Girl With The Dragon Tattoo is now the girl with the new show in development

America hasn’t given up on Lisbeth Salander yet as Amazon MGM preps a new adaptation

Aux News Stieg Larsson
Girl With The Dragon Tattoo is now the girl with the new show in development
Rooney Mara as Lisbeth Salander in The Girl With The Dragon’s Tattoo Screenshot: Sony

The buzziest book of 2008 is still relevant, or at least Hollywood executives hope it is. Per Variety, Amazon is developing a new Lisbeth Salander television series in celebration of The Girl In The Spider Web’s fifth anniversary. Though the report didn’t say specifically which of Stieg Larsson’s “Millennium trilogy” the series will focus on, Amazon MGM did select an appropriate showrunner: Veena Sud, who brought The Killing stateside.

Larsson died in 2004, but the Salander books continued. After his death, David Lagercrantz wrote several more Salander mysteries, including the aforementioned Spider’s Web. The latest, written by another new author, Karin Smirnoff, came out in 2022. However, though the books have sold more than 100 million copies, dragon tattoos never became the phenomenon Hollywood hoped for. Fincher’s series died in development after the release of Dragon Tattoo and Spider’s Web died at the box office.

There is a sense that Hollywood fumbled the bag with this one. Despite being pegged early as a bomb, Fincher’s Girl With The Dragon Tattoo grossed more than $100 million and was nominated for five Oscars, winning one for editing. Rooney Mara snagged her first nomination for the movie and was presumably expected to return until the sequels seemingly fizzled out. Seven years and one new Salander (this time Claire Foy) later, audiences had moved on from Dragon Tattoos to Sherlock Gnomes, another 2018 mystery, which grossed $97 million to Spider Web’s $34 million.

While Americans might have an on-again-off-again relationship with Lisbeth Salander, Larsson’s trilogy still had a massive effect. The books helped popularize Nordic noir procedurals around the world, inspiring The Killing and The Bridge, among others. Sud’s work on the first two seasons of The Killing certainly shows a knack for snowy investigations and adaptations. Like Dragon Tattoo, The Killing was based on the Danish series Forbrydelsen.

6 Comments

  • snooder87-av says:

    “Despite being pegged early as a bomb”Intentional pun?

  • breadnmaters-av says:

    “The books helped popularize Nordic noir procedurals around the world,…”It’s a fascinating world, too. That may be the problem. Americans don’t seem interested in anything not American right now, unless it’s some silly romcom that spends a minute in France or an another assasin movie that bludgeons everything Russian. Bergman was never a big hit over here either, more’s the pity.

    • wrighteousg7g-av says:

      I’m pretty sure some of the biggest television and film sensations in America in recent years have been Korean and British, so not quite sure what you’re talking about that Americans only want American things.

  • dirtside-av says:

    They should do a Game of Thrones crossover and call it “The Girl With the ‘Where Are My Dragons’ Tattoo”

  • noisetanknick-av says:

    I really don’t get the obsession with making this series a thing. The books may have sold over 100 million copies – but a look at Wikipedia tells me that 80 million of those were the first three. Seems like the magic lay with Larsson, and he’s been dead for nearly 2 decades.
    Amazon MGM did select an appropriate showrunner: Veena Sud, who brought The Killing stateside.

    Oh, so they’re going to make a crappy version? The first season of The Killing remains one of the most infuriating shows I’ve ever watched; I was sold as an intricate procedural tracking a pair of detectives solving a murder step-by-step, what I saw was a show about the two dumbest cops in Seattle repeatedly botching not only their own assigned case, but multiple other investigations in the process. The season finale did technically reveal whodunnit, but in a tremendously unsatisfying way (while also infuriatingly leaving multiple unresolved plot threads hanging in the wind for season two.)

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