Lara Croft In The Gatekeeper [updated] -
Is the entity a villain? Not exactly. The film smartly avoids making it a standard monster. It’s more like a force of nature: cold, fair, and terrifying. In the final confrontation, Lara doesn’t kill it. She negotiates with it by offering a memory she’s willing to lose. That’s bold, poetic, and very un-Croft-like—but it works.
Streaming now on Paramount+ (hypothetically). lara croft in the gatekeeper
The film’s first hour is a tight, claustrophobic puzzle-box thriller. The final act, however, becomes overstuffed. The explanation of “anti-memory” relies on dense exposition delivered via holographic recordings (a tired trope). Some may love the cosmic-horror turn; others will miss the simpler tombs of Tomb Raider (2018). Is the entity a villain
Green excels at dread. The monastery breathes—stone corridors shift when you’re not looking, and the sound design (footsteps echoing into impossible distances) is masterful. Lara (Alicia Vikander, fully committed) is no longer the frightened survivor; she’s a weary archaeologist with a moral code. One standout sequence sees her traverse a collapsing hall of mirrors while the Gatekeeper whispers her dead father’s voice—genuinely unnerving. It’s more like a force of nature: cold,
In the latest chapter of the rebooted Tomb Raider saga, Lara Croft in The Gatekeeper attempts to blend the gritty, survivalist tone of the 2018 film with high-concept supernatural horror. Directed by Misha Green (known for Lovecraft Country ), this standalone adventure pits a more seasoned Lara against an ancient order protecting a dimensional threshold known as “The Gate.”