Lara Croft In The Gatekeeper [extra Quality] šŸŽÆ Best Pick

The mirror corridor sequence. The final 10 minutes (stay through the silent credits for a chilling audio cue). Skip it if: You dislike slow-burn horror or metaphysical endings.

Rating: ā˜…ā˜…ā˜…ā˜†ā˜† (3.5/5)

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 ā€œanti-memoryā€ 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). The mirror corridor sequence

The creature design for the Gatekeeper is inspired: a silent, tall humanoid whose face is a vertical slit of static. It doesn’t chase—it waits , forcing Lara to outthink it rather than outrun it. Rating: ā˜…ā˜…ā˜…ā˜†ā˜† (3

After a cryptic artifact surfaces in a black-market auction in Istanbul, Lara tracks it to a forgotten monastery in the Carpathian Mountains. There, she discovers that ā€œThe Gatekeeperā€ is not a person, but a living curse—a being of shadow and geometry that guards a doorway to a plane of chaotic ā€œanti-memory.ā€ If opened, reality rewrites itself. Lara must solve the monastery’s Escher-like puzzles before a rogue paramilitary cult (led by a surprisingly menacing Claes Bang) forces the Gate open.

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.