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Thread: The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest

  1. #1
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    The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest

    Rolling Stone says The Girl Who Played with Fire is being released this week somewhere in America. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo is still playing at our local art house in Menlo Park. The S.F. Chronicle concurred, but called it Dragon Tattoo in one of the reviews (not in the photo caption) and said it starred Lizbeth Salander instead of Noomi. Suddenly my copy of Fire isn't as cool, so to stay ahead of the curve, I watched Hornet's Nest. Gotta keep avante garde, you know.

    Hornet's was quite good, picking up right where Fire ended. It doesn't have the visceral punch of the two previous films, despite opening with a brain operation, and it's a little predictable, but the trilogy is a well told story and Lizbeth finally finds justice. That's such a relief. Tattoo sets the hook, Fire rocks with the best fights, best sex scenes, and best mag cameo ever, and Hornet's winds it all down to a happy ending. Noomi is excellent again but hospitalized and incarcerated for most of it, which detracts from her dynamism. All in all, a great trilogy - a tad long-winded, yet satisfying until the last. I'm very eager to see what Noomi does next.

    YOU MUST SEE THE GIRL WHO PLAYED WITH FIRE. It's the most martial of the trilogy and you can cheer out loud when you see our mag cameo. But if you don't see The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, it's like see The Empire Strikes Back before seeing Star Wars: A New Hope. It's not absolutely necessary to see Hornet's, but if you see the first two, you'll probably get hooked and have to see it.

    I'm grateful for Yellow Bird and I'm honored that our mag has a cameo. Millennium reminds me of our mag a lot. As a publisher, my life is so like Blomquist's, except instead of guns, it's swords and rope darts. Seriously, I could totally empathize with what he went through. That's like my typical work week.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  2. #2
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    Opening in America

    Another limited release. You really must see the first two films for this one to make any sense at all.
    Rapace is the girl who played with an inner fire
    Michael Ordoña, Special to The Chronicle
    San Francisco Chronicle October 24, 2010 04:00 AM

    Noomi Rapace has memorably played Lisbeth Salander in three films based on Stieg Larsson's books.

    On the phone, what jumps out about Sweden's Noomi Rapace, who indelibly portrayed iron-willed woman of few words Lisbeth Salander in the "Millennium Trilogy" films, is her British-inflected English and rapid-fire, energetic speech.

    "I think she's a beautiful example of how you can manage to survive and turn yourself from being a victim, being ****ed on and treated so badly, how you can turn it into strength and into power," she says of the much-beloved character.

    "She doesn't feel pity for herself. She doesn't complain. She always finds a way to act instead of being wrapped up in a lot of emotional issues. She's a survivor and a fighter, and she's trying every minute to free herself and not accept the destiny that everybody around her, pretty much, has forced her into. I think that's pretty beautiful."

    Like the books by the late Stieg Larsson from which they spring, the films ("The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo," "The Girl Who Played with Fire" and the soon-to-be-released "The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest") have become international sensations, bringing the acclaimed actress a whole new level of fame. That the stories should be so successful is itself surprising, considering the darkness of their subject matter - including rape, torture and Nazism.

    "Yeah!" Rapace exclaims with a laugh. "What does that tell about our world? But I think people have always liked to see (an underdog), like Lisbeth; she's fighting these big dragons - society, police, her father, the government, the whole system - she's lonely and in a very bad position, but she's fighting back.

    "I also think the world is pretty complicated and people are ready to see films about difficulties in life. I think people are pretty fed up with super-beautiful ... they've been waiting for someone like Lisbeth to come. When I was a teenager, I saw 'Thelma and Louise' - I don't know how many times I saw that film. I saw 'Aliens,' I was really looking for films with some kind of heroines - girls and women who were fighting back and just weren't sitting and whining and feeling sorry for themselves."

    The first book ("Dragon Tattoo") introduces Salander and muckraking journalist Mikael Blomqvist, eventually bringing them together through the mystery of a missing person to uncover a larger, horrifying series of crimes. Along the way, the diminutive, antisocial hacker endures quite a lot, including a brutal rape. In a twist that turns out to be characteristic of Salander, she later repays her assailant - with interest.

