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David Fincher's The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo

She was really great. I felt more attached to her than in the Swedish version. That might just be the subtitles though because I really hate reading subtitles.

 
Two things. Reznor using that Sail Away song during Blomkvist's torture scene was awesome. It was out of place, yet fit perfectly.

Also, I felt so bad for Lisbeth at the very end where she sees Blomkvist walking away with the married chick. She was just about to start doing relatively normal things and was all excited she thought she found someone who cared about her and then bam, world shattered.
 
I was beyond heartbroken at the end. I think that's why I didn't like it, because I was so attached to Lisbeth that I wanted her to be happy so badly. Mikeal fucked it alllllll up. It's like the hero (Lisbeth) saves the damsel in distress (Mikeal) and doesn't even get "the girl".. It hurt my feelings, there's no telling how that made her feel.


Also, a difference I noticed between Lisbeth in the two versions is that in the Swedish version her hacking was portrayed on screen much more and they portrayed her impressive investigative skills in other ways in the American version.

Trent Reznor pulls off another perfect score, btw. He and Fincher were made for one another. If you saw his brilliance with a fucking movie about the creation of facebook than you can imagine how amazing his style fits with this type of movie.

I still may have a boner :acid:

Can't wait to see it again
:acid: :palooza: :acid: :acid: :woy: :acid: :acid: :palooza: :acid:
 
Going to see it again next week sometime.

:acid:

NAHSTE, I'll come to the city and wine and dine you with a dinner and a movie.
 
In Hollywood, screenwriter Steven Zaillian is considered a writer's writer, having won an Oscar in 1994 for his screenplay for Steven Spielberg's Schindler's List and having two other nominations under his belt. He's also worked with some of the world's greatest directors including Martin Scorsese for Gangs of New York and with Ridley Scott twice, first for Hannibalu and then American Gangster.

2011 has already been a great year for Zaillian as he follows up his adaptation of the bestselling Moneyball, co-written by Oscar winner Aaron Sorkin (The Social Network), with an adaptation of Stieg Larsson's bestselling crime thriller The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, directed by David Fincher and starring Daniel Craig, Rooney Mara and Christopher Plummer.

ComingSoon.net spoke to Zaillian at the New York junket for the film earlier this week, already knowing that he has deliberately stayed away from watching the Swedish film based on Larsson's novel.

ComingSoon.net: Between the press conferences and my own interview, I've listened to David Fincher talk for the past two hours about the script and the movie. He said he read the book and saw the original movie, but it was mostly your script and what you'd done with the adaptation that got him interested in directing this. How many times did you actually read a book before you jump into writing and figure out what part you're going to focus on?
Steve Zaillian: It depends on what the book or the source material is. For me, the first read is the most important one. I get a sense of reading it the first time whether I think it's going to work for me and whether I'm going to work for it, and then in terms of how many times I read it after that. I might read it two or three times after that and then I set it aside and get to work.

CS: One of the things I liked about the movie which Fincher mentioned as well, was the way the Vangers are treated. In the movie you haven't seen, the Swedish movie, the set-up is fairly grueling to get through and this movie is fun. What did you see in the Vangers that allowed you to have more fun with them and make them more interesting as characters?
Zaillian: I remember there was a point where I was reading the book and I actually had to go back and look at the family tree at the beginning (laughs) and say, "Well, we can't do that in the movie. We can't make it so complicated," so when Henrik is sort of explaining who's who the first time, when he's showing photographs, if you look at it, he's really only telling us about the people we need to know about. There's probably another twenty of them that are discussed in the book that we're not even going to know their names, so I know it doesn't really sink in, but you get to know Gottfried and Martin and Harriet and Harald and Cecelia and that's it. That's all you need to know. It was fun actually, the scene where Henrik, to remind us, the audience, who's who, he takes Mikael outside and he says, "She lives over here and he lives over there" and Mikael says, "I can't follow who's who." That really is for the audience to say, "You know what? We don't expect you to follow it. You'll get it before this movie's over."

