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The Girl Who Played With Fire
by George Sax
That Girl: The Girl Who Played With Fire
It’s a little difficult to take the measure of The Girl Who Played With Fire, the film adaptation of the second in the late Swedish novelist Stieg Larsson’s trilogy of novels that has become an enormous international publishing success. The movie is often involving and tense, but it’s also essentially little more than a cinematic transition between the first movie in this triparte series, Niels Arden Oplev’s The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, and the upcoming third one.
The first one was pretty close to an independent, stand-alone feature, even if it finally had a slightly unresolved feel at the end. But this Girl is blatantly a tease, with almost everything of narrative significance left up in the air at its abrupt ending. Devotees of the novels, who helped make the previous movie one of the largest foreign-language grossers in the US in recent years, presumably will have no problem with this, but the uninitiated may suffer a sort of cognition interruptus. On the other hand, this may turn out to be a canny marketing strategy to hook the audience. (And it’s mildly interesting to speculate abut whether the forthcoming American film of The Girl With the Tiger Tattoo will be able to translate this starkly violent, somehow firmly Scandinavian story into Yank terms and tap into a larger market.)
The kick-ass, supremely skilled computer-hacking Girl at the center of the stories, Lisbeth Salander (Noomi Rapace), returns to Sweden at the beginning of this one after a year of globe-trotting, and is promptly involved in a multiple-murder case and the lethal, tentacled outreach of an international prostitution ring. The man whose life she saved last time, crusading journalist Mikael Blomkvist (Michael Nyquist), is pursuing a big story about well placed clients of this nasty traffic, after the young freelancer who brought the story to Blomkvist’s magazine is murdered. Lisbeth’s hidden backstory is revealed to be crucially entailed in these events, and soon she’s sought by both the police and the killers. Blomkvist searches for her too.
That’s the movie’s primary thrust, but its velocity and accumulating turns and twists may be a little hard to follow for those who aren’t members of the legion of Larssonaholics. It’s a reflection of the craft of the director, Daniel Alfredson, that he managed to keep the film as intense and entertaining as it is, given the handicap he worked under. It’s obvious Larsson’s novel has been disassembled and recomposed in severely compressed form. Characters and events often come and go with scant preparation or information. But Alfredson has made this Girl so propulsive and tense (it’s also more brutal than the first one) that these deficiencies are rather less of a distraction than they might have been. His camera work and editing (Stockholm is handsomely presented) lend the movie a more varied visual and aural atmosphere than, for example, the current slambang, bombastic Angelina Jolie spy vehicle, Salt. (Rapace is also a more credible action heroine than Jolie.)
But her character, and the movie itself, are a little strange in at least one regard. In one of several instances of stilted dialogue, Blomkvist says of Lisbeth, “She despises men who hate women.” (The Swedish title of Larsson’s first novel in the trilogy was Men Who Hate Women.) In his and Lisbeth’s worldview and experience, there are a lot of them. But the movie, more than its predecessor, doesn’t quite make clear why. It sometimes seems to be conflating rape and paid sex. And this seems to imply a bemusing question about what Larsson may have been trying to say about Sweden’s ostensibly socially and politically enlightened society.
Watch the trailer for The Girl Who Played With Fire
Reader Comments (posting new comments is closed!)
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s. m. hutton 05 Aug 2010, 08:44
Here is a link to an article from ABC News about why Larsson may have been so obsessed with sexual assault against women. It wasn't about Swedish society, it was about Larsson's own flaws. (Copy and paste link address into your browser search window.) http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/stieg-larsson-guilt-gang-rape-lisbeth-fueled-millennium/story?id=11324859 "The scene toward the close of Stieg Larsson's "The Girl Who Played With Fire" is gut-wrenching: Two men tie up and take turns raping a 16-year-old prostitute who has been lured to Sweden in a sex trafficking ring. The wildly popular author of the "Millennium" trilogy, which also includes, "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" and "The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest," is graphic in his descriptions of violence against women, and now his closest friend reveals why. Larsson had his own dark secret. At the age of 15 he witnessed a gang rape and never intervened, according to longtime friend Kurdo Baksi. Days later, ridden with guilt, Larsson asked the victim for her forgiveness, but she refused. That girl was Lisbeth, the name later given to the tattooed, Asperger's-afflicted Lisbeth Salander -- heroine of Larsson's three novels."
s. m. hutton 08 Aug 2010, 10:51
Hi George, About your comment: "It sometimes seems to be conflating rape and paid sex.": there's a huge difference between "legitimate" sex work and sex trafficking. In the latter, young women and underage girls from 3rd world or post communist Eastern bloc nations are lured to western/northern Europe or the US with promises of domestic work or food service work, for instance, and then they are essentially kidnapped and enslaved for sexual use. It's not like Vegas where there's regulation and voluntary work in the "industry." The issues in the Millenium Series are about trafficking, not prostitution. This is more clearly defined in the novel series than in the films. |
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