    "When we went into those more complicated and dark scenes, it came from some deeper, darker levels in me," says the actress. "When we were done for the day and I was in the car on my way home, I really felt black inside, like I don't have any hope for anything and I don't see any light in my life. I was really angry and empty inside. It was like that for a whole week ... but I knew I wanted to go all the way, in every direction, to the end station."

    Larsson seemed to figure out readily enough what the main draw of that first book was; the next two focus on Lisbeth, uncovering pieces of her backstory until the third one ("Hornet's Nest") brings it all to light, from under the shadow of a full-blown cloak-and-dagger conspiracy.

    Rapace, whose portrayal unforgettably captures Lisbeth's razor-sharp intelligence, indomitable spirit and ugly, feral nature when cornered, describes the character's journey as one of "growing up" and learning that "everybody's not ... using you. Some people won't turn their back on you; they will stay with you and fight your fight."

    The actress had fights of her own in trying to stay true to her conception of the character. Chat rooms still debate whether she's too beautiful for the part of the boyish punk hacker, and she has acknowledged she was an unlikely choice because she's "pretty feminine."

    So she underwent months of physical training and got Lisbeth-appropriate piercings to help the character take root in her. After the first film's climax, the script had her spilling her guts to Blomqvist, revealing her most guarded secrets. The scene wasn't in the book (it used information from the next two), and Rapace flatly refused to do it.

    "It was a big, big fight and the director (Niels Arden Oplev) was really mad at me at one point. He said, 'You have to do it; otherwise we don't have a film.' I said, 'Yeah yeah yeah, call the producers and tell them we don't have a film; I won't do that scene,' " she says with a laugh. "He came back a couple of days later and said, 'What if Mikael is the one who is talking? You don't have to tell me. I can see that you've gone through something difficult. I'm happy that you're here with me and you saved my life.' "

    The result was one of her favorite scenes in the series, including what she guesses is the first time Lisbeth ever said "Thank you" to anyone. Meanwhile, dedicated fans continue to say "Thank you" to the actress in remarkable ways.

    "I was in Spain this summer with my family and I was on a bus and all of a sudden this woman comes to me and she's just staring, saying, 'Is it you? Is it you?' She just cried and said, 'I was so upset when I heard they were going to do films, then when I saw them ... I've seen them 10 times!' She was just crying. I really saw how extremely important Lisbeth had been to her. I was on the bus with my son for an hour; she just opened up her whole heart. Lisbeth had helped her through some difficult situations. It's amazing." {sbox}

    The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest (R) opens Wednesday at Bay Area theaters.

    To see a trailer for the film, go to www.millenniumfilmtrilogy.com.
    Noomi Rapace

    Born: Noomi Norén, Dec. 28, 1979, Hudiksvall, Gävleborgs län, Sweden.

    Personal: Married actor Ola Norell in 2001 (filed for divorce); according to Entertainment Weekly, the couple chose the surname "Rapace," which means "bird of prey" in French.

    Why we care: Before the "Millennium Trilogy," won best actress honors from the Robert Festival and Bodil Awards for "Daisy Diamond" (2007). Won the best actress crown from the Guildbagge Awards and nominated at the European Film Awards for "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" (2009).

    Quotable: Rapace has repeatedly stated that she is done playing Lisbeth Salander, especially when asked about the in-the-works American remake of "Dragon Tattoo." But what of the rumored fourth "Millennium" book? The late Larsson's common-law wife reportedly may have the writer's final work on a laptop in her possession. Would Rapace consent to return to the role if there were another Larsson book? "I've heard that, too. Actually, it's a fifth book - he started to write a fifth instead because he - I don't know. It's all hidden in a lot of mystery in Sweden," she says. "I felt pretty strongly that I was done with (Lisbeth), that I had done everything I could. He didn't finish that book; nobody knows how much he did, how much there actually is. But Lisbeth lived in me for 1 1/2 years and then I left her. I don't think I ever will go back into her."
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  3. #3
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    In the spirit of all these books and movies, I am currently filming " The Girl that is making sweet love to Sanjuro Ronin" starring me and Jessican Alba and Jessican Biel and Katarina Law.
    Psalms 144:1
    Praise be my Lord my Rock,
    He trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle !

