Archive for April 7, 2010

RAW – Film – Girl With Dragon Tattoo

After losing a high profile libel case, Mikael Blomkvist (Michael Nyqvist) is plucked out to investigate the disappearance of Harriet Vangar 40 years after her disappearance. His search is aided by Lisbeth Salandar (Noomi Rapace), a punk, cyber geek with a troubled past who had been tracking through hacking his investigations. Mayhem and intrigue follow from there through the depths of a Swedish winter.

Based on the book by Stieg Larsson (the first of a trilogy), Girl With The Dragon Tattoo is a violent but engrossing and entertaining thriller with plenty of twists and turns. Rapace is terrific and increasingly steals the show as her character’s dysfunctional past and present get revealed. The many, often conflicting, facets of her personality get well drawn even if by the film’s end we feel we don’t much know her still. The Blomkvist character lacks development as to his motivations and history but together they make an engaging team who by one means or another come to understand how the other works best.

At 2 ½ hours, viewing could have been a struggle but the pace and tension is sustained, the cinematography is superb and the violence, while at moments graphic, adds meaning to both characters and story rather than being gratuitous. At times, the story does rely on big time coincidences that make you feel you are watching Law & Order – Criminal Intent but one quickly is moved on to see how it all plays out.

Those who have read the book may find the treatment unsatisfying but such is always the case with films drawn from novels, especially complex ones. But as a standalone film, this is a high quality thriller justifying its moniker as Nordic’s highest grossing local movie.

Kryztoff Rating   4K

RAW – Film – MicMacs

This French farce features Bazil (Dany Boon), a man who lost everything after being hit in the head by a stray bullet from a gangland shootout. Out on the street, he befriends a loving but bizarre mix of characters from the underworld who inhabit a house of all sorts of equipment collected over the years from the waste of others. They include a contortionist (Julie Ferrier), Slammer (Jean-Pierre Marielle) an elderly ex-con and Buster (Dominique Pinon) as the former human cannonball record holder. Together with Bazil they plot, as revenge for his wound and the loss of his father to landmines, the downfall of arms dealers that happen to occupy offices across the road from each other by playing one off against the other.

This highly inventive comedy directed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet is a feast of strange characters, a vivid imagination and the triumph of the little guy over the institution. Boon is an amusing character but it is his circus friends, especially Elastic Girl (Ferrier), who make his task as lead so much easier with eccentric performances that don’t allow real world probabilities to intrude into the plot. At all stages, the scenes are chock full of detailed items of interest and manic behaviour.

Filmed in a golden hue against overcast skies, Micmacs is both of this time (President Sarkozy is identified as a friend of one of the dealers) and of anytime; a trip into a nice dream that is part Mary Poppins and part Bruce Willis.

With a script and sub titles that are tight, this is an excellent escape flick.

Kryztoff Rating   4K