LARA CROFT:
TOMB RAIDER
In the tradition of Con Air and The General’s Daughter, director Simon
West keeps the plot thin and his characters at in his latest venture. Even Oscar winner
Angelina Jolie (for Girl, Interrupted) can’t save this big-budget lm based on the
video-game series. Her Lara Croft, the ctitious British aristocrat with an ample bosom
and an adventurous disposition, is the most popular female ever to star in a video game.
Spurred on by clues left by her long missing father (played by Jolie’s real-life dad,
Jon Voight), Lara must work against a power-hungry secret organization and their
tomb-raider-for-hire (Iain Glen) to nd two halves of an ancient artifact.
Although Tomb Raider attempts to be as innovative and imaginative as the video
game — locations included sacred Cambodian temples and the Icelandic tundra — it shames
the Indiana Jonesýgenre it robs from. The plot holes and the subpar special
effects will offend fans and non-fans of the video game alike. Jolie’s own stunt work,
including a Cirque du Soleil–esque bungee sequence, deserves more attention, yet the
lmmaker favors crotch shots over acting ability. With a sequel already in the works,
this video game is better left in the arcade. At Falmouth, Maine Mall, Auburn,
Biddeford, Bridgton, Brunswick, Chunky’s-Sanford, Lewiston, Oxford, Saco, Wells, Windham,
Lilac Mall, Newington, Somersworth, Salisbury 95.
— Julia Cohen
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