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by sanjuro_ronin View Post
    In the spirit of all these books and movies, I am currently filming " The Girl that is making sweet love to Sanjuro Ronin" starring me and Jessican Alba and Jessican Biel and Katarina Law.
    I bet you Jessican't !!!

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by CFT View Post
    I bet you Jessican't !!!
    Humility and being a gentlemen precludes me "kissing and telling" but WOW, what a week !!!
    Psalms 144:1
    Praise be my Lord my Rock,
    He trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle !

  6. #6
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    You also have exquisite taste. My hat's off to you sir.

  7. #7
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    I doubt I'll get out for this

    I didn't see Fire in the theaters and that's the one with our mag cameo.
    Review: 'The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest'
    Amy Biancolli, Hearst Movie Writer
    Friday, October 29, 2010

    POLITE APPLAUSE Thriller. Directed by Daniel Alfredson. Starring Noomi Rapace and Michael Nyqvist. (R. 148 minutes. At Bay Area theaters.)


    Music Box Films
    Noomi Rapace plays Lisbeth Salander again in "The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest," the third and final film based on Stieg Larsson's novels.

    "The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest" is one of the knottiest, talkiest tangles of celluloid to roll into theaters this year.

    It is, as even semi-conscious moviegoers already know, the third and closing chapter in Stieg Larsson's Millennium trilogy - based on the hugely popular Swedish novels about a damaged goth pixie and the crusading journalist who befriends and defends her. "Hornet's Nest" isn't the best of the three (that would be the first film, "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo"), but it's the most challenging. It requires patience, fortitude and the ability to keep tabs on multiple characters in complicated subplots.

    When we last saw Lisbeth Salander (Noomi Rapace) at the end of "The Girl Who Played With Fire," she was shot in the head, buried alive and lived to whack her father with an ax, all while being pursued by an insensate blond monstrosity who happens to be her half brother. "Hornet's Nest" opens with flashbacks to these events, then pays hospital visits to Lisbeth and her hacked-up daddy, a terrorizing Soviet defector she also once set ablaze.

    The film begins in earnest as members of a long-dormant shadow conspiracy are roused into action. With Lisbeth facing attempted murder charges, editor Mikael Blomkvist (Michael Nyqvist) and his staff dig up information on the elusive men of power who've been violating her for decades. Meanwhile, the Swedish government opens its own investigation. The conspirators conspire. And the mute albino hulk (Micke Spreitz) roams the countryside, offing people.

    What unfolds is part political thriller, part police procedural, part "Da Vinci Code" hooey and part courtroom drama, with bouts of peripheral serial killing and lurid psychological horror of the evil-shrink variety. Lisbeth, small of frame and strange of hair, is a figure of explosive violence and implosive psychic wounds. But she spends most of the film confined: first to a hospital room, then to a cell. What's more, she barely speaks.

    Lisbeth's saga is, at its core, a cautionary tale for abusive caregivers and delinquent social services, but it's almost undone by sprawl. That the movie holds together at all is a testament to a smart, meaty screenplay by Jonas Frykberg and Ulf Ryberg and Daniel Alfredson's assured direction, which treats the most ludicrous plot developments with stylish Hitch****ian poise.

    "Hornet" marks the last of the Scandinavian adaptations; in about a year, we'll see the first of the American productions, directed by David Fincher and starring Daniel Craig. But for now, and for audiences who won't faint at the sight of subtitles or shrink from t***** plotting, the Swedish films offer a trio of seductively brainy thrillers.

    -- Advisory: Strong violence, some sexual material and brief language.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

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