However, she captures the assault on camera. Salander comes up with another plan, she asks for more money to pay her rent and is able to subdue Bjurman by tasering him. She then strips him naked except for his socks, ties him to the floor and demands he give her access to her money; she uses the recording of him assaulting her to blackmail him and also tortures him.
When Bjurman agrees, Salander releases him, though not before tattooing the words "I am a sadistic pig, a pervert, and a rapist. Not long after her return to Sweden, Salander is falsely implicated in the murder of three people — Bjurman and two of Blomkvist's colleagues. Zalachenko had his son, Salander's half-brother Ronald Neidermann, kill both of Blomkvist's colleagues investigating Zalachenko's prostitution business, and also Bjurman, intentionally implicating Salander.
The Section hides its complicity in the concealment of Zalachenko's crimes by falsely incriminating Salander as well. Blomkvist tries to help Salander, even though she wants nothing to do with him. By the end of the novel, Blomkvist follows her to Zalachenko's farm, where he finds her seriously injured after a confrontation with both Zalachenko and Neidermann.
Blomkvist calls an ambulance, saving her life by having her air-lifted to a hospital. The novel also expands upon Salander's childhood. She is portrayed as having been an extremely bright but anti-social child, violently lashing out at anyone who threatened or bullied her. This was in large part the result of an abusive and troubled home life: repeatedly abusing her mother, Zalachenko escaped punishment because the Section perceived his value to the Swedish State as being more important than her mother's civil rights.
Zalanchenko was also responsible for destroying Salander's relationship with her younger sister, Camilla, who, having repressed her own memories of their abuse, perceived her father as gentle and loving. When Salander was 12, Zalachenko beat their mother so severely that she sustained permanent brain damage. In retaliation, Salander set her father on fire, leaving him permanently disfigured and in chronic pain. Ultimately, the Section, fearing repercussions from Zalanchenko's behaviour would lead to its exposure, dealt with Salander by having her sent to Children's Psychiatric Hospital in Uppsala.
While there, she was placed under the direct surveillance of pedeophilic psychologist Dr. Peter Teleborian, who had earlier conspired with the Section to have her declared insane. During her stay at the hospital, Teleborian physically abused 12 year old Salander, indulging his pedophilia, repeatedly placing defensless Salander in physical restraints for trivial infractions. Conspiring with the Section, Teleborian declared her legally incompetent, thereby invalidating her accounts of what had happened.
The Section ensured control of Salander by appointing Bjurman, a lawyer in its employ, her guardian after Palmgren's stroke. Zalachenko, who is a patient in the same hospital, is murdered by one of the Section, who then tries to kill Salander; fortunately, her lawyer Annika Giannini, Blomkvist's sister had barred the door upon hearing a disturbance. Due to her deep-seated mistrust of authority, Salander refuses at first to cooperate in any way with her defence, relying instead on her friends in Sweden's hacker community.
They eventually help Blomkvist discover the full scope of the Section's conspiracy, which he strives to publish at the risk of his own life. Is "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" based on a book? Is it advisable to read the book before seeing the movie? Should people whose only language is English watch the dubbed or subtitled version? Why was Blomkvist indicted and convicted? How much is , Swedish kronor worth? How are all the Vangers related to each other?
It's hard to keep them straight. Where are Hedestad and Hedeby Island located? Why was Lisbeth investigating Mikael? Why does Lisbeth need a guardian? What did Lisbeth tattoo on her guardian's abdomen? How did Mikael find out that Lisbeth hacked his computer? How is Mikael able to find the woman taking photos of the opposite side of the street during the Children's Day parade? How old was Mikael supposed to be? Why didn't Harriet contact the police? How does the movie end? How does the film differ from the novel?
What are the differences between the theatrical edition and the Extended Edition? Create a list ». All the movies and series I fangirl about.
Foreign Movies Spa, Arg, Fra Top 25 Favorite Films of My Favourite Scandinavian Films. See all related lists ». Neither Palmgren nor Salander herself would have consented to Bjurman being her new guardian.
Bjurman rapes Lisbeth twice and restricts her access to her own money. The sexual abuse is so violent that some readers might not notice the financial abuse. However, these are two forms of abuse that disabled people often experience in real life.
In particular, the narrator notes that the guardianship itself is an unwanted governmental imposition into private life. Because of the way Salander looks and acts, the court misjudges her mental state and intellectual ability, though in reality she remains perfectly independent and able to take care of herself.
But the court nonetheless imposes its judgment and essentially gives someone control over her, disempowering her and essentially making her captive to the whims of her guardian.
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