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The Girl in the Spider's Web: A New Dragon Tattoo Story
Frans Balder of the National Security Agency launched a dangerous hacker called Lisbeth Slender for the purpose of stealing a program called Fire Wall. This program is the most dangerous in the world where it can access the symbols of nuclear weapons around the world. Lisbeth may be the most dangerous hacker to do the job, but the download takes the attention of the NSA agent, who tracks the activity to Stockholm. Lisbeth is surprised to steal her laptop from a group of Russian thieves.
CRITICS OF "The Girl in the Spider's Web: A New Dragon Tattoo Story"
El Mundo (Spain)
The director turns Lisbeth into the perfect female replicant of James Bond; half secret agent and half neighborhood superhero. [Full Review in Spanish]
Much of what made the preceding four films so daringly unique is gone. In its place is a muddled film that, despite an earnest performance from Claire Foy, leaves very little impression.
The problem: better material is needed and the audience can almost see the hand of the studio executives tapping [Alvarez] on the back and reminding him to remember for whom he's directing the film.
In some moments, Alvarez tries to make Lisbeth's story more personal, but the script does not successfully venture into those darker themes. [Full Review in Spanish]
Foy's Lisbeth is somewhat tempered to appeal to a wider mainstream audience, in the superhero vein; she's kind of relatable and likable, a different spin from the originals.
The Girl in the Spider's Web starts off better than it ends. It holds your attention for the most part, though its plot winds up not serving its hero as well as it should.
The Girl in the Spider's Web, Lisbeth Salander saves the day, and she looks cool doing it. But this is a story so slick that she'd be rolling her eyes if she watched it.