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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2001 action-adventure film by Simon West
This article is about the 2001 film starring Angelina Jolie. For the 2018 film starring Alicia Vikander, see Tomb Raider (film) . For the character, see Lara Croft .

Paramount Pictures (United States)
United International Pictures (United Kingdom/Internationally)
Concorde Filmverleih (Germany)
Toho-Towa (Japan)


June 15, 2001 ( 2001-06-15 ) (United States)
June 28, 2001 ( 2001-06-28 ) (Germany)
July 6, 2001 ( 2001-07-06 ) (United Kingdom)
October 6, 2001 ( 2001-10-06 ) (Japan)

Germany Japan United Kingdom United States [1] [2]

Angelina Jolie as Lara Croft
Iain Glen as Manfred Powell
Jon Voight as Lord Richard Croft
Daniel Craig as Alex West
Noah Taylor as Bryce
Richard Johnson as Distinguished Gentleman
Chris Barrie as Hillary
Julian Rhind-Tutt as Mr. Pimms
Leslie Phillips as Wilson
Henry Wyndham as Boothby's Auctioneer
Olegar Fedoro as Russian Commander

This section has an unclear citation style . The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting . ( February 2022 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message )
69 : 01 72:14 (including the additional track)

" Deep " Released: 2001 (promotional)


^ Green's featured performance is not mentioned in the soundtrack credits



^ "Lara Croft Tomb Raider" . British Film Institute . London. Archived from the original on August 2, 2012 . Retrieved November 10, 2012 .

^ "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider" . AFI Catalog . Retrieved September 22, 2021 .

^ Jump up to: a b c "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider" . Box Office Mojo . Retrieved June 19, 2014 .

^ Ascher-Walsh, Rebecca (March 2, 2000). " Tomb Raider is gearing up for a summer 2001 theatrical release" . Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved April 23, 2022 .

^ Thakur, Pradeep. Pradeep Thakur: Angelina Jolie: The World's Most Powerful Celebrity? , Morrisville (NC) [without date], p. 99 . ISBN 9788190870597 .

^ Jump up to: a b "EW.com answers your Tomb Raider burning questions" . Entertainment Weekly . June 27, 2001 . Retrieved December 27, 2017 .

^ Eila Mell (2005). Casting Might-Have-Beens: A Film by Film Directory of Actors Considered for Roles Given to Others . ISBN 9781476609768 . Retrieved December 27, 2017 .

^ Jump up to: a b c David Hughes (2003). Tales From Development Hell: New Updated Edition . ISBN 9780857687319 . Retrieved December 27, 2017 .

^ "Angelina Jolie's most thrilling decision: Robbing her breasts of their cultural power" . Salon . May 15, 2013 . Retrieved December 27, 2017 .

^ "Angelina Jolie On Filling Lara Croft's Shoes and D-size Cups" . NY Rocks. June 2001. Archived from the original on December 2, 2001 . Retrieved December 27, 2017 .

^ "Does Angelina Jolie's 'Tomb Raider' Hold Up?" . GQ . March 14, 2018.

^ East, James (December 8, 2000). "The making of Tomb Raider in Cambodia" . The Guardian . Retrieved May 5, 2018 .

^ D, Spence (May 23, 2001). "Interview with Tomb Raider Director Simon West" . IGN . Ziff Davis . Retrieved May 5, 2018 .

^ Clugston, Harriet (November 15, 2017). "Eight movie scenes you didn't know were filmed in Hertfordshire" . Hertfordshire Mercury . Retrieved August 6, 2020 .

^ David Hughes - Tales From Development Hell: The Greatest Movies Never Made, Page 231, Interviews with De Souza and Revell; "de Souza alleges that West went 'many, many millions over budget and two months over schedule, so the minute he turned in his interminable 130-minute cut, Paramount showed him the door. They didn’t even let him in the editing room.' Whether or not this is true — West was later invited back to direct minor reshoots in London, and provides director's commentary for the DVD — Paramount brought in Stuart Baird [...] to re-cut the entire movie. 'Stuart Baird has an executive producer credit on the movie,' notes de Souza, 'but all he did was re-cut the movie down to eighty-eight minutes (plus generous head and tail credits).' The studio also rejected the original music score by Michael Kamen (The X-Men), commissioning Pitch Black composer Graeme Revell to produce a new soundtrack — sixty minutes of music — in the space of ten days. [...] So rushed were the final stages of post production, that several major effects shots appeared incomplete by the time the film hit theatres."

^ "LARA CROFT – TOMB RAIDER – Graeme Revell" . June 16, 2001.

