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
Music by Alan Silvestri
Editing by Michael Kahn
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Mutual Film Company
Release date(s) July 25, 2003
Running time 117 min.
Country Flag of the United States United States
Language English
Budget $118,000,000
Gross revenue $156,505,388
Preceded by Lara Croft: Tomb Raider
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

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

[edit] Plot

Lara Croft returns in the sequel to the original video game based movie. This time, she is tasked to find Pandora's Box by agents from MI6, the object from ancient legends which supposedly contains one of the deadliest plagues on Earth, before evil Nobel Prize-winning scientist 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 is supposed to be some type of a map. While exploring the submerged Luna Temple off Greece, she comes across the orb. However, it is stolen by Reiss' henchman and so she recruits an old friend, Terry Sheridan, a former mercenary and Royal Marine who had spent his last couple of years in prison in Kazakhstan, to help her.

Lara and Terry embark together on an adventure that spans continents in an attempt to regain the orb. Their adventure takes them to Shanghai and Hong Kong where Reiss is engaging in shady dealings with criminal lord Chen Lo. Among the white-knuckle action sequences that take place during this time are the duo's entry by spaceplane, an intense fight scene in suburban Shanghai and the dramatic leap off the then-under-construction International Finance Centre skyscraper in Hong Kong, landing on a ship out in the Kowloon Bay.

Clues unveiled lead the pair on separate paths to the Kilimanjaro in Africa. When Lara sends the info to Bryce and Hillary, Jonathan Reiss and his men infiltrate the house and capture them. Rendezvousing in Africa with Kosa, they obtain help from a local tribe for her journey only for most of them to be killed by a lot of Reiss' men upon his arrival. When Reiss reveals that he captured Bryce and Hillary, he threatens to kill them and Kosa if Lara doesn't lead them 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 black acid that can destroy anything. Terry eventually arrives, frees Reiss' captives, and catches up to Lara. At the end of the film, Jonathan Reiss is knocked into the black acid, Terry attempts to take Pandora's box as a prize for helping Lara find it. This results in Lara being forced to kill him.

[edit] Cast

Lara and Terry
Lara and Terry

[edit] Box office and critical response

Despite its over-$100 million budget, Cradle of Life grossed only $65 million domestically, relying on the foreign box office to make a profit. The box office disappointment of this movie created something of a ripple effect that resulted in production of several similar movies being cancelled, most notably the James Bond spin-off from Die Another Day (2002), which was tentatively titled Jinx and was to have starred Halle Berry.

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 installment of the video game series, Tomb Raider: The Angel of Darkness. After numerous delays, The 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 less-than-favorable reviews from critics. Cradle of Life was originally planned to be the second of three movies, but the harsh critical reception and poor box office performance resulted in the second sequel being scrapped by Paramount in early 2004.

Despite being filmed in Hong Kong, the final movie was banned in China (except in Hong Kong and Macau) after the government complained that it portrayed their country as having "secret societies." One scene in the movie was set in Shanghai, but it was shot on a set and not on location.

[edit] Filming locations

[edit] Budget

  • Story rights and screenplay: $4 million
  • Producers: $4 million
  • Director (Jan de Bont): $5 million
  • Cast: $17.25 million
    • Angelina Jolie: $12 million
    • Extras: $250,000
    • Other (inc. Angelina's perks): $5 million
  • Production costs: $67 million
    • Set design and construction: $17.8 million
  • Visual Effects: $13 million
  • Music: $3.3 million
  • Editing: $3 million
  • Post Production costs: $1.5 million

Total: $118 million[1]

[edit] Trivia

An actual East African tribe featured in the film
An actual East African tribe featured in the film
  • The scene with the underwater scooters was shot dry-for-wet, as actual underwater test shots with the scooters proved unsuccessful (as they almost always flipped upside-down).
  • The Maasai, seen near the climax of the picture, is an actual East African tribe.
  • Director Jan de Bont was forbidden from entering the Luna Temple set due to Paramount's insurance policy after he had suffered a knee injury just weeks earlier, since the wet surfaces provided a potential slip-and-fall hazard.
  • In order to shoot the Santorini scenes, all the equipment had to be brought up by staircase, and artificial rocks were attached to the cliff face so nothing was actually damaged during the earthquake scene.
  • Whilst filming the underwater scenes for The Cradle of Life, Jolie overcame her fear of water while swimming beyond her normal endurance.
  • In the scenes shot in Hong Kong, Lara is seen entering the laboratory in Times Square but takes an elevator up to the roof of the IFC Two. This is actually geographically incorrect as Times Square is in Causeway Bay and IFC Two is in Central and both buildings are almost 2.5 kilometer apart. The Times Square in the movie also shows a glass ceiling, which is not existing in the real world's Times Square.
  • Kazakhstan episode is introduced with a line "Kazahkstan, Barla Kala prison", having a typo in the word "Kazakhstan".

[edit] References

[edit] External links