Tomb Raider wears its cinematic aspirations on its grimy, blood-soaked sleeve. In the mode of Uncharted, this is a game that very much wants to be a movieâits âcameraâ is a constant companion, never missing the opportunity for a close-in tension shot or a jumbled, handheld action sequence. As Lara Croft runs through the rain and engages in Croftian derring-do, you can feel the invisible cameramanâs loping stride as he follows behind.
In terms of design and pacing, Tomb Raider also takes a bevy of cues from Uncharted, but it diverges from Naughty Dogâs series in one crucial way: Where Uncharted drew from the same pulpy adventure serials that influenced Indiana Jones, Tomb Raider draws from something much darker: In addition to lifting a number of themes from the exploitation cinema and snuff-tinged horror of the 1970s, and it aggressively channels Neil Marshallâs 2005 horror movie The Descent
Iâll have some spoilers for both Tomb Raider and The Descent here, but nothing too major. Itâd be hard to spoil The Descent, really.
In The Descent, a group of tough extreme-sports-type women head into an uncharted cave and, after a cave-in, find that their situation goes from bad, to worse, to super way fucking worse. Itâs a hell of a good horror movie, and you should totally watch it, particularly if you liked some of the ideas explored in Tomb Raider. (And donât mind having your pants scared off.)
The similarities between the game and the film are apparent from the get-go: Women in caves, lost and injured, hunted by a terrifying group of all-male antagonists. And eventually, the women (or in Tomb Raiderâs case, woman), find that theyâre stronger than the men and fight back.
I havenât seen anyone at Crystal Dynamics specifically call out The Descent as an influence (and in this feature today at GameSpot, Crystal Dynamics head Darrell Gallagher focuses more on Die Hard, which, sure). But considering the fact that Tomb Raider contains at least two clear-cut homages to Marshallâs film, it stands to reason that someone at Crystal Dynamics was a fan.
A bit near the beginning of the game conjures aspects of The Descentâs controversial endingâit was given one ending in the UK and another in America, before being released as a final cut with only the original ending.
I remember seeing this sequence when it debuted at E3 and thinking, âGood lord, is this game seriously going after The Descent?â
Thereâs also this bit, from the middle of the game:
Which is an explicit shout-out to The Descentâs most iconic image:
Soon after that scene, a blood-drenched Lara lurks in the darkness, ready to exact terrible vengeance on the men who have hurt her and her friends:
Just as in The Descent, Shauna Macdonaldâs protagonist Sarah is ârebornâ from a lake of blood as a woman driven into an animal frenzy by fear and a desperate need to survive:
(Side note: Rebirth, lost children, a bizarre group of all-male CHUDs killing women⊠CAVES filled with BLOOD⊠yep. Discussion still continues as to whether or not The Descent is a feminist horror film. I see it as one, but I understand the arguments on the other side. Iâd imagine a similar discussion will continue about Tomb Raider.)
https://jezebel.com/in-defense-of-lady-terrorizing-horror-movies-5623749
And then thereâs the poster for The Descent 2, which I havenât seen, but which presents a scene that should be pretty familiar to anyone whoâs played Tomb Raider:
Torch? Check. Climbing axe? Check. Tank-top? Check. Tore-up physical appearance? Check.
Itâs remarkable that a big-budget, AAA video game would turn to such dark, hardcore material for its cinematic inspiration. If youâd told me in 2005 that in eight years, weâd get a Tomb Raider game that drew inspiration not from Indiana Jones or Romancing the Stone but from The Descent, I wouldnât have believed you.
Despite (or possibly thanks to) its dark tone and grisly atmosphere, Tomb Raider seems to have been a success, certainly critically and from the sounds of things, also commercially. Itâs said that horror canât be mainstreamâIâve even argued that point here at Kotaku. But then, Tomb Raider isnât really a horror game, though it sure can be horrific at times.
https://lastchance.cc/horror-is-not-mainstream-5927923%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E