After being enlisted to recover a dangerous computer program, hacker Lisbeth Salander and journalist Mikael Blomkvist find themselves caught in a web of spies, cybercriminals and corrupt government officials.
Claire Foy
Lisbeth Salander
Sverrir Gudnason
Mikael Blomkvist
LaKeith Stanfield
Edwin Needham
Sylvia Hoeks
Camilla Salander
Stephen Merchant
Frans Balder
Christopher Convery
August Balder
Claes Bang
Jan Holster
Synnøve Macody Lund
Gabriella Grane
Cameron Britton
Plague
Vicky Krieps
Erika Berger
Andreja Pejić
Sofia
Mikael Persbrandt
Alexander Zalachenko
Beau Gadsdon
Young Lisbeth Salander
Carlotta von Falkenhayn
Young Camilla Salander
Thomas Wingrich
Grane's Home Security
Andreas Tietz
Camilla's Driver
Paula Schramm
Malin Erikson
Anja Karmanski
Landlord
Volker Bruch
Peter Ahlgren
Saskia Rosendahl
Linda Ahlgren
Pål Sverre Hagen
Ove Levin
Christian Serritiello
NSA Officer
Damien Murphy
Cops
Asuka Tovazzi
Cops
Daniel Stockhorst
Holster's Driver
Béla Gabor Lenz
Seedy Looking Punk
Maddy Savage
Reporter
Lea Faßbender
August's Mother
Tomas Jester
Huge Skinhead
Hendrik Heutmann
Milos Meer
Volkram Zschiesche
Dark Haired SAPO Agent
Sonja Chan
Naked Asian Woman
Felix Quinton
Camilla's Henchman
Alois Knapps
Camilla's Henchman
Wolfgang Lindner
Gabriella Grane's Driver
Sebastian Stielke
Uniformed Cop 4
Sinha Gierke
Airport Employee
Michael Bornhütter
Airport Policemen
Oliver Juhrs
Airport Policemen
Steffen Jung
Airport Policeman
Christian Zagia
Detention Room Blonde Cop
Amalia Holm Bjelke
Waitress
Director, Screenplay
Fede Álvarez
Characters
Stieg Larsson
Novel
David Lagercrantz
Screenplay
Steven Knight
Screenplay
Jay Basu
November 22, 2018
5
Lackluster entry in the Millennium film series:
A solid performance by Claire Foy (First Man, Unsane) can't do much to elevate a weak script that, quite often, not only asks you to suspend your disbelief, but to abandon your disbelief altogether.
This film is based on the fourth of five books (to date) in the popular "Millennium" series of novels, which happens to be the first of the books written by author David Lagercrantz after the passing of original author Stieg Larsson. The first three books were adapted into a trilogy of films in their native Sweden (all of which were released in 2009), and the first book, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, was given an American adaptation helmed by David Fincher in 2011.
The story of the newest entry in the film series revolves around a top-secret program called Firefall, which would allow whoever wields it to take control of the world's nuclear weapons. The program was designed by Frans Balder (Stephen Merchant), who has a young autistic son. Balder, having come to realize that the program is too dangerous for any government to control, contacts super-hacker Lisbeth Salander (Foy), asking for her help to find and destroy the program. Unknown to them,however, a mysterious group known only as the Spiders are also after the program. Salander receives help along the way from good friend Mikael Blomkvist (Sverrir Gudnason), a journalist working for Millennium magazine (from which the book series gets its name). In the meantime, Lisbeth's attempt to acquire the Firefall program leads American National Security Agency security expert Edwin Needham (LaKeith Stanfield) to travel to Sweden in hopes of tracking her down.
Action abounds, and as the film progresses we learn the identity of the leader of the Spiders, a secret tied to Salander's murky past. Eventually all parties converge on a house in the mountains that is all-too-familiar to Salander, where the film's climax plays out.
The film appears to retcon certain details from the previous films (e.g. Blomkvist is younger than he should be), which can be off-putting to those familiar with those films.. Vicky Krieps, who audiences may remember from her fantastic performance in 2017's Phantom Thread, is wasted in a brief appearance as Millennium's publisher Erika Berger. While Salander has been established as a first-class hacker in previous films (as well as in the books on which they're based), here her hacking skills often reach levels of unbelievability. An example of this: in one scene Salander hacks into a car's systems while actively pursuing in another car.
In the end we are left with a film that could have been greater than it is, but which was hobbled by a poor script filled with overly convenient contrivances. The film's one saving grace is Foy, who does the most with what she is given.