^ "Silvestri: Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life" .

^ "Jerry Goldsmith Online Spotlight the Lost Scores" .

^ David Hughes - Tales From Development Hell: The Greatest Movies Never Made? - Chapter 12; Tomb Raider Chronicles - Why making the leap to the big screen was the toughest challenge Lara Croft had ever faced, Pages 211-235

^ Lara Croft: Tomb Raider Blu-ray, Digging Into Tomb Raider (29 minutes)

^ Jeannette Walls, MSNBC Scoop, September 27, 2000

^ Simon West interview, Empire Magazine, July 2001

^ " 'Lara Croft: Tomb Raider': Angelina Jolie Was Dissatisfied with the Movie Because Her Character Wasn't 'Sexy Enough' " . March 5, 2022.

^ Jump up to: a b c d "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider - Original Motion Picture Score" . Amazon . Retrieved August 6, 2014 .

^ "Various - Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (Music From The Motion Picture)" . Discogs . Retrieved August 26, 2018 .

^ "TOMB RAIDER: Composer Graeme Revell - Creating a feature-film soundtrack in less than two weeks" . mania.com . March 27, 2013. Archived from the original on April 4, 2015 . Retrieved April 3, 2014 .

^ Jump up to: a b "Tomb Raider (Graeme Revell)" . Filmtracks. June 26, 2001 . Retrieved August 6, 2014 .

^ Castillo, Phil (July 29, 2002). "GraemeRevell.com NEWS" . GraemeRevell.com. Archived from the original on August 10, 2001 . Retrieved February 19, 2013 .

^ "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider DVD Release Date" . DVDs Release Dates . Retrieved May 21, 2018 .

^ "Weekly video report: Top 20 rental titles" . The Hollywood Reporter . Wilkerson Daily Corporation. December 2001. p. 19.

^ "UK Film Council Statistical Yearbook: Annual Review 2004/05" (PDF) . UK Film Council . p. 73 . Retrieved April 21, 2022 – via British Film Institute .

^ "Weekend Boxoffice Report: 'Lara Croft' Leaps Into the Big Game at No. 1" . hive4media.com . June 18, 2001. Archived from the original on July 1, 2001 . Retrieved September 21, 2019 .

^ " 'Lara Croft' easily tops US box office" . United Press International . June 17, 2001. Archived from the original on February 28, 2022 . Retrieved February 28, 2022 .

^ "Weekend Box Office" . Box Office Guru. June 18, 2001 . Retrieved February 18, 2013 .

^ "Video Game Adaptation Movies at the Box Office" . Box Office Mojo . Retrieved February 18, 2013 .

^ "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider" . Rotten Tomatoes . Fandango . Retrieved October 5, 2021 .

^ "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider" . Metacritic . Retrieved April 13, 2022 .

^ "Cinemascore" . Archived from the original on December 20, 2018 . Retrieved August 14, 2019 .

^ Glen Oliver (October 26, 2007). "IGN: Tomb Raider Review" . IGN . Archived from the original on October 26, 2007. "Review of Lara Croft: Tomb Raider" . IGN . June 15, 2001.

^ McCarthy, Todd (June 15, 2001). "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider" . Variety .

^ Simon Braund (January 1, 2000). "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider" . Empire .

^ Ebert, Roger (June 15, 2001). "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (review)" . Chicago Sun-Times . Retrieved July 3, 2011 .

^ Wilson, John (February 11, 2002). "22nd Annual Razzie Nominations Announced" . Golden Raspberry Award Foundation. Archived from the original on December 10, 2015 . Retrieved February 9, 2015 .

^ Jump up to: a b c d Nolfi, Joey (March 8, 2018). "Tomb Raider director fought for Angelina Jolie as 'wicked' Lara Croft over 'safer' actresses" . Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved November 23, 2019 .

^ " 'The Departed' & 'The Town' Producer Plans 'Tomb Raider' Reboot For 2013" . The Film Stage. March 8, 2011. Archived from the original on March 18, 2018.

^ Kroll, Justin (April 28, 2016). "Alicia Vikander to Play Lara Croft in 'Tomb Raider' Reboot" . Variety . Retrieved March 30, 2017 .

^ McNary, Dave (July 7, 2016). "Alicia Vikander's 'Tomb Raider' Gets 2018 Release Date" . Variety .


Wikiquote has quotations related to Lara Croft: Tomb Raider .
Lara Croft: Tomb Raider is a 2001 action adventure film based on the Tomb Raider video game series featuring the character Lara Croft , portrayed by Angelina Jolie . An international co-production between the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan and Germany, it was directed by Simon West and revolves around Lara Croft trying to obtain ancient artifacts in competition with the Illuminati.

