
the fate of her father not as the usual plot device but as a primal drive. She
has to know. Her desire powers every scene.
Much of the effectiveness of
“Tomb Raider” comes down to a fresh but old-fashioned idea: the decision by
Roar Uthaug to shoot a movie that pivots around omens, curses, jade amulets,
and Spielbergian rock formations not as a glossy swashbuckling cliffhanger —
even though that’s what it is — but as a “realistic” thriller that might
actually be taking place. Instead of pummeling us with the outlandish, “Tomb
Raider” lures us into suspending our disbelief. Some may find its scrappy,
earthbound style a touch drab, but the film’s intense likability is that it’s a
kick-ass reverie of feminine power that’s only too happy to be life-size.
That spirit extends from Vikander
to the performance of Walton Goggins, who plays Mathias Vogel, the dastardly
hunter who’s been stranded on Yamatai for seven years, searching for Himiko’s
tomb (for reasons that have something to do with getting off the island and
something to do with world domination). Vogel treats his army of workers like
chattel, and Goggins, a magnetic actor who projects the lean, hungry anger of
vintage-period Jack Nicholson, never hits you over the head with evil; he lets
Vogel’s sleazy cruelty seep through his pores. Also noteworthy are Daniel Wu,
as the Hong Kong boatman who becomes Lara’s trusty tour guide, and Kristen
Scott Thomas as the pearly Croft executive who’s more connected than she looks.
In the end, though, it’s Vikander’s
movie. Done right, there’s a special tingle to the image of someone who’s not
an action heroine becoming an action heroine. When Lara stands in Himiko’s
temple of doom, trying to figure out what to do as spikes jut out of nowhere or
a booby-trapped floor falls away, piece by piece, she’s standing in for all of
us.
“Tomb Raider,” let’s be clear, is
hokum: brisk but derivative, a compendium of jungle-chase pulp spun into
something stylishly watchable. Yet when a movie like this one is made with a
semblance of the human touch, and when it gives an actress as alive as Vikander
a chance to carve out a true character instead of just inhabiting a series of
stronger-than-life poses, you walk out feeling honestly entertained rather than
jittery with overkill. It’s something that shouldn’t be so rare: escapism that
breathes.
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