Alicia Vikander to play Lara Croft in ‘Tomb Raider’ reboot
LOS ANGELES—Oscar-winning actress Alicia Vikander is to follow Angelina Jolie’s footsteps into the action-filled role of British archeologist and adventurer Lara Croft in the “Tomb Raider” reboot, reports said on Thursday.
The latest in the franchise will be an origin story following the young Lara as she sets off on her first adventure, according to the Los Angeles Times, with Norwegian director Roar Uthaug at the helm.
The original “Lara Croft: Tomb Raider,” released in 2001, was based on the 1996 video game, and Jolie reprised the role two years later for “Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life.”
Neither film was a critical success, although Jolie was singled out for praise, but the original performed well at the box office, taking $275 million worldwide, while its sequel earned a respectable $157 million.
MGM, which acquired the film rights in 2012, has not officially announced hiring Vikander and the 27-year-old Swede’s London-based agent was unavailable for comment.
Article continues after this advertisementBut entertainment weekly Variety, citing unnamed sources, reported MGM would develop the reboot alongside warner Bros and GK Films.
Article continues after this advertisementVikander won a best supporting actress Oscar for her role as artist Gerda Wegener in 2015 biographical drama “The Danish Girl.”
READ: OSCARS: Alicia Vikander wins supporting actress prize
She appeared the same year in British sci-fi psychological thriller “Ex Machina” where she starred as the humanoid robot Ava and for which she was nominated for a Golden Globe.
Born in Gothenburg in 1988, Vikander studied at the Royal Swedish Ballet School in Stockholm before injuries cut her dance career short in her teens.
She appeared in Swedish short films and television until her breakthrough role in the 2012 British adaptation of historical epic “Anna Karenina.”
She recently wrapped up filming for “Jason Bourne,” which will see Matt Damon return to the big screen as the amnesiac super-spy.