The Girl in the Spider's Web (film)

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The Girl in the Spider's Web
Theatrical release poster
Directed byFede Álvarez
Screenplay by
Based onThe Girl in the Spider's Web
by David Lagercrantz[a]
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyPedro Luque
Edited byTatiana S. Riegel
Music byRoque Baños
Production
companies
Distributed by
Sony Pictures Releasing[1]
Release dates
  • October 24, 2018 (2018-10-24) (Rome)
  • October 26, 2018 (2018-10-26) (Sweden)
  • November 9, 2018 (2018-11-09) (United States and Canada)
  • November 21, 2018 (2018-11-21) (United Kingdom)
  • November 22, 2018 (2018-11-22) (Germany)
Running time
117 minutes[3]
Countries
LanguageEnglish
Budget$43 million[5]
Box office$35.2 million[6]

The Girl in the Spider's Web is a 2018

Lakeith Stanfield, Sylvia Hoeks, and Stephen Merchant
also appear in the film.

The Girl in the Spider's Web had its world premiere at the

box-office disappointment
, the film grossed $35.2 million worldwide and received mixed reviews from critics, although Foy's performance was praised.

Plot

In the introduction, sisters Camilla and

Alexander Zalachenko
. When Zalachenko asks Camilla to play a game with him (the implication being inappropriate sexual behaviour) Lisbeth tries to drag her away, before leaping from a high balcony into a snowdrift and making her escape, leaving Camilla behind.

Some years later, in

Stockholm, Sweden, computer programmer Frans Balder hires Lisbeth, now a vigilante hacker, to retrieve Firefall, a program he developed for the National Security Agency
(NSA) that can access the world's nuclear codes. Balder believes it too dangerous to exist. Lisbeth successfully retrieves Firefall from the NSA's servers, but she is unable to unlock it. Her actions attract the attention of NSA agent Edwin Needham.

Mercenaries led by Jan Holtser steal the program from Lisbeth and attempt to kill her, though she survives. When she misses a scheduled rendezvous with Balder, he mistakenly believes Lisbeth has kept Firefall for herself and contacts Gabrielle Grane, the deputy director of the Swedish Security Service (SÄPO). Grane moves Balder and his young son, August, to a safe house. Meanwhile, Needham tracks the unauthorized login to Stockholm and arrives there seeking Lisbeth and Firefall.

Lisbeth and her hacker friend, Plague, contact Lisbeth's former lover, investigative journalist Mikael Blomkvist, for help identifying her assailants. Blomkvist learns Holtser previously worked for Lisbeth's late father, Zalachenko, and is now affiliated with an elusive international crime syndicate known as the "Spiders". Lisbeth puts surveillance on Balder's safe house, and when it is attacked, she intervenes, attempting to protect Balder and his son. She is intercepted by Holtser, who kills Balder and frames Lisbeth, then kidnaps August. Lisbeth pursues them and rescues August. Lisbeth also learns the Spiders' leader is her sister, Camilla, whom Lisbeth believed was dead. Lisbeth escaped her abusive father who was literally torturing her, leaving Camilla behind after she hesitated to leave. After years of physical and sexual abuse, Camilla faked her suicide and went underground to form the Spiders.

Lisbeth takes August to another safe house, where she confirms only he can unlock Firefall. Elsewhere, Needham locates Lisbeth's girlfriend, Sofia, and persuades her to arrange a meeting between them, intending to lure Lisbeth into a trap. Lisbeth evades him, and Needham is later arrested by SÄPO. Lisbeth helps him escape in exchange for him safely escorting August to San Francisco to reunite him with his mother; she begrudgingly agrees to later give him Firefall.

The Spiders trick August by calling him from his father's cellphone, then track him to Lisbeth's safe house. Camilla and the Spiders take August to her base of operations, the sisters' childhood home. Grane had hired the Spiders to retrieve Firefall for her and informed them of Balder's location, but Camilla has other plans and kills her.

Using a tracker hidden on August, Lisbeth, Blomkvist, Plague, and Needham locate him. Lisbeth breaks in to give Plague remote computer access to the building's surveillance system. She is caught and taken to where August is being held. She learns that Blomkvist has also been captured. When Camilla threatens to torture him, Lisbeth tells August to trust her and to reveal the Firefall password. Camilla tries suffocating Lisbeth while describing their father's abuse.

Armed with a .50 BMG sniper rifle and remotely guided by Plague via computer, Needham fires through brick walls, eliminating Camilla's henchmen, saving August and Blomkvist. Camilla escapes with the laptop containing Firefall, and Lisbeth pursues her. Holtser, injected with a poison that induces blindness, stumbles through some woods onto a road, where he is fatally hit by Camilla's fleeing car. The vehicle crashes into the trees. Camilla, injured, escapes into the woods. Lisbeth pursues her to a nearby clifftop, where Camilla tearfully asks why she never returned to rescue her; Lisbeth says Camilla chose to remain with their father rather than escape with her. Camilla, heavily bleeding, drops the laptop computer and steps off the cliff before Lisbeth can stop her, disappearing into a snowy mist and apparently falling to her death.

Needham attempts to access Firefall, only to discover Lisbeth has destroyed it. August is reunited with his mother in the United States. Blomkvist writes an investigative article about the Spider's Web to be published in Millennium, but then deletes it. Lisbeth destroys her childhood home as closure, then rides away on her motorcycle.

