Thursday, December 22, 2011
Two Dragons
Two Dragons
Two questions have haunted David Fincher’s much-anticipated
American version of The Girl With the
Dragon Tattoo: will it be worth the
wait? and is there really a reason to
make it in the first place? Well, now that it is here, it’s safe to say
that the answer to the first is that it most definitely was worth the wait: it
is a relentlessly dark movie about relentlessly dark people with mysterious and
dark histories. And it is brilliant. As to the second question, which begs the
notion of whether Fincher could add anything new to the visualization that the
2009 Swedish version did not (other than a far greater budget), I was willing
to bet that America’s greatest stylist could manage to make it his own in some sort of way. And I think I’d win
that bet also.
Fincher’s take on the first book of Stieg Larsson’s
Millennium Trilogy turns out to be less Se7en
and more Zodiac, not so much the
thriller as the pulsating, slowing unwinding, inexorable mystery, which is
exactly what Larsson’s book, with its vast complexities of financial
malfeasance, familial discord, and cryptic clues, is in the first place. The
director begins, as the book and the Swedish film both do, by presenting the
acute reason for trying to unravel a cold case now 40 years old, the arrival of
a birthday gift. What follows this brief moment is a title sequence, over Karen
O’s cover of “Immigrant Song,” that is surreal and haunting and rather
frightening as it sets up some of the uglier backstory in enigmatic, Rorschach
images. Once free of this nightmare, though, Fincher moves somewhat more
conventionally.
Using a palette of white and gray and light gray and dark
gray and several other shades of gray, (to which he generously adds some sepia
when he moves indoors) Fincher shows us a part of Sweden trapped in a
never-ending frozen state that one character not too inaccurately calls “the
North Pole.” Niels Arden Oplev, director of the Swedish film, opted for a less
restrictive palette, even allowing (gasp) sunshine to penetrate his Hedeby Island.
Not so Fincher, whose island is in a snowstorm when Mikael Blomkvist (Daniel
Craig) arrives at the behest of the patriarch of the powerful Vanger family,
Henrik Vanger (Christopher Plummer) to try to solve the mystery of his niece’s
disappearance forty years ago and it never seems to stop. The one notable exception to the dull color scheme is the bright, modern sharpness of the home of the Martin Vanger, the missing girl's brother, and Fincher has his own ironic reasons for that choice. The otherwise ubiquitous dull gray is
reflected in the life that the Vangers are living, shut up on what might once
have been their island retreat but now has become more of a prison: practically
none of them likes any of the others and no one speaks to anyone else, the
perfect self-punishment for what Henrik calls “the most detestable collection
of people that you will ever meet.” It also reflects the painstaking search for
the answers here. They do not swoop in conveniently: they are pieced together
slowly from old photographs and opaque diary entries and decades-old hotel
receipts. This is real investigative
journalism, even if it is aided by a tech whiz with access to anything she
wants.
Plummer does what he can with an undemanding role, and
Stellan Skarsgård shines as one of the members of the Vanger clan, but Craig’s
performance is revelatory. In every film he is in we see his strength as well
as his vulnerability, and both are at play here. Blomkvist comes to Hedeby on
the heels of a trumped-up libel conviction, and in Craig’s face and eyes can be
read his character’s ambivalence about whether he even goes on writing. While
Michael Nyqvist portrays this character well in the Swedish film, his
performance remains oddly distant from the viewer: we do not get a chance to
live inside of Blomkvist’s mind as we watch him go through his difficulties
(which include attempts on his life). The result is something that we can
believe and appreciate and even enjoy, but that does not seem complete. Craig’s far more emotional,
more vulnerable performance gives us that intimacy. When he has been shot, the
audience can feel the pain of the wound. When he realizes—too late—that he has
made a terrible mistake, it only takes a glance at a knife to show us the
horror he is feeling.
The biggest question going into this film, of course, was
whether Rooney Mara’s performance as emotionally damaged hacker extraordinaire
Lisbeth Salander could be anywhere near as strong and memorable as the
already-iconic one created by Noomi Rapace in the Swedish version. The answer,
with no offense to Rapace, is absolutely yes, but it is complicated. The two
actresses and their directors create the character in very different ways.
Rapace, who allows more of the natural feminine of her face to remain visible
and unshadowed, for all of her smallness and thinness stays distinctly female
throughout the film. Even in the most horrific scene (in both films), the rape
and revenge sequence with her “guardian,” she manages a small feminine smile as
she finishes her revenge telling him not to move or what she is doing to him
“won’t look nice.” Her vulnerability comes from being a young woman in a man’s
world, a woman who has been hurt many, many times by many, many men. When she
gives herself to Blomkvist in one scene, it is a brief, entirely sexual encounter,
over the second it is complete.
