National Post

The Girl in the Spider’s Web is a tangled tale.

- Knight

The Girl in the Spider’s Web

I left the mystery-thriller The Girl in the Spider’s Web equal parts happy and puzzled. And then I made the mistake of thinking about it, and my increasing bafflement crowded out more and more of my pleasure.

I realized that director and co-writer Fede Alvarez doesn’t understand computer hacking. In the early going, Goth hacker Lisbeth Salander (Claire Foy) is approached by a brilliant programmer (Stephen Merchant) to steal something called FireFall, which will let its user control all nuclear missiles everywhere. He created it, gave it to the U.S. and then had second thoughts.

As the film progresses we learn Lisbeth can use her tech savvy to control airport security devices, open locked doors, look through walls, and even take control of another car during a highspeed chase, mostly from her iPhone and once while still woozy from a hypo full of tranquilli­zer. And is it even possible to knock people out with their car’s airbags?

I’m not claiming to be an expert in any of these fields, but you don’t have to be a chef to know when the food is overcooked. And I do know a little about screenplay­s; this one is so heavy on exposition it may actually have more words than the novel on which it’s (loosely) based. People constantly refer to each other by their full names and job titles, lest you forget that Lakeith Stanfield plays NSA agent Edwin Needham, or that Sverrir Gudnason is journalist Mikael Blomkvist, the Watson to Lisbeth’s problem-solving Holmes.

In the end, the biggest tear in the Spider’s Web is that Lisbeth has been reduced to a kind of James Bond figure, righting geopolitic­al wrongs. When she first showed up in The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (Swedish version, 2009; American remake by David Fincher, 2011) she was known as the woman who hurt men who hurt women, which seems pretty prescient almost a decade later, well into the #TimesUp movement.

But while Spider’s Web opens with a scene that reveals Lisbeth’s father to have been a sexual predator from whom she fled as a girl, followed by a bit from the trailer with the grownup Lisbeth avenging an abused wife, it never lets her get back to that kind of work again.

This movie is technicall­y the sequel to Fincher’s Dragon Tattoo, though none of its cast is the same, and for its source it skips to the fourth Lisbeth Salander novel, and the first written by David Lagercrant­z, taking over from the late Steig Larsson. If that’s too confusing a provenance, it only stresses the notion Spider’s Web is best enjoyed by not thinking about it too much. ∫∫ The Girl in the Spider’s Web opens across Canada on Nov. 9.

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