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Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life

 
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Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life

  • Director: Jan de Bont
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Fantasy
  • Movie Type: Fantasy Adventure
  • Themes: Priceless Artifacts and Prized Objects, Race Against Time, Treasure Hunts
  • Main Cast: Angelina Jolie, Gerard Butler, Ciarán Hinds, Chris Barrie, Noah Taylor
  • Release Year: 2003
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 118 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

This sequel to the 2001 hit video-game adaptation Lara Croft: Tomb Raider finds Jan de Bont stepping in for director Simon West, helming his first feature since 1999's The Haunting. From a script by first-time scribe Dean Georgaris, Lara Croft: Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life finds Angelina Jolie once again portraying the titular curvaceous adventurer. But where the first film saw Croft in a race against the Illuminati to acquire an elusive relic that offers control over life and death, this entry in the series follows the heroine as she ventures to an underwater temple in search of the mythological Pandora's Box. Unfortunately, once she secures the legendary artifact, it is promptly stolen by the villainous leader of a Chinese crime syndicate. It is then up to Lara to get the box back before an evil mastermind gets hold of it and uses it to construct a weapon of catastrophic capabilities. Gerard Butler, Djimon Hounsou, and Noah Taylor head up the supporting cast. ~ Matthew Tobey, All Movie Guide

Cast

Djimon Hounsou - Kosa; Til Schweiger - Sean; Simon Yam - Chen Lo; Terence Yin - Xien; Daniel Caltagirone - Nicholas Petraki; Fabiano Martell - Jimmy Petraki; Jonathan Coyne - Gus Petraki

Credit

Alan Tomkins - Art Director, James Morahan - Art Director, Dennis Bosher - Art Director, Paul Kirby - Art Director, Stu Whittaker - Art Director, Frank Walsh - Art Director, John Fenner - Supervising Art Director, Shelly Clippard - Associate Producer, Holly Goline - Associate Producer, John Hubbard - Casting, Dan Hubbard - Casting, Louis A. Stroller - Co-producer, Lindy Hemming - Costume Designer, Cliff Lanning - First Assistant Director, Jan de Bont - Director, Simon Crane - Second Unit Director, Michael Kahn - Editor, Jeremy Heath-Smith - Executive Producer, Alan Silvestri - Composer (Music Score), Peter Afterman - Musical Direction/Supervision, Kirk M. Petruccelli - Production Designer, David Tattersall - Cinematographer, Lawrence Gordon - Producer, Lloyd Levin - Producer, Sonja Klaus - Set Designer, Simon Kaye - Sound/Sound Designer, Chris Munro - Sound/Sound Designer, Randy Thom - Sound/Sound Designer, Steve Boeddeker - Sound/Sound Designer, Simon Crane - Stunts Coordinator, Chris Corbould - Special Effects Supervisor, Dean Georgaris - Screenwriter, Harry Harrison - Additional Cinematography, Steve Begg - Visual Effects Supervisor, Steve Boeddeker - Supervising Sound Editor

Similar Movies

Buffy the Vampire Slayer; Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom; Raiders of the Lost Ark; Romancing the Stone; Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of Gold; Resident Evil; Blade II; National Treasure
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Wikipedia: Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life
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Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life
Directed by Jan De Bont
Produced by Lloyd Levin
Lawrence Gordon
Written by Dean Georgaris
Starring Angelina Jolie
Gerard Butler
Ciarán Hinds
Chris Barrie
Noah Taylor
Til Schweiger
Djimon Hounsou
Music by Alan Silvestri
Editing by Michael Kahn
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Mutual Film Company
Release date(s) United States
21 July 2003
United Kingdom
22 August 2003
Australia
25 September 2003
Running time 117 min.
Country United States
United Kingdom
Language English
Budget $120 million
Gross revenue $156,505,388
Preceded by Lara Croft: Tomb Raider

Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life is a 2003 action film directed by Jan de Bont, and starring Angelina Jolie as Lara Croft. It is a sequel to the 2001 film Lara Croft: Tomb Raider.

Contents

Plot

Lara Croft is tasked by MI6 to find Pandora's Box, an object from ancient legends which supposedly contains one of the deadliest plagues on Earth, before evil Nobel Prize-winning scientist turned bioterrorist Jonathan Reiss can get his hands on it. The key to finding the box, which is hidden in the mysterious Cradle of Life, is a magical luminous orb that serves as a map. Lara finds the orb while exploring the submerged Luna Temple following an earthquake off the coast of Santorini, but it is stolen by crime lord Chen Lo, who in turn plans to sell the orb to Reiss. Lara recruits an old lover, Terry Sheridan, a former mercenary and Royal Marine who had spent his last couple of years in prison in Kazakhstan, to help her track down Chen Lo and the orb.

Among the action sequences that take place during this time are the duo's entry into mainland China, a fight scene in suburban Shanghai, and a leap off the then-under-construction International Finance Centre skyscraper in Hong Kong, landing on a ship out in the Kowloon Bay. The orb later reveals the location of the Cradle of Life to be somewhere near Kilimanjaro in Africa. Lara, unknowingly, reveals the location to Reiss when she sends this info back to Bryce back at Croft Manor. Meanwhile, Lara and Terry begin to fall in love with each other again but Lara starts to back away from him.