CS: As David mentioned at the press conference, Mikael then says to him, "And you live here." I haven't seen the Swedish movie in a while but I'm fascinated by how one book has so many layers that it can create two completely different visions that focus on such different aspects. How important was it to get away from the book as much as possible and develop
Zaillian: I wasn't trying to get away from the book. I was just trying to make the book work for us, in terms of what we wanted to do, and it did. It offered all of that. Again, the movie, I don't know what the Swedish movie did. I hear it's very good, but I really don't have any clue what they chose to focus on, as opposed to what we did.

CS: When you finish writing all the scripts are you going to go back one night and just see what the other movies look like?
Zaillian: I don't think I can allow myself to see it until all three of them are done, if we actually do the other ones. Yeah, I'll have a little film festival. I'll watch all three of them.

CS: What's interesting is that when you hear someone is remaking this movie or re-adapting the book I should say, you assume they're going to move it to Seattle or Maine or somewhere in the States and make it American. It was a very specific decision to keep it in Sweden, so can you talk about why a story like this has to take place in Sweden?
Zaillian: I think all of us had a different reason. None of us--and when I say none of us, I mean the studio, the producers, David, me--none of us said, "Hey, should we consider doing it in America." It was always going to stay in Sweden. I thought the best reason to keep it in Sweden, even though the story could take place somewhere else. You could make the changes to make it work was that it was a setting we're not that familiar with. It was a great place to set a film noir story. In Sweden, of all places. It's fantastic and that was what I liked about it.

CS: What about the character of Lisbeth who is really evocative in the book and a character who is a big draw. Men like her for one reason, women like her for another, and obviously, the actresses who've played her really have pulled out all the stops. How do you write a character like this, knowing that someone is going to have to find someone to play her?
Zaillian: Yeah, I mean, I approached all the characters with equal enthusiasm and work. One thing I felt while reading the book was that she talked too much. She kind of expressed herself too much, and I thought that this character would not really try to communicate too much, and so what I liked about what ended up happening is that she doesn't explain herself really at all. She behaves in a certain way, she reacts in a certain way. You get to know her through her behavior as opposed to her explaining things to you, and I just think that's just a more interesting character to watch, it's a more interesting character to write. And what Rooney did that's so great is that she can take these tiny little moments that are showing something about what's going on inside her head and make them work. I'm thinking of little... you know, when Mikael comes over to her house the first time, I don't know, it's like her whole face changes. She becomes a different person in his presence. Most characters will smile a hundred times in a movie - and if she smiles once, it just says so much.

CS: How important was it to keep any of Stiegg Larsson's dialogue? Was there anything in the book that you felt was an important line to keep or something important to the story or what readers expect?
Zaillian: No, if it was something that I was like, "I can't say this any better" than absolutely, but there wasn't anything in it that I felt that it had to stay in simply because it was in the book. At no time did I feel that.

CS: You said you read the other two books, but this one is interesting because it's a done-in-one complete story, but the other books get more into the characters but it also separates the two characters people like seeing together. You haven't seen the movies but the second two movies just weren't as fulfilling as the first one.
Zaillian: Do you think that's why?

CS: I think partially and I was wondering while you were reading those other books if you think you'll have to deviate even further than the first book in order to keep it consistent?
Zaillian: I don't know. I haven't read the third book in a long time. I remember it was a very long court case basically, but I don't really remember it in detail. Second book I read not too long ago, so I do remember it. But I agree with you. I think this idea of them being separated for so long is not necessarily the best way.

CS: So do you think that's something that might be different from the books once you adapt them?
Zaillian: I don't know. It's something I'll have to put... right now at this point, I'm just working up the nerve to approach it (laughs). I haven't solved anything, so I'm really just gearing up for it.

CS: Is it one of those things where you're literally going to wait until the Monday before it opens when someone says "Start" and then you have to start?
Zaillian: No, I've been working on it, but more like just trying to get ideas down on paper, but as far as whether it will get made or not, absolutely. (laughs) That's going to be the decision making thing, not what I think.

