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The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (2011) [Blu-ray]
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Rated: |
R |
Starring: |
Rooney Mara, Daniel Craig, Christopher Plummer, Joely Richardson, Robin Wright Penn, Geraldine James, Stellan Skarsgard, Steven Berkoff, Goran Visnjic, Yorick Van Wageningen, Donald Sumpter.
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Director: |
David Fincher |
Genre: |
Crime | Drama | Mystery | Thriller |
DVD Release Date: 03/20/2012 |
Tagline: What is hidden in snow comes forth in the thaw.
Tagline: I misjudged just how sick you are.
Disgraced journalist Mikael Blomkvist (Daniel Craig) accepts an invitation to surreptitiously investigate a forty year old unsolved murder on behalf of the victim's uncle, Swedish industrialist Henrik Vanger (Christopher Plummer). Meanwhile, tattooed
hacker Lisbeth Salander (Rooney Mara), hired to investigate Blomkvist, discovers the truth behind the conspiracy that led to his fall from grace. Thrown together by fate, the unlikely duo uncovers a secret history of murder and sexual abuse festering
beneath the veneer of Sweden's industrial past, all the while drawing closer to a quiet evil waiting to engulf them both.
Storyline: This English-language adaptation of the Swedish novel by Stieg Larsson follows a disgraced journalist, Mikael Blomkvist (Daniel Craig), as he investigates the disappearance of a wealthy patriarch's niece from 40 years ago. He is aided by
the pierced, tattooed, punk computer hacker named Lisbeth Salander (Rooney Mara). As they work together in the investigation, Blomkvist and Salander uncover immense corruption beyond anything they have ever imagined. Written by
Anonymous
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Martin Liebman on March 11, 2012 -- I misjudged just how sick you are. --- The fallibility of man, individualism, dark secrets, misconceptions, and all sorts of prejudices all play central to the story within
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, Director David Fincher's (The Social Network) film adaptation of the novel of the same name, written by the late Stieg Larsson and first published in 2005. The story is populated with any number of
characters, characters who are different "in every way" on the surface and behind the scenes alike. The story demonstrates that there are façades and then there are people, the true creatures behind the piercings, the court decisions, the
titles, the positions, the wealth. The story turns convention on its head, making a hero out of a misunderstood and mistreated "social outcast" and a promiscuous middle-aged and disgraced journalist who beds married women, younger women, and older women
(the latter skipped over in the film) throughout the course of the story. It makes villains of clean-cut people who are upstanding members of their communities and people charged with the delicate task of caring for those deemed to be the less fortunate
or the more asocial members of society. The only two characters who are neither evil nor in any way inwardly amoral or outwardly odd spend most, or all, of the film in a sickly, frail condition. Everything in The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo seems
upside down from convention, but that's why it works so well and speaks so loudly. Life and its secrets aren't defined by the superficial; rarely is the old axiom "what your see is what you get" adhered to in the story, and rarely does it hold true in the
real world, away from the fiction of the printed page and the images of the cinema screen.
Journalist Mikael Blomkvist (Daniel Craig) has just been found guilty of libel, the case stemming from an unflattering article he penned in his magazine, Millennium, concerning Swedish business tycoon Hans-Erik Wennerström (Ulf Friberg). As he's
packing up for an extensive leave of absence from the magazine -- choosing to leave it in the hands of co-owner and occasional lover Erika Berger (Robin Wright) -- he's contacted by Dirch Frode (Steven Berkoff), calling on behalf of his client Henrik
Vanger (Christopher Plummer), a prominent Swedish industrialist. Blomkvist agrees to meet Vanger and is presented with a proposition: uncover the truth behind the mystery disappearance and presumed death of relative Harriet Vanger, who vanished without a
trace forty years ago, a case that's obsessed Henrick ever since. His reward: a handsome salary and fresh dirt on Wennerström. Mikael agrees to look into the matter under the cover story that he's writing the Vanger family history. As Mikael digs into the
case and uncovers long-buried truths, he comes to need a research assistant. Frode suggests the same person who investigated Mikael before he was offered the job, Lisbeth Salander (Rooney Mara), a pierced and tattooed twenty-something ward of the state
who has been labeled a social outcast and a person incapable of handling her own affairs. In reality, she's an expert investigator and a gifted hacker who freelances at an investigative firm. Her own very personal dealings with untoward people gives her
greater purpose in the Harriet case, and her dealings with Mikael allow her to experience emotions long buried underneath her hardened exterior and difficult interior. As the truth behind Harriet's disappearance takes shape and as Mikael and Lisbeth's
relationship grows, they come under fire from those who would prefer the past be left buried and the present be left undisturbed.
