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Saying
Lara Croft: Tomb Raider
is the best film to ever be adapted from a video game isn't
really that much of a compliment.
There have been too many Wing
Commanders and Double Dragons to make that statement mean anything at all.
Here's the skinny: Tomb Raider is a
blast and will likely be one of the summer's better action
films. Sure, it
makes less sense than Swordfish,
and when its over-the-top action isn't at full-throttle, the
flick is kind of a bore. But
does any of that matter when Angelina Jolie gets to wear so many
cute outfits?
Jolie
(Gone
in 60 Seconds) stars as the titular Lady Lara Croft
(with the emphasis on "titular"), a wealthy Brit with
a knack for busting into tombs Indiana Jones-style.
Her mum is dead, and her treasure-hunting father (Pearl
Harbor's Jon Voight, Jolie's real-life dad) has been
missing for 15 years. Lara is a little like Bruce Wayne, in that
she lives in a giant mansion, complete with a doting butler
(Chris Barrie), and lives somewhat of a double life.
Tomb Raider's
first scene establishes Lara as a major-league ass-kicker,
complete with a penchant for John Woo-esque double-fisted
gunplay as she battles an insect-like robot that turns out to be
a training device created by her chum Bryce (Shine's
Noah Taylor, who is basically playing an Aussie Seth Green).
Without
going too much into the plot for a couple reasons (one, it
barely matters; and two, I still don't understand most of it), Tomb
Raider revolves around a rare astrological event in which
all nine planets of our solar system align and create a total
solar eclipse. The
blackout, which only happens once every 5,000 years, allows the
world access to a magical triangle with an all-seeing eye that
gives its possessor the ability to manipulate time. The catch is
that several years ago, the triangle was broken into two pieces
and hidden at opposite ends of the earth to keep it from falling
into the hands of an evil madman.
Coincidentally, a group of evil madmen called the
Illuminati (led by a guy named Richard Johnson...no joke) is
after the triangle pieces to, presumably, do some really bad
stuff. Manfred Powell (Iain Glen) is put in charge of finding
the triangle and returning it to the Illuminati.
Lara gets dragged into
the whole thing when she begins to find clues left behind by her
dead dad (one involves – get this – a mysterious clock
hidden inside another clock hidden under the stairs).
Powell and his band of soldiers bust into Lara's pad and
steal the clock, but not until we're treated to a nifty action
sequence involving Ms. Croft, a pair of white pajamas (with only
the top button done) and a bungee cord, which enables her to fly
around like Zhang Ziyi while she's cracking skulls.
She's
flying through the air. She's
sporting a buff British accent.
She's riding motorcycles.
She's even taking a shower!
Is there anything this girl can't do?
Jolie even looks like Lara a few times, and did I mention
she gets to wear a bunch of cute outfits, to boot?
And as silly and implausible as most of the action was in
Tomb Raider, I never
once rolled my eyes and said, "Cripes, there's no way she
could have done that."
Is she an Indiana Jones rip-off?
You bet, but Indy never looked this good when he was
covered in sweat.
Tomb
Raider
is full of the things that made Raiders
of the Lost Ark a cool ride.
There are plenty of booby-trapped tombs (emphasis on
"booby"), secret doors and the like.
There are a couple of scenes that make Ark's
giant boulder look downright laughable at this point.
Plus, like Indy, Lara has a really old father who used to
be an actor, like, a hundred years ago.
There
are negatives, though. The
action-packed peaks are wonderful, but the valleys are
atrocious. Glen is
the least threatening bad guy since Dougray Scott stunk up the
joint in M:I-2,
and he's practically interchangeable with Daniel Craig (I Dreamed of Africa), who plays
another treasure hunter (and I'm still not sure if he was a good
guy or a bad guy). Tomb Raider is also
packed full of product placement, which will always result in a
lower overall rating (except with Wayne's
World).
Tomb
Raider was directed by The
General's Daughter's Simon West and written by a
hodgepodge of scribes; most of them are rookies, but two penned
the equally far-fetched but totally enjoyable Face/Off.
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for
action violence and some sensuality |
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