CS: One thing you mentioned earlier was the fact you don't go on the sets of movies you write. I remember the scene in "Adaptation" where Nicolas Cage is wandering around on set and didn't know what to do and no one knew who he was, but especially a movie like this where it's just one writer which is so rare, you'd think the collaboration would continue onto set. So how does that work? Once you give the script to Fincher and he has actors, that's it?

Zaillian: Yeah, yeah, and David is a very disciplined director. He's not somebody out there reinventing scenes in terms of dialogue and stuff like that. The script means something to him, so I felt very confident that I didn't need to be there. I didn't be there to lord over him or look over his shoulder; he's perfectly capable of doing it himself.

CS: But even working with Ridley Scott, you spent a lot of time getting the script exactly where it needs to be.
Zaillian: Right, right, and we'll spend time in a room and we'll go over it until they're happy and then in the case of David and Ridley Scott, then they go and direct the movie. They're not working on the script anymore. Script's done at that point.

CS: You had another great adaptation this year with the work you did adapting "Moneyball" with Aaron Sorkin. I haven't read the whole book but I read enough of it to know it could never have worked as a movie, so it's amazing that it does work and it's quite good. Can you talk about writing that? I know you were working with Soderbergh originally.

Zaillian: Yeah, yeah, I'll talk about it a little bit, but Aaron, because we were working on it, we sort of agreed that we should do all the "Moneyball" stuff together.

CS: But you worked on that separately.
Zaillian: Yeah, but now we'll work together, but yeah, I was working on it... I can't really say "with Soderbergh," because we were kind of working at cross-purposes at a certain point, but I feel better talking about it with Aaron, if maybe you can get an interview with both of us.

CS: Fair enough. If you'll both be in New York doing interviews, I'll try to do something. What about some of these other things you've been developing like "A Thousand Splendid Suns"? Is that still going to happen?
Zaillian: Yeah, yeah, we're still talking about it. The way I want to do it is make basically a foreign film. I want this thing to be done by a Middle Eastern director with Middle Eastern actors, maybe even in Farsi, and approach it in the exact opposite way that they did "Kite Runner" and make it a really indigenous film to the area, and that's a tough approach to get the money for, so that's what we're trying to do.

CS: "The Kite Runner" is interesting because I liked the movie a lot.
Zaillian: I haven't seen it actually.

CS: I was shocked that the people who loved the bestselling book did not go see the movie, so you never even saw the movie?
Zaillian: No, I read the book. I haven't seen the movie, but unlike "Dragon Tattoo," I had no qualms about setting it in Sweden and the people would be speaking English, I thought that was the right way to go, but with "A Thousand Splendid Suns," I think it would really be more distinctive if it was made indigenously.

CS: Which means you won't get as much money to make it.
Zaillian: No, it will be very cheap.

CS: You've done so many great adaptations but do you have any original ideas or screenplays that you've been developing?
Zaillian: Yeah, well "American Gangster" really was. "American Gangster" was something, there was an article, but it really grew out of my interviews with these two guys. I came to New York and spent about a week with Frank Lucas and then Ritchie Roberts came out to Los Angeles and I spent some time with him, and that is what made me want to do it, these two really interesting guys.

CS: Do you have the urge to direct again after "All the King's Men," maybe something you've been writing?
Zaillian: Oh, yeah, but I don't have anything in my hands right now that I feel passionate enough about to do. I'm not a director director, so guys like David (Fincher) and Ridley Scott and Spielberg, I get the feeling that they're not happy unless they're directing and they direct a lot. Every year they're doing something. I'm not that way. I feel like it takes a lot out of me, and it doesn't come naturally to me, so it has to be something that I really feel I know this story and I can do a good job with this, better than somebody else can do, so I just don't have that project right now. When I do, yeah, I'll be happy to direct again.
 
In 1995, director David Fincher helped redefine the serial killer genre with Se7en, territory he returned to with 2007's Zodiac, delving into the true crime story of the killer who plagued San Francisco during the '70s. After exploring different genres with 2009's The Curious Case of Benjamin Button and last year's Oscar-winning The Social Network, Fincher is back to more familiar territory with The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, a dark mystery-thriller that stands the best chance at appealing to the fans of his earlier work.

