Alicia Vikander turns Lara Croft back into a worthy role model

New 'Tomb Raider' film sets the record straight: Lara Croft isn't sex-on-legs, she's a smart, strong and skilled hero that girl gamers can look up to

27 May 2018 - 00:00 By shanthini naidoo

Gaming in the 1990s wasn't easy. There's a flighty resonance with our parents' stories about walking miles in the snow, barefoot, to get to school, when you compare voice commanding and VR headsets to early console and PC gaming.
Back in the day, for us who are practically ancient in tech years, you had to be double-jointed in the thumbs or work really hard and quickly to manoeuvre your hero to do anything.
The combination-key moves could break the springs in your grey PC space bar if you wanted to get to the end of a game.
Whether it was Sega's Mickey Mouse in the Castle of Illusion (darker than you might think with a red-eyed genie the "boss" to clear the game), the Prince of Persia with his problematic mazes and difficulty of move-and-jump simultaneously or to get Liu Kang to do a bicycle kick in Mortal Kombat, played at the arcade, you had to practise, practise and try again.
Then there would be software crashes if someone removed a cartridge or CD incorrectly and friendships would be over sooner than you can press "eject".
Your gaming skills, finding dealers in cheats, upgraded hardware at Christmas or birthdays, gave you street cred.
And there was something anti-establishment about females who enjoyed gaming. There were also few female heroes.
Early console games were never gender divisive, I mean, who didn't love Donkey Kong?
COOL KILLER, THAT LARA
But when Lara Croft became the PC game to have in 1996, with her penchant for shooting wild animals, finding lost artefacts deep in jungles, and an image of a smart girl who happened to have a killer two-pistol shot, she was so cool.
Then Lara was redesigned as the fantasy of some young boy's wet dream, and was even criticised by Germaine Greer for her backward feminine ideals.
Yet, her adventuring skills, agility and Oxford-school accent made an awkward teenage girl feel a little more powerful than she might have been in her high school technical-drawing class.
Eye-roll at how male gamers insisted on a naked mode written into the code at one stage and then she started to morph into a Barbie-disproportionate body shape.
WATCH | The trailer for Tomb Raider..

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