By no means am I wanting to pile on here, but I'm really struggling to understand what Ms. Rapace's big accomplishment here is. Perhaps because I haven't read the books, I'm not able to fill in the blanks, such as they are, but to me Lisbeth comes across as someone so insular that there's really very little for Rapace to play. She has no apparent emotions other than anger, so she just needs to stare straight ahead with an angry look on her face, and let the costumes and makeup do the work for her. I don't see why Ms. Mara can't equal Rapace, and I suspect that a big part of her "success" is due to the fact that no one has seen her in anything else.
Anyway, I saw the third film a couple days ago, and I have to say, I thought the movies were pretty disgusting. They pretend to take sympathy for Lisbeth, but the first two films at least are
really in love with seeing her getting raped/beaten, and even the third goes out of its way at the end to see her getting bloodied up a bit one last time. A lot of movies try to have it both ways in this respect - glorifying the things that they're pretending to denounce - and these are a particularly nasty case of such. How many lovingly made-up corpses do we see in the third? And mostly of people that aren't even characters in the film - they're just there for eye-candy.
And they're not even all that interesting in a narrative sense, just a jumble of John Grisham/Dan Brown cliches. Throughout the series we have Nazis, government conspiracies, invincible giant albino mutants, Soviet spies, serial killers, kiddie molesters, etc., all undone by plucky journalists and a bisexual goth-punk computer hacker who constantly make revelatory discoveries whenever they're at a computer, microfilm, etc. None of it is all that credible, even on its own terms -
seriously, Lisbeth is going to be charged with attempted murder after being shot three times and buried alive? Self-defense didn't cross the investigators' minds? -
and it's all made up to be as unpleasant as possible, most of the time just for the sake of it. The second film finds almost nothing for Mikael to do, while the third finds Lisbeth mostly passive.
I didn't care for them, is what I'm saying. And though I'm not a huge fan of Fincher, it's not hard for me to imagine that he can do a lot better.