Based on the bestselling novel by Stieg Larsson, it stars Daniel Craig as Mikael Blomkvist, the Swedish magazine publisher hired to investigate the disappearance of a wealthy and powerful magnate's niece 40 years earlier. To help with his investigation, he's assigned a damaged cyber-hacker named Lisbeth Salander (Rooney Mara), who has suffered from abuse after spending much of her childhood in an asylum, and together they uncover even darker secrets surrounding the rape and murder of many girls going back even further than 40 years.

This past weekend, ComingSoon.net was given a rare extended sit-down with the enigmatic filmmaker, and even having sat through nearly 80 minutes of press conference with Fincher and members of his cast, which made us think we wouldn't have more to ask, we still had a lot more ground to cover. (And to those concerned, there are absolutely no spoilers in this interview for the movie in case you haven't read the book or seen the previous adaptation.)

In fact, we started with what we thought was one of the most obvious questions, which surprisingly wasn't asked earlier:

ComingSoon.net: I was really shocked no one asked about your intro to Stieg Larsson's story. Did you read the book first or was there already a screenplay? How did you first find out about this?
David Fincher: No, Steve was working on a screenplay. I was given the book and Sony were committed to making this movie. I was given the galleys of the English language translation in 2005 or 2006 by a producer who I was working on "Benjamin Button" with, and she said, "Here, I really, really love this and I'd really like to do this with you." I said, "I don't have time to read a 600-page book. Tell me what it's about." She told me what it was about and we had just spent six years trying to get "Benjamin Button" made, so I was like, "Why are you doing this? No one in Hollywood's going to make this movie." I was wrong. Five years later, Scott (Rudin) and Amy (Pascal) brought the book to my attention; they had just purchased the rights. The (Scandinavian) movie had not come out yet, or it hadn't come out in the States. I read the book. I was assured by everyone involved that they wanted to make an R-rated, European movie for adults. So, I said, "You realize it's a little bit like a red cape in front of a bull, but I'm happy to oblige." Then, I saw the Danish film.

CS: You did watch the film? That's the other question I was surprised no one asked during the press conference earlier.

Fincher: Yeah, I saw the Danish film on DVD, and I thought it was great, but it was very different than the film that I saw in my head. Then Steve Zaillian turned in his script and I thought, "Wow, he's really focused on the stuff that's of interest to me, this odd pairing of detectives and why resist?"

CS: When I first saw the Swedish movie, I thought, "Boy, 'Se7en's' really had a big influence." We can't ask Stieg if that's the case because he's not alive, but based on the ritual serial killings, you must have figured it must have had some influence. So I was surprised when you were going to direct this and want to re-explore that territory.

Fincher: Well, again, the path is familiar, but the people on the path was very exciting. (Lisbeth Salander) is exciting and I lived sort of vicariously through him, and I loved the idea of meeting up with her.

CS: She's a great character. I feel both for people who read the books and saw the original movies, there's something that appeals about her character to men and women for different reasons. It may be one of the reasons why actresses like Rooney and Noomi are able to pull something out of it. Was the complexity of her character something that struck you on first reading the book or the screenplay?
Fincher: I mean, she's really compelling, but also, like I say, the way in was Daniel. The first person that we needed to anchor (this) that we needed was Daniel. Once we had Daniel, we could afford to take risks. We could afford to surprise, because it is Blomkvist's story. It is. That's the vessel. That's the ship through uncharted territory, and you have to be with him. It's one of those roles that's not unlike in a weird way Morgan's role in "Se7en" in that he really is the anchor for the thing. He's sort of the unsung, because he's the thing around which everything pivots.

CS: Have you read the other books and seen the other movies or were you very much focused on this one?
Fincher: I haven't seen the movies. I read the second book, I read most of the third book. I haven't read the whole entire; I just ran out of time because I was prepping.