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo superbly mixes modern social commentary and classic murder mystery, and it does so in a way never really before attempted, using the mystery to demonstrate not the absolute goodness of heroes and the undeniable evil
of villains, but to prove that life is a far more complicated challenge than the righteous condoning the unrighteous, the well-dressed and clean-cut hero piecing together the evidence and loudly proclaiming the unflappable findings in an authoritative
voice and going home once the culprit is placed behind bars. No, this is a cutting-edge tale of 21st century anthropologic analysis where nothing is clear-cut or black-and-white, save for the cold, inhospitable Hedestad winter. The story is dark,
disturbing, and deranged -- many of the characters, too -- but it's the comparative case study of who makes up the heroes and villains that's the draw. The picture speaks loudly against preconceived notions, blind judgments, and other classic prejudices
as it draws largely unconventional heroes. Lisbeth's life is shaped by those who either see and accept the person behind the piercings, tattoos, and cold exterior or who refuse to get to know her because of her appearance, age, and gender and who take for
gospel the story of her life as it's recorded in a folder penned by and for bureaucrats who treat her as a file number -- or worse -- and not as an evolving, self-sufficient individual, a state in which she exists, it would seem, largely because of the
very same judgments of others and not exclusively by her own actions. The story necessarily forces its audience to look beyond the external, see past moral disagreements, and judge others on actions, not simply outdated "norms." Certainly neither Lisbeth
nor Mikael travel the high road in all that they do, leaving much of the story in a soupy sort of moral equivalence dilemma, but then again, that seems to be the standard for life, for better or for worse, the story making gross exaggerations and working
on extremes but certainly making its point, as sharp and yet eloquent as it may be.
Director David Fincher does a superb job of telling the story from both sides, structurally de-emphasizing the character study but making sure to accentuate it within the broader thematic undercurrents. The film potentially runs into trouble considering
just how heavy it can be and usually is. It's so cold, so dark, so disgusting that it threatens to alienate segments of its audience almost by default, but that underlying theme of the dark underbelly and the dangers of distant
character judgment necessitate a more difficult-to-process visual tone. The film rarely lightens up; it's thematically heavy and structurally gray, with its second half, physically, a little brighter as the mysteries and people become more clearly
defined, but at its core The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo plays with an almost unapproachable style that leaves the audience uncomfortable both physically and emotionally. Fincher doesn't prepare his audience for what's to come, either; for as
shocking as the story may be, the director plays it straight and shows no hesitancy in doing so. Only his bleak stylings portend what's to come, yet even the seediest details become somewhat lost in translation from page to screen. The story does work a
little better with the added breathing room and deeper exposition afforded by the written word, but Fincher certainly paints clearly the dastardly characters and deeds, even when not explicitly following the book. The picture certainly hits all of the
necessary highlights, but a read-through of Larson's novel definitely helps in piecing together the themes which the film translation does indeed bring into greater focus, seeing the characters -- namely Lisbeth, Mikael, Henrik Vanger, Martin Vanger,
Palmgren, and Bjurman -- play into the broader theme of judging people on their outward attributes rather than their inward traits, of living rightly in all areas, wrongly behind-the-scenes, or as an individual who may not fit socially acceptable criteria
but who stay within the confines of basic decency until and unless pushed to do otherwise.
The complex characters require equally complex and nuanced performances, which the cast provides with Ocar-caliber efficiency. Needless to say, the film is dominated by the presence of Rooney Mara and her uncanny and complex performance of Lisbeth
Salander. Mara pulls off the superficialities of Lisbeth very well. Of course, it's much easier to paint a character from the outside-in rather than inside-out. It's simple to put on a few piercings, draw on a few tattoos, dye eyebrows, and cast a slender
young actress willing to film several brutal scenes and bare her body at several junctures. It's another altogether to so painstakingly create a character on the inside, a character who wears the external oddities with a wounded confidence so well. Mara
literally gets under Lisbeth's skin, playing the part in such a way that the personality meshes with the exterior. Her actions and decidedly understated emotions come naturally, and the audience will find the nuanced performance effectively saying much
more than is vocalized or physically demonstrated on the screen. Mara opens up a closed-off character without compromising the integrity of who Lisbeth Salander is or the intent with which Larson seemed to draw her. It's one of the most complex and
understated but effective performances in recent memory, certainly defined by far more than the immediately-evident external traits that shape, but don't define, the characters. Daniel Craig puts in a fine effort as Mikael Blomkvist, doing well in a role
away from the standard action fare in which he normally appears. His character doesn't translate quite as well to the screen as does Lisbeth, largely because time constraints keep him from the sort of intimate development enjoyed in the novel, and
partially because Mara's performance is just that good. Still, it's an effective performance but one that's certainly overshadowed by both Mara and Fincher's smooth and pinpoint direction, the latter largely defined by its subtleties. For example, the
film's first half borders on black-and-white with one of the first real splashes of brightness and color coming when Mikael first dines with Martin in his wide-open glass-walled house, the relative glow and obvious transparency both making for interesting
studies in cinema style as it shapes structure, defines expectations, and helps tell a story.