Cast

Production

Development

In November 2015,

Sony Pictures Entertainment was planning to develop a new film series based on the Millennium novels, starting from the book The Girl in the Spider's Web by David Lagercrantz.[9] Rooney Mara and Daniel Craig, who portrayed Salander and Blomkvist, respectively, in The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, would not be back for the film. New actors would be cast, and David Fincher would also not return as director, though he later received an executive producer credit.[9] Steven Knight was announced to be in talks to adapt the novel, while the producers would be Scott Rudin, Amy Pascal, and Elizabeth Cantillon, along with Yellow Bird's Berna Levin, Søren Stærmose, and Ole Sondberg.[9] TheWrap reported that Alicia Vikander was being considered for the role of Salander.[10] However, while promoting Carol, Mara stated that she was still signed for the sequel: "As far as I know I'm doing it until someone tells me otherwise".[11] Tatiana Maslany, Jane Levy and Troian Bellisario
were also linked to the project.

Casting

In November 2016, Variety reported that Sony was in negotiations with Fede Álvarez to direct the film, with Eli Bush as an additional producer.[12] In March 2017, it was announced that the film would feature an entirely new cast, with production set to begin in September 2017.[13] In May 2017, it was reported that Claire Foy was the frontrunner to play Salander, and, in September 2017, Foy was officially cast in the film.[14][15] Sylvia Hoeks joined the cast in October 2017.[16] The rest of the cast was announced over the next five months.[17][18][19][20][21][22][23]

Filming

Principal photography began in January 2018 in Berlin,[17][24] Leipzig Airport then moved to Hamburg February 2–4, for filming at the Kattwyk Bridge;[25] and ended in April 2018, in Stockholm.[26][27]

Music

Composer Roque Baños was chosen to provide the score. The recording took place at the newly opened Synchron Stage Vienna in Austria.[28]

Release

The Girl in the Spider's Web was released in the United States on November 9, 2018 by Sony.[22] It was originally scheduled for October 5, 2018, but was moved in March 2017.[13] The first trailer was released on June 7, 2018.[29] The film premiered at the Rome Film Festival on October 24, 2018.[30]

Reception

Box office

The Girl in the Spider's Web worldwide gross was $35 million, against a production budget of $43 million.[6] Having failed to recover its production budget, it emerged a box-office bomb.[31]

In the United States and Canada, The Girl in the Spider's Web was released alongside The Grinch and Overlord, and was projected to gross $10–15 million from 2,929 theaters in its opening weekend.[32] It made $3 million on its first day, including $635,000 from Thursday night previews. It went on to debut to $8 million, down from the $12.8 million opening of the first film and finishing fifth at the box office.[33] The film fell 68% in its second weekend to $2.8 million, finishing ninth.[34]

Critical response

On the

weighted average, assigned the film a score of 43 out of 100, based on 42 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[36] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B" on an A+ to F scale, while PostTrak reported filmgoers gave it a 75% positive score.[33]

Manohla Dargis of The New York Times was critical of Alvarez's action filmmaking touch-ups being "a bummer, at times risible" and giving the story "a wash of murky hues and murkier narrative developments".[37] Chris Nashawaty of Entertainment Weekly gave the film an overall C grade, calling it "a disappointingly safe, by-the-numbers action-thriller" that will be "a letdown for fans who once embraced Salander's bold queerness and bleak nihilism."[38] Peter Sobczynski of RogerEbert.com commended Alvarez for staging the action scenes in a "slick and efficient manner," but criticized the overall film for having a "genuinely terrible story" with "ham-handed storytelling" and reducing Lisbeth Salander to a "nondescript female action hero" with dialed down characteristics.[39] Greg Cwik of Slant Magazine heavily panned Alvarez's film for using a "slick but lifeless aesthetic" that rips off David Fincher's Seven and "suffers from a compulsion to be capital-C cool" with its overly stylistic touches, concluding with: "From its aping of Fincher's style to its purloining of clichés from so many James Bond films and action thrillers before it, The Girl in the Spider's Web is simply chasing the ghosts of other films."[40]

Many critics praised Foy for her portrayal of Lisbeth Salander.[41] Deborah Young of The Hollywood Reporter wrote that Foy did a "respectable job" as the character,[42] while Will Gompertz of BBC.com said she did a "reasonable job in a limited role" that doesn't go beyond "being a cartoonishly two-dimensional action hero".[43] Brian Truitt of USA Today said, "To her credit, Foy gives her a default cold demeanor and businesslike drive that is nicely upended later on when things do get personal."[44] Rolling Stone's Peter Travers called her "killer good" in the role for "supplying the nuance and grace notes that the too-busy script leaves out."[45] Katie Rife of The A.V. Club wrote that Foy gave an "interesting performance" that "splits the difference between [Rooney] Mara's mannered interpretation of the character and [Noomi] Rapace's more vulnerable work in the role".[46] Kate Erbland of IndieWire felt that Foy gave "the best on-screen depiction of Lisbeth yet," saying she makes her "more human" than the previous incarnations and delivers "a heroine not only worth cheering for, but one worth loving and even understanding."[47]

Notes

  1. ^ Characters originally created by Stieg Larsson

References

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External links