CS: Do you go into something like this thinking of it as your entry into some sort of tentpole franchise, which is not territory you've explored before?
Fincher: Tentpole? No. I mean, when you say "tentpole" to me it's like, summer blockbuster. No, I think this is a little too curvy for that, but that's why I was interested in it, but I like the idea of three movies that are made for adults. I like the idea of R-rated franchises. Again, a franchise to me doesn't have to be a billion dollar title. The first "Austin Powers" movie was extremely narrow cast. I mean, to understand what he was talking about with that character... Yes, he was doing a send-up of James Bond, but he was also doing a send-up of "Man From U.N.C.L.E." and "The Saint." I mean all that stuff about swinging London. So I think you can start at a more narrow and more specific and a more niche way and breathe life and include more people as you go.

CS: What's interesting is that the first book is done in one. It is very much a story which has a beginning and end. The other books...
Fincher: Mostly don't.

CS: Right, which is one of the problems with the second movie is that it's literally a set-up for the third, and I assume the books are the same, but Lisbeth and Mikael are barely together at all.
Fincher: She's barely in the second one.

CS: So I'm curious about that, because if this does well and they want you to do another one, would it be hard for you to be interested knowing that?
Fincher: I would assess that at that point, but right now, we had to rush to make this print available for the ill-fated New York Film Critics Circle screening, but that was literally a wet print, you know? We were working nights and weekends to get that ready. I literally finished it two-and-a-half weeks ago, and we've been on the press tour since then. So I haven't had time to really think about the future right now. I mean, the future for me is lunch.

CS: Also, when you were doing press for "The Social Network," you were already well into this movie, so this is rare for you because you've had your next project lined up or in development.
Fincher: Yeah, I haven't embraced that kind of schedule before. It's scary. It's a scary thing. You want to be prepared. You want to be able to answer all the questions, and had I only been on through the book and didn't have Steve Zaillian, I wouldn't have even... I'd say, "Get some other sucker."

CS: One thing I have to ask about is your relationship with Trent Reznor and the amazing music for these last two films. He had just ended one chapter in his life when he decided to stop touring with Nine Inch Nails, and then you gave him the chance to score "The Social Network," and he won an Oscar for the first major score he's done. Can you talk about how you guys work? You mentioned earlier he basically just sends you a lot of music.
Fincher: Yeah.

CS: So he just does a lot of music and you find places for it?
Fincher: Well, he reads the script. We talk about it. We talk about senses of things, but I think "Social Network," I didn't prescribe anything, but I said to him, "Here's what I see. I'm hearing Tangerine Dream. I'm hearing a John Hughes... I'm hearing 'Risky Business.' That's the kind of thing. Bad synthesizers, very '80s," and he sort of smiled and said, "You know I can't do that." I said, "Of course not. I'm just telling you what I was thinking and now it's up to you." I do think electronic music, something that's specifically electronic is part of the tapestry of this and that's what he came up with, which was better than I could've explained or imagined. By all means, he should've won the Academy Award for that. It was amazing.

CS: And this new one is a pretty amazing record in itself. I know you must have heard "Ghosts" at one point.
Fincher: Yes. Well, we temped "Social Network" with "Ghosts." He made that record in nine days or something; he went ahead and just did it. That's what I said to him. I said, "Look, you are too important to too many people, and you are too important to me to have you come in and us co-opt you. I don't want to do that. I want your response. I want you as a technologist and as a communicator and as a voice of a generation of music. I want you to respond to this. You don't have to drive the whole thing. I'm just going to be a backstop. The movie's the backstop and you just hit it as hard as you want. It's going to come back." Then on this movie, I said to him, "Look, we'd love to have you do 'Dragon Tattoo.'" He said, "Well, let me give it a round." "Here's a script." Then, a good two or three weeks later there was 45 minutes of music (chuckles) or something and I was like, "Wow."

CS: You must get frustrated by whenever your name is mentioned as a director, there's talk of you doing 40 takes or more.
Fincher: And that's not really true, but...