The film was released on June 15, 2001, and received generally negative reviews from critics, although Angelina Jolie was praised for her performance. Tomb Raider was the highest-grossing film on its opening weekend. A sequel, Lara Croft: Tomb Raider – The Cradle of Life , was released in 2003.

Adventurer Lara Croft defeats a robot in an Egyptian tomb, revealed to be a training exercise arena in her family manor, where she lives with her technical assistant Bryce and butler Hilary. In Venice , as the first phase of a planetary alignment begins, the Illuminati search for a key to rejoin halves of a mysterious artifact, "the Triangle," which must be completed by the final phase, a solar eclipse . Manfred Powell assures the cabal that the artifact is almost ready, but has no real idea of its location.

Lara's father Lord Richard Croft, long missing and presumed dead, appears to her in a dream. Lara awakens to a mysterious ticking, and finds a strange clock hidden inside the manor. On her way to consult a friend of her father's, Wilson, Lara crosses paths with Alex West, an American associate and fellow adventurer. Lara shows Wilson the clock, and he puts her in touch with Powell. Lara shows Powell photographs of the clock, which he claims not to recognize.

That night, armed commandos invade the house and steal the clock, bringing it to Powell. The next morning, a prearranged letter from Lara's father arrives, explaining that the clock is the key to retrieving the halves of the Triangle of Light, an ancient object with the power to control time. After misuse of its power destroyed an entire city, the Triangle was separated: one half was hidden in a tomb at Angkor Cambodia, and the other in the ruined city located at Ukok Plateau , Siberia. Her father tasks her to find and destroy both pieces before the Illuminati can exploit the Triangle's power.

In Cambodia, Lara finds Powell, who has hired West, and his commandos already at the temple. West solves part of the temple's puzzle, and Powell prepares to insert the clock at the moment of alignment. Lara, realizing they are mistaken, finds the correct keyhole; with only seconds left, Lara persuades Powell to throw her the clock. She unlocks the first piece of the Triangle, and the statues of the temple come to life and attack the intruders. West, Powell, and his remaining men flee with the clock, leaving Lara to defeat an enormous six-armed guardian statue. She escapes with the first piece; recovering at a Buddhist monastery, she arranges a meeting with Powell.

In Venice, Powell proposes a partnership to find the Triangle, and informs Lara that her father was a member of the Illuminati, and offers to use the Triangle's power to resurrect him; though reluctant, she agrees to join forces. Lara and Bryce travel with Powell, West, and the leader of the Illuminati to Siberia. Entering the tomb, they discover a giant orrery , which activates as the alignment nears completion. Lara retrieves the second half of the Triangle, and Powell kills the Illuminati's leader to restore the Triangle himself, but the halves will not fuse. Realizing Lara knows the solution, Powell kills West to persuade her to complete the Triangle to restore West's and her father's lives. Lara complies, but seizes the Triangle herself.

In a "crossing" of time, Lara faces the memory of her father, who urges her to destroy the Triangle for good rather than save his life. Returning to the tomb, Lara manipulates time to save West and stab Powell, and destroys the Triangle. The tomb begins to collapse, and all flee but the wounded Powell, who reveals to Lara that he murdered her father. After a hand-to-hand fight, she kills Powell, retrieving her father's pocket watch and escaping the tomb.

Back in her manor, Lara visits her father's memorial and finds that Bryce has reprogrammed the robot, and Hilary presents her with her pistols, which she takes with a smile.

Tomb Raider went through many drafts and several writers, which resulted in production delays. In 1998, writer Brent V. Friedman, who had co-written Mortal Kombat: Annihilation the year before, penned an unproduced Tomb Raider script. Producer and screenwriter Steven E. de Souza , who wrote and directed the 1994 video game film Street Fighter , penned an early draft of the Tomb Raider script in 1999, but it was rejected by Paramount. The final draft of the script was attributed to five writers, including director Simon West. West reverted back to the original writers after he replaced Stephen Herek as director. [4]

Lara Croft was financed through Tele München Gruppe (TMG), a German tax shelter . The tax law of Germany allowed investors to take an instant tax deduction even on non-German productions and even if the film has not gone into production. By selling them the copyright for $94 million and then buying it back for $83.8 million, Paramount Pictures made $10.2 million. The copyright was then sold again to Lombard Bank, a British investment group and a further $12 million was made. However, to qualify for Section 48 tax relief, the production must include some UK filming and British actors, which was acceptable for a film partially set in the United Kingdom. Presales to distributors in Japan, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Spain made a further $65 million. Showtime paid $6.8 million for premium cable television rights. In total, $94 million was put together. [5]

