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In Larsson's trilogy, Salander and journalist Mikael Blomqvist team up to solve serial killings and sex trafficking scandals. Rooney Mara plays Salander and Daniel Craig plays Blomqvist in the David Fincher directed film. Mara suggested at a news conference last month that Salander isn't a feminist, and doesn't see herself as part of any group or subculture. "Does she know what film she has been in?" Gabrielsson said, disbelievingly. "Has she read the books? Has she not had any coaching?" Salander doesn't fit neatly into any category, "but she is still part of a movement," Gabrielsson said. "Her entire being represents a resistance, an active resistance to the mechanisms that mean women don't advance in this world and in worst case scenarios are abused like she was." Gabrielsson said the feminist theme had been partly lost with the creation of the English title, which she thinks sounds like "a children's book." She said the original Swedish title is "Man som hatar kvinnor,"
-- men who hate women. "In his (Larsson's) world that was also the basic theme for these books," she said. Gabrielsson published her own book last year about her life with Larsson.
[Associated
Press;
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