CS: I know, but it becomes almost like a running joke when people talk about your work. Is that different when you work with Trent, where you don't have to do that? Where the music is his territory and he just finds his own way until he has something that works for you?
Fincher: Well, there's a lot of things that he works and reworks and reworks and reworks. The thing about him is he's such a perfectionist, that there's a lot of stuff I don't even know about. By the time I'm hearing it, it's something he wants to present. I mean, the first version of "Hall of the Mountain King" when "The Social Network" was just a little too Wendy Carlos, and that's when I went to him. I said, "What would Wendy Carlos do with 'Hall of the Mountain King?'" Then, of course, he came back with that. I said, "It's too Wendy Carlos for me." (Laughs) "That was the brief, Dave," and I was like, "No, no, I know. I know, and I'm wrong. It needs to be more Trent Reznor in there," and that's what we did.

CS: One of the amazing moments in this movie is the use of Enya in a pivotal scene, which reminded me of the use of Huey Lewis in "American Psycho" or your own use of Pixies' "Where is My Mind?" at the end of "Fight Club," where a song you're not expecting ends up defining a key moment.
Fincher: Yeah, I gotta give credit where credit's too. That was Daniel Craig. We were actually in a hotel room that looked a lot like this in SoHo in London. It was run by the same hotel company. We were sitting there and we talked about, "What would Martin's calming influence be?" Daniel got this big smile across his face and he said, "'Orinoco Flow.'" None of us knew what he was talking about. "'Orinoco Flow,' what does that mean?" He was like, "Come on. Come on. You guys know 'Orinoco Flow.'" Then he picked up his iPod and he played it. We all just started laughing. Yeah, it's too great.

CS: You talked about the title sequence a little bit downstairs, and it's pretty amazing because if you've seen the Swedish film, you go in expecting a certain thing and that kicks you right out of that. If I watched it on DVD I'd just be going back and forth and watching it over and over, because it was such a crazy thing. Was "The Immigrant Song" always going to be the basis of that?
Fincher: Yeah, "The Immigrant Song" was always going to be the music for the first movie. I had thoughts about where to go from here, but that and the Bryan Ferry song too, was something that very early on and I was listening to it in the van on the way to shooting and was like, "I want this. I want these two bookends."

CS: Were the people who did those titles someone you've worked with on previous movie titles?
Fincher: No, this is Tim Miller at Blur in Venice and Tim and I had been working for two years, or longer, trying to get two movies - "Heavy Metal" and "The Goon" made. I knew he was busy; they do a lot of game cinematics. I went to him and said, "Will you do the title sequence? Here's the idea. I want this thing that comes out of blackness and shininess and I want it to be defined by its slippery sheen, but it's all black." I walked him through sort of what I was thinking, and then he ran with it. Jeff went through the books and kind of said, "Well, we think this is important. If you're talking about Salander, these are the things that are important." So, we took 50 little vignettes and we whittled it down to 25 or something and then I said, "You have eight weeks. It's two minutes and 25 seconds. Here's the track. Go."

CS: How involved in the marketing have you been with these last couple of movies? I feel like Sony's really stepped up their game, first with "The Social Network" teaser using "Creep," which is the first trailer I've seen that had me in tears.
Fincher: We've been involved. I mean, I try to get involved, I want to be involved. I think it's important to position the way that something gets thought about because I think that you never get a second chance to make a first impression. When I showed (Sony) what's ostensibly the final cut of "The Social Network" after my 10 weeks, I showed them the teaser, which was the typing, the instant messaging thing. Then, I showed them the trailer that was "Creep," the Mark Woollen cut, then I showed them the movie and they kind of bought the whole package. Then last Christmas, when we moved back to LA and were shooting on stages at Paramount for all the interiors of "Dragon Tattoo," we had cut the teaser with "Immigrant Song." So I presented them with that teaser and they bought into the idea of Red Band, not wholly, but as much as they could. Then, we did a trimmed version. Then, Mark Woollen cut the eight-minute trailer that we turned over to the studio basically to say, "Here's kinda what we think the movie is, and you can cut a trailer from this." They cut a trailer that I didn't really like, so Mark went back and cut a four-minute trailer, and that was the big trailer that went out. Then, eventually the eight-minute got leaked. I was involved in that, but the television spots have been pretty much (Sony).