In contrast, Mara hides more of her face in shadow through
the angles in which she turns her body, behind her forbidding piercings, and
(most notably) behind an ever-morphing head of hair that either pulls attention
away or covers part of it intentionally, leaving herself more unknown, more of
a mystery. She is a riddle: her clothing gives nothing at all away of gender;
her lifestyle gives nothing away of the genius she possesses. The only part of
Mara’s Lisbeth that lives on the surface is her anger. It is always right
there, waiting to explode. Mara’s Lisbeth is a wild animal keeping herself in
line by sheer strength of will. She has developed a tremendous capacity for
compartmentalization; otherwise she would certainly be institutionalized. It is
never clearer than in the revenge scene. Rapace’s Lisbeth cannot wait to zap
her assailant with a stun gun; Mara’s has a plan and will carry it out as
dispassionately as possible…until she
gets him trussed and vulnerable, the way he had her. The she can let the animal
loose. And no sweet tones in her
voice when she tells him not to move or it won’t look good. She practically
hisses it.
Nonetheless, within a few scenes, she’s in bed with a woman.
And within not too many more scenes, she’s in bed with Blomkvist.
Compartmentalizing. It has become as natural to her as her photographic memory
or her hacking skills. It helps her survive. It can be argued that Rapace shows
this capacity too, but not to this extent. And that is one of the defining
distinctions between the characterizations.
Another is the sheer urgency
of Mara’s characterization, as well as her clear vulnerability, which comes out
in many places during the film. Mara’s Lisbeth is vulnerable for a different
reason than Rapace’s though: she has methodically destroyed the feminine within
her unless she wants it there, so now she is vulnerable because she is the unwanted. What she has made herself
into is exactly what society does not want. Both actresses are small and thin,
though each shows herself capable of putting up a good fight, and it seems
clear after watching both of them that whichever
had come first would have been seen as the archetype for the character.
I’ve read reviews online that find fault with Fincher for
his use of the book’s final chapters (which bring to a conclusion the
convoluted and fairly arcane financial matters that got Blomkvist into trouble
at the book’s start), which Oplev’s version merely glossed over. But, although
it does seem a bit of an anticlimax, I won’t fault him for this. I’d rather
fault Oplev for cutting the entire relationship between Blomkvist and his
partner at Millennium magazine, Erika Berger (Robin Wright), an error that
caused no end of havoc in the subsequent films of the series. I might question
a pretty significant alteration to the ending that readers of the book with
notice right away and wonder why Fincher felt it necessary. (Oplev managed it.) But the bottom line is that this big budget
American version of the Swedish popular novel is well worth seeing, whether or
not you’ve seen the Swedish version. Here's hoping audiences reward Fincher's effort so that we can see what he does with the considerably less confining storyline of the second novel.
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sunsparks
it's your hair that i notice first
streaked with morning
it frames your face
you lying there eyes closed
soft breath not quite there
unmoving
i follow its path as it bends the sheet
and i can touch you there
touch what i feel is you
in the spark of daylight
you'll rise
pull on the wrinkled shirt from last night
say something you think is beautiful
drink some coffee
from behind my paper
and drive away,
leaving a kiss on my lips
and a hole in my heart
where a fire ought to be
Favorite Films
- The Wizard Of Oz
- Amelie
- The Princess Bride
- Casablanca
- Annie Hall
- The Lord of the Rings
- All That Jazz
- Citizen Kane
- Love Actually
- Moulin Rouge
- Big Fish
- When Harry Met Sally
- Almost Famous
- Bull Durham
- Notting Hill
- Apocalypse Now (Redux)
- Magnolia
All-Time Favorite TV Shows
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer
- Gilmore Girls
- M*A*S*H
- The West Wing
- The X-Files
- The Daily Show
- Ally McBeal
- Picket Fences
- All In The Family
- Seinfeld
- The Mary Tyler Moore Show
- Star Trek
- Firefly
- Wonderfalls
- Northern Exposure
- Get Smart
- The Dick Van Dyke Show
- Twin Peaks
- The Larry Sanders Show
- Monk
- Felicity
- St. Elsewhere
Current TV Shows I Enjoy (in no particular order)
- Perception
- Major Crimes
- American Horror Story
- Louie
- Suits
- The Newsroom
- Falling Skies
- Franklin and Bash
- Veep
- Scandal
- Fairly Legal
- Girls
- Don't Trust the B---
- Justified
- Portlandia
- Psych
- The Middle
- Person of Interest
- Happy Endings
- Hart of Dixie
- Real Time with Bill Maher
- Nikita
- Raising Hope
- Castle
- Drop Dead Diva
- Covert Affairs
- Elementary
- Rizzoli and Isles
- Revolution
- The Last Resort
- Alphas
- SNL
- Revenge
- Community
- Suburgatory
- New Girl
- Once Upon a Time
- Grimm
- Nashville
- Downton Abbey
- Smash
- Homeland
- Fringe
- Glee
- Haven
- Community
- Warehouse 13
- Modern Family
- Vampire Diaries
- The Daily Show
- How I Met Your Mother
- The Colbert Report
- Parks and Recreation
- Leverage
- Rachel Maddow Show
1 comment:
You've written an amazing piece. I guess I have to go see the American version now. The trailers do leave me a bit disconcerted though. I'm so used to hearing the films in their native Swedish a lot of the character is missing. Thanks for putting pen to paper!
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