The announcement of the film generated significant discussion about who would be cast to play Lara Croft. Numerous actresses (and non-actresses) were rumoured to be on the shortlist to play her and countless others declared their interest in the role, [6] most notably Jennifer Love Hewitt , Famke Janssen , Jennifer Lopez , Rhona Mitra , Elizabeth Hurley , Ashley Judd , Sandra Bullock , Catherine Zeta-Jones , Diane Lane , Demi Moore and Denise Richards , with many considering the latter the favourite to win the role. [6] [7] [8]

The casting of Jolie was controversial among many fans of the Tomb Raider series, who felt she wasn't physically appropriate enough to play the large-breasted heroine; others complained about an American actress being hired to play a British character; others cited Jolie's tattoos and well-publicised controversial personal life. [8] Director Simon West dismissed these concerns and said, in reference to Jolie's penchant for sexual knife play, "it was always Angelina. I mean, Lara sleeps with knives and doesn't take shit from anybody. That's [Angelina] down to a tee." [8] Jolie wore a padded bra to increase her bust size when playing Lara. As she explained to NY Rock in June 2001: "C'mon, I'm not so flat chested to begin with. When I wear a tight T-shirt, I look a certain way. So it wasn't like we had to completely change me. You know, we just had to enhance me a little. I'm a 36C. Lara, she's a 36D. And in the game, she's a double D, so we took her down some. But we did give her a bit of padding there. For me, it was simply one size. So it was like having a padded bra. But no, I am not flat chested anyway. So we still made it Lara Croft, but we didn't go to any extremes. And Lara doesn't apologize for herself, and for having that, you know, recognizable shape. So I'm not going to apologize for her either." [9] [10]

The film marked the feature film debut of television actor Chris Barrie , known for his role of Arnold Rimmer in the BBC science fiction comedy series Red Dwarf . English actor Daniel Craig adopts an American accent for the role of Alex West whilst Jolie, being American herself, takes on an English accent. [11] Jon Voight, Angelina Jolie's father, plays Richard Croft, Lara's father in the film.

Principal photography for Lara Croft: Tomb Raider took place from July 30 to November 30, 2000. Portions of the film were shot on location at the Ta Prohm temple, located in Angkor , Siem Reap Province , Cambodia . The film was the first major motion picture to be shot in Cambodia since Lord Jim in 1964, following the country's occupation by the Khmer Rouge regime. [12] In addition to on-location shooting, a majority of the film's production also took place on the 007 Stage at Pinewood Studios . [13] Hatfield House in Hertfordshire was used as Croft's home in the film. [14]

Simon West's first director's cut of the film was around 130 minutes long, and that was before it went through re-shoots some time later after principal photography was finished. West was removed from working on the film in post due to some problems between him and Paramount, however he did return to work on re-shoots. Editor Stuart Baird was brought in by Paramount to re-edit the entire film. He was well known for coming in at last minute to help movie studios by fixing up their films which went through troubled productions and had problems with earlier cuts. Baird was promised the job of directing Star Trek: Nemesis by Paramount in exchange for re-editing original 130 minute cut of this film and John Woo's original 210 minute cut of Mission: Impossible 2 . Due to all the work on post production taking longer than anyone thought it would, and how rushed it was, some of the major effects were apparently left unfinished by the time the film was released in theaters. Baird ended up re-editing the film down to 88 minutes. One of the bigger cuts on the film was changing the original score. Originally, Nathan McCree was hired to compose the score, since he already composed the music for some of Tomb Raider games, but Paramount insisted on more well known movie composer. Greg Hale Jones started to work on the score with Peter Afterman in November 2000, right after production was finished, and Danny Elfman composed the main theme for the film. Jones later said how once West was fired from the film, his score and Elfman's theme were shelved. Michael Kamen was then hired and he submitted couple demos, although according to Tales From Development Hell by David Hughes, Kamen did in fact compose full score which was rejected once the film was re-edited by Baird. Graeme Revell was then brought in and he had to compose sixty minutes of music inside ten days. Some earlier reports about the film mentioned John Powell as one of original choices for composer, and Fatboy Slim too. Jerry Goldsmith was also attached to score the film at one point, but he couldn't do it due to problems with his health at the time. [15] [16] [17] [18]

Despite large amount of film that was cut out, only four deleted scenes, in total seven minutes long, were included as extras on film's DVD and Blu-Ray releases. Trailers for the f
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