One could probably write a dissertation about the layers, themes, and characters of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo with only cursory mention of the murder mystery plot. Indeed, David Fincher's latest masterpiece and the source novel both are
complexly thought-provoking beyond the confines of a film review. The two compliment one another beautifully; though the film doesn't show everything from the book or follow it quite to the letter (in fact, the film wraps up the story with
haste, which is its only real problem), Fincher's vision for the story stays pretty much true to the source. Seeing the people, watching them work, and witnessing their personal failures, positive traits, and places in the world gives an added layer to
the story that nicely supplements the written word and helps tie together some of the ideas and themes that are fully explored in the book but that seem a little more obvious when watched rather than read. The movie is expertly crafted and the
performances are superb, with Rooney Mara turning in one of the most complex and nuanced performances in quite a long time, a performance certainly deserving of more than an Oscar nomination. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo has the potential to
disturb its audiences with its graphic dealings and decidedly adult-oriented themes, but it's one of the top must-see films of 2011. Sony's Blu-ray release of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo delivers stunning video, fantastic audio, and plenty of
extras. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo earns my highest recommendation.
Cast Notes: Daniel Craig (Mikael Blomkvist), Rooney Mara (Lisbeth Salander), Christopher Plummer (Henrik Vanger), Stellan Skarsgård (Martin Vanger), Steven Berkoff (Dirch Frode), Robin Wright (Erika Berger), Yorick van Wageningen (Nils Bjurman),
Joely Richardson (Anita Vanger), Geraldine James (Cecilia Vanger), Goran Visnjic (Dragan Armansky), Donald Sumpter (Detective Inspector Gustaf Morell), Ulf Friberg (Hans-Erik Wennerström), Bengt C.W. Carlsson (Holger Palmgren), Tony Way (Plague), Per
Myrberg (Harald Vanger).
IMDb Rating (07/24/14): 7.9/10 from 258,738 users
IMDb Rating (03/02/12): 8.1/10 from 73,657 users Top 250: #242
Additional information |
Copyright: |
2011, Sony Pictures Home Entertainment |
Features: |
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo contains a wealth of bonus materials. Disc two houses most of them, and the majority are broken into subsets beyond the main-page listings of Characters, On Location, Post Production, and
Promotion. Most of the supplements contain extensive behind-the-scenes footage as the core narrative is shaped through interviews. Notably absent are any deleted or extended scenes. English subtitles are available with the supplements. Disc three
contains a DVD copy of the film. An Ultraviolet digital copy is also included.
Disc One:
- Audio Commentary: Director David Fincher offers a thorough and engaging track, covering a wide array of topics, including but not limited to the cover of Immigrant Song for the opening titles, the opening title design, shooting locales
and preparing them for particular scenes, character traits and dynamics, the quality and performances of the cast, utilizing a "five-act" structure, digital effects, shooting the rape scene and fleshing out the accompanying character and thematic
undercurrents, shaping the characters beyond the superficial, creating all of the photographic evidence from the day of the disappearance and accident, deleted scenes, and much more. There are some fantastic insights within this track; it helps shape the
story and the characters, not only the filmmaking process. This is a complete and entertaining track that comes recommended for all audiences.
Disc Two:
- Men who Hate Women (1080p, 6:40): Cast and crew discuss the success of the novel, transitioning it to film and condensing it for the medium, and gender dynamics in Sweden.
- Casting Salander (1080p, 15:42): Cast and crew, including Mara, discuss her casting. They speak on her previous work with Fincher in The Social Network, preparations for rehearsal, the physical and emotional changes necessary for the
role, the qualities she brought to the role, the difficulties in landing the role, the long-term implications of taking the part, and more.
- Different in Every Way (1080p, 5:32): Lisbeth's character traits and background.
- The Look of Salander (1080p, 14:06): A piece that focuses on creating a "dark and brooding" iconic character, including hair design, bleaching the eyebrows, piercings and tattoos, makeup, and costumes.
- Mara/Fincher (1080p, 4:09): This supplement features Mara and Fincher praising one another's work and dedication.
- Irene Nesser (1080p, 6:25): Mara's performance of Lisbeth's physical transformation for the end of the film.
- Salander Test Footage (1080p, 2:53): "Early in the testing phase David Fincher & Rooney Mara surreptitiously walked the streets of Los Angels with a mini camera to get a sense of how their burgeoning Salander felt out in the real world."
- Casting Blomkvist (1080p, 6:44): Craig discusses the opportunity to work with great source material and David Fincher. Discussions also include the Blomkvist character, Craig's appeal, and the importance of accentuating both Blomkvist and
Salander in the film.
