Daily Mirror

TOMB RAIDER

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Cert Running time

Swedish superstar Alicia Vikander swings into action in this big budget reboot of groundbrea­king video game character, Lara Croft. Famously made flesh by fellow Oscar winner Angelina Jolie in 2001 and 2003, Vikander offers a grittier and more punishing interpreta­tion.

This one is based on the 2013 version of the game and explains how Lara becomes a kick-ass, globe-trotting explorer.

So we see how she evolves from an aristocrat­ic cycle courier to a cold-hearted killer, cultural vandal and unrepentan­t destroyer of antiquitie­s.

The script leans heavily on Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, but lacks any interest in protecting or learning about historical artefacts, which apparently do not belong in a museum.

Dominic West cuts an avuncular dash as her father, Lord Croft, who went missing years ago while searching for a legendary Japanese witch queen. He left Lara a secret home video recording as a clue to his whereabout­s.

Proudly pig-headed, Lara refuses to use her inherited millions in finding her father, as she’s angry with him for abandoning her to a life of unimaginab­le privilege as a teenager.

Walton Goggins plays the bad guy who’s a member of the shadowy Trinity organisati­on and her rival in the search for the queen’s tomb. Despite being set in the here and now, the film’s smartest move is pretending the potentiall­y plot-wrecking internet doesn’t exist.

Smartphone­s, social media and especially Google maps are absent.

There’s no faulting the location work and the film’s highlight is an impressive­ly staged extended stunt sequence involving an ancient aeroplane and a waterfall.

But there’s a lack of urgency and giddy escapism, plus the dialogue and humour fall as flat as Lara frequently does during her attempted heroics.

This is a long backstory to introduce a new franchise and if you want to see the fully formed pistol-packing version of Lara, you will have to wait around for the sequel.

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