CS: What about the pirated teaser? I don't know if you followed it but it caused a bit of a controversy in the online world, because we've been inured into not running pirated material since there's so many issues with piracy, but it ended up being even bigger because of that.
Fincher: Well, obviously we were upset with the notion that it was being seen. I mean, I wanted it to be seen in...

CS: In theaters, right.
Fincher: Yeah, but it didn't get shipped to many theaters and not many theaters would show it. It's the kind of thing that you needed to, and this is what I had hoped Sony would do, I hoped that they would go to each of the exhibitors and say, "Look, we have something, and here's the content of it. Although it's Red Band and normally that's too naughty for mass consumption, we'll show you it. Here's what you're going to see." To me, it was quite tame. There are certain technical things. If you see the side of a woman's breast, obviously that becomes a red banded trailer, and obviously if Daniel Craig has blood on his face, that becomes a red banded trailer. But I didn't feel that there was anything that was particularly gratuitous or offensive about it, and certainly for people who knew the book, so I felt like the teaser really did a nice kinda job of saying, "We were faithful to the book." My hope was that more exhibitors - I mean, I wanted to go to them and say, "Let's draw people into the theaters by giving them something that they can't get anywhere else. Come to the altar to see the cross and be part of that experience." And when it got leaked, obviously at first I was pissed. I don't want it to be seen as a postage stamp. I want it to be seen as a big... but it was being shown by 20 theaters worldwide, so no one was showing it. So in the end, it ended up being a good thing, but I am of the mind that impressions should be tiered. There should be a specific way that something is... if you're going to see it as a QuickTime, no matter how big, to me that's downstream of seeing it in all of its majesty.

CS: As we wrap up, we'll get a bit more esoteric, but what does David Fincher consider a bad day?
Fincher: I don't know. It's a bad day when you don't get the work done that you need to get done or you don't get it done to the satisfaction. The whole idea of spending this kind of money is to make people proud.

CS: With that in mind, is there a lot of pressure being David Fincher?

Fincher: There's always a lot of pressure. I don't want to sound like a sociopath, but you have to be able to sort of tune it out. I mean, I think I do a fairly effective job of keeping my eye on the ball.

CS: My last question is a little more innocuous. Is there any movie this year that's impressed or shocked you and any movie next year you're really looking forward to?
Fincher: I haven't seen much this year. I was just telling Chris (Plummer), I just saw "Beginners," which I thought was just beautiful. I'm so happy for Mike (Mills) because I really enjoyed "Thumbsucker" and I thought the accomplishment of that was amazing for a guy who was that into it. Then the leap from that to this is pretty astounding. He's very gifted.

CS: Yeah, and it's such a personal story for him, too.
Fincher: Yeah, but you know what? But how incredibly global and humanistic its approach. I mean, I know that he's seeing the movie through the letterbox, but I felt totally included. There was not a moment in it that I didn't understand, father to son and son to father and old age and dying and regrets and things you wish you could go back to and things you wish you could say to your mother. I thought all of that stuff was beautifully drawn. I loved that dog.

CS: Since you haven't seen that much, is there anything you're looking forward to seeing?
Fincher: I don't know. I don't know what's coming out. I'm looking forward to "MI:4." (Laughs) I want to see what Brad (Bird) did, you know? He's one of the greats, and it'll be interesting to see what he does in live action.
 
Got back from this about an hour ago, oh my motherfucking god.

I'm in absolute love. What a movie. MVP, I was thinking the same thing, that song that played during that scene, perfect.

As I love to do, I went into this movie with absolutely zero knowledge of what the book was about, who was in the movie, or even what genre it was, and didn't even know it was a Fincher film! I love doing that because you have no expectations, so when something is great it seems PHENOMENAL, exactly which this movie was. Palooza I felt the same way, I didn't want it to end. I was on the edge of my seat for the whole film captivated by everything.

