Continuing a theme across my movie reviews this year of games/franchises I’ve never played, that have been around for over 20 years, with movies released at some point in the last seven years. However, I do own two games from today’s franchise on Steam, so I might discover it someday.
“This one walked so the next one could run.” I’ve heard that sentence used in the context of film series a few times. It refers to when a first movie is made to be simple and to-the-point, so that a sequel has a solid foundation to build from. The downside is that this comes with the intention of making more than one movie, meaning that the first film cannot miss its mark. (Actually having the sequel greenlit helps, too.) The tendency for movies in certain genres to end on cliffhangers has been long derided, and video game movies have been guilty of the practice. Remember that time Daisy busted down the Mario family’s door, gun in hand, ready to destroy more interdimensional Koopa ass?
If you don’t know what I’m talking about, I envy you.
But to this day, it still happens, and it may be even worse nowadays with the rampant franchising of everything. I’m playing my cards early for this one, I admit.
Tomb Raider has been around since 1996. One of the few female-driven long-lasting series, featuring the acclaimed Lara Croft, who has deserved her space on the pantheon of great heroines of gaming alongside Samus Aran and Claire Redfield. Tomb Raider is also a film series... sort of; two films starring Angelina Jolie were released in 2001 and 2003. In the 2010s, the games reinvented themselves (and their starring lady), and a feature reflecting the reboot was more than welcome. A film adaptation of Tomb Raider (2013) was released in American theaters on March 14, 2018. Directed by Roar Uthaug, the feature puts actress Alicia Vikander, already a fan of the franchise, in the shoes of the adventurous archaeologist. The film is intended to be an origin story for the character… a foundation to possibly build on in the future.
At the very least, we should look at this film for its own merits, so let’s sit down and give it a watch, shall we?