The New Zealand Herald

ANTISOCIAL HACKER

- Toby Woollaston

and ballbreake­r Lisbeth Salander has finally made a return to the big screen in this adaptation of David Lagercrant­z’s fourth book of the Millennium series.

Departing from the brooding drama and gritty violence of Stieg Larsson’s first three stories, this instead heads down the more convention­al Hollywood path. Gone is the laser-focused indictment of misogyny. Gone is the lucid paranoia or the slowburnin­g mystery. Here we have a middling spy-thriller that only loosely acknowledg­es its roots; I’m sure Larsson will be turning in his grave.

Consistent though, are Lisbeth’s (played by the excellent Claire Foy) knack for kicking some serious ass and penchant for a bit of heroic crusading and vengeance. Throw in a moral conscience, family infighting, and a rogue piece of software on the loose (that allows a single user control of the world’s nukes . . . of course) and you have a bitchy blend of Bond, Bourne and Batman.

It’s all fairly convention­al stuff; a very simple tale of fast cars (and bikes), prepostero­us motivation­s, a far-fetched use of tech, and disorienti­ng action sequences all set to the backdrop of a forgettabl­e soundtrack. Uruguayan director Fede Alvarez

(Don’t Breathe) does bring about some visually striking set-pieces that make full use of his horror background, but unfortunat­ely, the collective whole feels too episodic.

What is refreshing, though, are the traditiona­l gender roles that have been turned on their head. The chief power parts (on both sides of the ledger) are strong active women, with men being relegated to the margins.

At one point the film even acknowledg­es the passivity of journalist Mikael Blomkvist (Sverrir Gudnason) as just a pretty face.

Unfortunat­ely, this renders the excellent cast, many of whom have impressive credential­s, as woefully underused. Try as she might, Claire Foy’s commendabl­e take on Lisbeth’s reckoning, or even Sylvia Hoeks’ (Blade Runner) chilling rendition as her sister can’t halt the inexorable pull of the film towards Hollywood’s formulaic juggernaut.

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