The acting, the twists, the music. Everything was just great.


Downloading the 1080p Swedish version now, all 22 gigs of it. Probably picking the first book up at the store tomorrow.
 
I saw it the other night. I personally didn't find it to be as great as everyone said. I thought at the beginning the movie moved too slow. Acting and directing were great... i just thought it was too slow for me.
 
I saw it the other night. I personally didn't find it to be as great as everyone said. I thought at the beginning the movie moved too slow. Acting and directing were great... i just thought it was too slow for me.

That would pretty much fit the book. First 200 or 300 pages are terribly slow, once it gets rolling though its great.

Haven't seen this yet but really want to. As others have said it will be interesting to compare it to the Swedish version which was fantastic.
 
I finally managed to catch this last night. It was hard not to go in with high expectations - I loved the book, really liked the Swedish film, and have heard so many great things. But it still managed to live up to it. Not a perfect film or anything but it captured the atmosphere from the book in a really effective way. I love how subtle they were with some stuff - the hacking and photographic memory, etc.

I heard a lot of good things about Rooney Mara's performance and it delivered. It was a slightly different Lisbeth from Noomi Rapace. I thought Rapace was fantastic, but Mara was a bit more vulnerable. Rapace had a bit more of a hard edge. I thought she projected the awkwardness of Lisbeth fantastically well.
 
I finally managed to catch this last night. It was hard not to go in with high expectations - I loved the book, really liked the Swedish film, and have heard so many great things. But it still managed to live up to it. Not a perfect film or anything but it captured the atmosphere from the book in a really effective way. I love how subtle they were with some stuff - the hacking and photographic memory, etc.

I heard a lot of good things about Rooney Mara's performance and it delivered. It was a slightly different Lisbeth from Noomi Rapace. I thought Rapace was fantastic, but Mara was a bit more vulnerable. Rapace had a bit more of a hard edge. I thought she projected the awkwardness of Lisbeth fantastically well.

I prefer Mara as Salander after reading the book. Mainly because of the awkwardness part. For some reason I remember the girl in the Swedish version acting like a badass the whole time rather than just in spurts.
 
Title sequence -

 
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/tcp9Ysi75f0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
I liked it. I loved the originals and I think these performances are different enough that you can't compare Rapace and Mara. Mara was really great. Mgoblue was right, Mara played her in a more fragile manner.

 
For instance, in the original when she fucks Mikel in the cabin, she comes in, fucks him, and leaves. In the newer version she sticks around and their sex is not just wham bam. I also like the way the did the financial espionage shit. Very nice.


I thought the 2nd movie was the best of the series in the original trilogy. I'm looking forward to seeing what Fincher does with #2, especially.....

 
the brother. so badass of a character, I hope he does it justice, which I know he will.
 
Watched the second and third films of the Swedish series...

Mara pulled of a wonderful Lisbeth in the Fincher remake but I wonder if she has the stomach for the 3rd Act in "The Girl That Played With Fire."

 
 
I'm not fucking kidding.
 
Getting shot 3 times (once in the dome), buried alive and then coming back like a goddamn zombie for revenge?

Most can't take a papercut.
 
I remember when I first saw The Fellowship of the Ring there were a ton of people leaving the theater not knowing that there'd be sequels on the way. Wonder how many did it with this, though it's not as popular so the percentage is probably lower.
 
I remember when I first saw The Fellowship of the Ring there were a ton of people leaving the theater not knowing that there'd be sequels on the way. Wonder how many did it with this, though it's not as popular so the percentage is probably lower.

Holy fuck are people dumb there.
 
See it. Please.

The only way we'll get the sequels is if this movie makes some money at the box office. That and it is so much better in a dark, isolated room with a gigantic screen.

The opening credits won't be the same on your TV.

Don't worry. Even while the gross of the film was only at 60 million compared to the 90 million budget, Sony said that they were still planning on releasing sequels.
Since then though, the gross has more then doubled and is well over the budget, so we should be in the clear.
 
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