- Daniel Craig on Film Acting (1080p, 3:31): The actor discusses his approach to the craft.
- Dressing Blomkvist (1080p, 2:56): A short look at the process of making Craig "a little less Bond" and the clothes he wears in the film.
- Investigation (Stills) (1080p): A gallery consisting of In the Cottage, Anita in the Window, Harriet at the Parade, and Vanger Newsletter.
- Stellan Skarsgård on Acting (1080p, 3:13): The actor discusses his processes for crafting a great performance.
- Psychopathy (1080p, 6:11): Stellan Skarsgård speaks on psychopaths and playing one.
- Bondage (1080p, 5:29): An interesting look at the design and function of the bondage device that plays central to the picture's climax.
- Torture (1080p, 4:09): A raw look at the process of making the torture scene.
- Wrapped in Plastic (1080p, 4:37): Shooting a plastic bag over a head from a first-person perspective.
- Set Design (Stills) (1080p): Hedestad, Vanger Estate, Vanger Attic, and Harald's Den.
- Stockholm Syndrome (17:54): A look at the necessity of shooting in Sweden, with emphasis on the country's culture, history, climate, and politics as they play central to the storyline. Also examined is the country's film industry.
- Stockholm's Tunnelbana (1080p, 6:24): Cast and crew discuss the benefits of shooting in Sweden insofar as better understanding the culture as it centers around a scene involving an attempted theft of Salander's laptop.
- F*ck These People (1080p, 6:03): A raw look at the making of a scene that was ultimately re-scripted for another location, and the interruptions that disrupted shooting.
- The End (1080p, 11:58): A thorough examination of the shooting of the film's final moments and the conveyance of the emotions that shape it.
- Picture Wrap (1080p, 6:53): The supplement offers viewers a glimpse into shooting at the end of the process in Sweden and provides a very brief glimpse into the celebration that followed.
- Casting Armansky (1080p, 4:44): Goran Visnjic discusses landing and playing the role of Salander's employer at Milton Security.
- Armansky Audition (1080p, 6:42): Goran Visnjic works with David Fincher in shaping the character and his performance.
- Thinking Evil Sh*t (1080p, 5:09): Shooting one of the film's critical emotional-based scenes with a complicated camera movement and from a unique perspective.
- Rape/Revenge (1080p, 16:52): A detailed look at the making of the film's most challenging scenes, discussed from thematic, emotional, and cinematic perspectives.
- Int. Blomkvist's Cottage (1080p, 5:42): This piece looks at the technical challenges of shooting one of the scenes inside the cottage.
- Int. Martin's House (1080p, 7:39): A supplement that combines a look at the work and style of David Fincher along with the process of shooting some of the scenes in Martin Vanger's house.
- Int. Salander's Apt. (1080p, 2:40): Raw behind-the-scenes footage.
- In the Cutting Room (1080p, 14:23): A detailed examination of the editing process, centered around Fincher screening scenes from the film.
- ADR (1080p, 6:37): In the recording studio for post-production dialogue recording.
- Main Titles (1080p, 2:33): "Compare the final title sequence to its earliest stages of development in a three-way composite." Viewers may also watch any off the three variations in a full-screen mode. Available with optional commentary by Tim
Miller of Blur Studio.
- Visual Effects Montage (1080p, 8:01): A supplement that showcases various scenes in different stages of completion.
- Hard Copy (480p, 8:58): "This mock episode of the 80's-90's era tabloid show was created as part of the film's internet promotion." Available with optional commentary by David Prior.
- TV Spots (1080p, 0:32 each): Introduction Final; Me, Killer & You Final; Character Final Revised; Graphic Event; Pedigree Revised; Duress Revised; and Revenge.
- Trailers (1080p): Theatrical Teaser (1:41), Trailer 3 (3:47), Trailer 4 (1:10), and Trailer 5 (2:08).
- Metal One Sheet (1080p, 4:00): A look at the process of creating a metallic poster.
- Disc Production Credits.
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Subtitles: |
English, Spanish, French, Hebrew, Arabic, French-Canadian, Hindi |
Video: |
Widescreen 2.40:1 Color Screen Resolution: 1080p Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1 |
Audio: |
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1
ENGLISH: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
FRENCH-CANADIAN: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
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Time: |
2:39 |
DVD: |
# Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1 |
UPC: |
043396395947 |
Coding: |
[V4.5-A4.5] MPEG-4 AVC |
D-Box: |
Yes |
Other: |
Producers: Scott Rudin, Cean Chaffin, Soren Staermose; Directors: David Fincher; Writers: Steven Zaillian; running time of 159 minutes. Blu-ray Only --- (The DVD/UV-Digital Copy --> Given
Away)
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