So what happened? How did the gulf open up?  
The  original Lara was created by a bunch of people in Derby, a rough and  ready town in the centre of England. They’d all been brought up on Monty Python and Hitchhikers Guide  and they’d all been inspired by the slightly black humour that is  visible in at least the first couple of Indiana Jones films. There was a  sort of anarchy still around in 1996 in the gaming industry (left over  from the very early days), and not everything was “corporate”. It  probably amused the Core team to make the hero into a Brit and the  villain (Natla) into a Texan (in comedic contrast to normal Hollywood  tropes). It probably amused them that Lara died in hideously grotesque  or painful ways. It probably amused them that she shot everything in  sight, even harmless rats, and that she seemed motivated not by  “archaeology” but by raiding tombs for their “shiny things” with all the  sympatico of Patrick Bateman in American Psycho.
However … dreams change.  
In 2001 - just after Core had apparently killed Lara off - disaster struck. Hollywood was persuaded to make some movies.  
Angelina  Jolie was great casting and she tried hard to give Lara that  anarchistic edge that she herself knows so well. She even protested when  her “pokes” were air-brushed out of the posters for Cradle of Life, bless her, but not even she could shrug off the dead weight of the “suits”. The Tomb Raider movies were about as edgy as Hannah Montana, and the total lack of gratuitous violence or “quips a la James Bond” left many fans feeling as they might when having ordered patatas bravas  they received instead soggy fries and ketchup. Once you’ve gone down  the bland path it’s very hard to turn back. The promisingly Gothic Angel Of Darkness  was rushed out before completion and then blamed for the failure of the  politically correct angst fest that was the second movie, and the heart  of the operation – Core, Derby – were sacked. Lara might as well have  had her heart cut out.
Fast forward to Tomb Raider Legend.  Poor old Crystal Dynamics, an excellent firm, were lumbered with a task  they didn’t quite get. May as well ask a British team to take over the  running of the TV programme 30 Rock.  They hired Toby Gard to try and get continuity, and then either ignored  his advice or got lead astray by Toby having a senior moment about  Lara’s “feelings”. I suspect the Daddy plot was salvaged from the  execrable Tomb Raider  movie – why do all American plots have such a big thing about “Daddy’s  little girl”? – and CD probably also got told by people who ought to  have known better that Tomb Raider was for kids.
All  this left the TR fans with a huge culture clash. People who were  entertained by Lara blowing away the helicoptor pilot at the end of TR3  were hardly going to identify with her blubbing over a well-earned  bullet for American lunkhead Larson. Fans who valued the silence and  loneliness of the first TR games would hardly warm to constant yammering  from comedy sidekicks nor a soundtrack that droned on in the background  like incessant elevator music. Even worse, from about 2006 to 2007  there seemed to be a concerted effort by various fan forum “bigwigs” to  rubbish the Core legacy and to ban anybody who dared not to love the  “new, improved” Lara. This Orwellian approach split the fanship into  fragments and caused many old timers to leave forever.
So  what now? With the “re-re-boot”, the newer fans are finding out what it  feels like to have the rug pulled from under the Lara they thought they  knew. At least everybody is now on an equal (lack of) footing. Square  Enix seems to have found a polite way of undoing (hopefully) the damage  done to Lara’s reputation as a hardass and it remains to be seen whether  they can produce a game that takes hardcore gamers more then a couple  of days to complete. (Who cares about the pretty parrots flying about if  you can’t shoot them? Who cares about perfectly rendered landscapes if  you can’t climb all over them?) Even the rumoured third movie might go  the reboot route and give us a Lara that isn’t a bleeding heart liberal.
We wait with baited if slightly jaded breath …

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