Lara meets up with Kosa, an African friend who serves as her translator as they obtain information from a local tribe about the Cradle of Life. However, many of the tribesmen are soon killed, and Lara captured, by Reiss' soldiers upon his arrival. Reiss threatens to kill Bryce, Hillary, and Kosa unless Lara leads him to the Cradle of Life. Soon they face perils such as a forest full of shadow monsters that kill immediately when they sense movement, and a pool of highly corrosive black acid which holds the box. During this time, Terry arrives, frees Reiss' captives, and catches up to Lara.

Following a climactic fistfight between Lara and Reiss, Reiss is knocked into the acid pool by Lara after he is distracted by Terry. Terry treats Lara's injuries and she gives him a kiss as a way of saying thank-you. When the couple tries to leave, Terry attempts to take Pandora's box as compensation for finding it, but she staunchly refuses to let him leave with it. Despite her love for him, this results in Lara being forced to fatally shoot him in self-defence just after Terry draws his own gun. Lara places Pandora's Box back into the pool, and realises that some things were not meant to be found.

Cast

Lara and Terry

Additional information

The budget for Cradle of Life was just under $120 million; like the first film, it was financed through Tele-München Gruppe. The picture was also distributed internationally by Japanese company Toho-Towa.[1]

Filming lasted for three and a half months, which included six-day shoots on location in Hong Kong, Santorini, Llyn Gwynant in North Wales (doubling for mainland China), and a two-week stint in Kenya for shooting at Amboseli and Hell's Gate, with the remainder of the picture filmed on soundstages in the UK.[2] The film was banned in China (save for Hong Kong and Macau) after the government complained that it portrayed their country as lawless and "overrun with secret societies."[3] One scene in the movie was set in Shanghai, but it was shot on a set and not on location.

Cradle of Life also featured the new 2003 Jeep Wrangler Rubicon, first seen when Lara parachutes into the moving vehicle in Africa and takes over the wheel from Kosa. As part of Jeep's advertising campaign, it was specially customized for the film by Jeep's design team along with Cradle of Life production designers Kirk Petruccelli and Graham Kelly, with three copies constructed for filming.[4] 1,001 limited-run Tomb Raider models were produced - available only in silver like the film version and minus its special customizations - and put on the market in July to coincide with Cradle's theatrical release. Jeep vice president Jeff Bell explained, "[The ad campaign] is more than just a product placement ... the Jeep Wrangler Rubicon is the most capable Jeep ever built, so the heroic and extreme environment in which Lara Croft uses her custom Wrangler Rubicon in Tomb Raider is accurate."[5] In the end, Lara's Rubicon had less than two total minutes of screen time in the finished film, nearly all of which consisted of the vehicle being driven on flat land.

Critical response

Cradle of Life received slightly higher reviews than the original, with a 23% rating on Rotten Tomatoes[6] and a 43/100 rating on Metacritic.[7] Salon described it as a "highly enjoyable summer thrill ride,"[8] while Roger Ebert wrote that the film was "better than the first one, more assured, more entertaining [...] it uses imagination and exciting locations to give the movie the same kind of pulp adventure feeling we get from the Indiana Jones movies."[9] David Rooney of Variety praised Jolie for being "hotter, faster and more commanding than last time around as the fearless heiress/adventuress, plus a little more human."[10]

Cradle of Life was nonetheless as heavily panned as its predecessor. Rene Rodriguez of the Miami Herald called it "another joyless, brain-numbing adventure through lackluster Indiana Jones territory,"[7] James Berardinelli said on ReelViews, "The first Tomb Raider was dumb fun; Cradle of Life is just plain dumb [...] the worst action movie of the summer."[11] Wesley Morris of the Boston Globe wrote, "It's a bullet-riddled National Geographic special [that] produces a series of dumb, dismal shootouts that are so woefully choreographed there's reason to believe Debbie Allen may be behind them." He then said of director De Bont, "He has yet to meet a contraption he couldn't use to damage your hearing."[12]

Box office performance

Despite the more favourable critical response, Cradle of Life suffered a disappointing opening weekend, as it debuted in fourth place with a take of $21.7 million,[13] a 55% drop from the original's opening gross of $47.7 million. The film finished with a domestic gross of only $65 million, therefore relying on the foreign box office to make a profit. Total earnings amounted to $156.5 million, which represented a loss of $118 million - nearly equal the cost of Cradle's budget alone - compared to the original's total take of $274.4 million.[14]

Overall, 2003 was not a good year for the Tomb Raider franchise. Paramount blamed the failure of Cradle of Life on the poor performance of the then-latest instalment of the video game series, Tomb Raider: The Angel of Darkness.[15] After numerous delays, Angel of Darkness was rushed to shelves just over a month before the release of the movie, despite the final product being unfinished and loaded with glitches. It spawned mediocre sales while garnering mixed reviews from critics,[16] and former Eidos senior executive Jeremy Heath-Smith, who was also credited as an executive producer in the film, resigned days after the game was released.[15]

In March 2004, producer Lloyd Levin said that Cradle of Life had earned enough internationally for Paramount to bankroll a second sequel, but any hopes of it going into production were soon quelled by Jolie's announcement that she had no desire to play Lara Croft a third time. "I just don't feel like I need to do another one. I felt really happy with the last one. It was one we really wanted to do."[17]

Soundtrack

References

External links


 
 

 

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