- A fragile, anxious boy, 12-year-old Oskar is regularly bullied by his strongermates but never strikes back. The lonely boy’s wish for a friend seems to come true when he meets Eli, also 12, who moves in next door to him with her father. A pale, serious young girl, she only comes out at night and doesn’t seem affected by the freezing temperatures.Coinciding with Eli’s arrival is a series of inexpli
Oscar, a 12-year-old fragile and bullied boy, finds love and revenge through Eli, a beautiful but peculiar girl he befriends, who moves into his building. When Oscar discovers that Eli is a vampire it does not deter his increasing feelings and confused emotions of a young adolescent. When Eli loses the man who protects and provides for her, and as suspicions are mounting from her neighbors and police she must move on to stay alive. However when Oscar faces his darkest hour, Eli returns to defend him the only way she can.The enduring popularity of the vampire myth rests, in part, on sexual magnetism. In Let the Right One In, Tomas Alfredson’s carefully controlled, yet sympathetic take on John Ajvide Lindqvist’s Swedish bestseller-turned-screenplay, the protagonists are pre-teens, unlike the fully-formed night crawlers of HBO’s True Blood or Catherine Hardwicke’s Twilight (both also based on popular novels). Instead, 12-year-old Oskar (future heartbreaker Kåre Hedebrant) and Eli (Lina Leandersson) enter into a deadly form of puppy love. The product of divorce, Oskar lives with his harried mother, while his new neighbor resides with a mystery man named Håkan (Per Ragnar), who takes care of her unique dietary needs. From the wintery moment in 1982 that the lonely, towheaded boy spots the strange, dark-haired girl skulking around their outer-Stockholm tenement, he senses a kindred spirit. They bond, innocently enough, over a Rubik’s Cube, but little does Oskar realize that Eli has been 12 for a very long time. Meanwhile, at school, bullies torment the pale and morbid student mercilessly. Through his friendship with Eli, Oskar doesn’t just learn how to defend himself, but to become a sort of predator himself, begging the question as to whether Eli really exists or whether she represents a manifestation of his pent-up anger and resentment. Naturally, the international success of Lindqvist’s fifth feature, like Norway’s chilling Insomnia before it, has inspired an American remake, which is sure to boast superior special effects, but can’t possibly capture the delicate balance he strikes here between the tender and the terrible. –Kathleen C. Fennessy


January 26, 2006
#1
This was the worst vampire movie I have ever seen and perhaps one of worst movies I have seen period. The movie was slow, there was no action. The story didn’t go anywhere. I can’t understand what people were watching. Save your money and do not buy this one. You will thank me later
January 26, 2006
#2
this movie looked good but they don’t speak english. Thank God I watched the preview. Now I know not to buy it. Don’t waste your money!!!
January 26, 2006
#3
I have been a vampire movie junkie since before it was popular again so I have seen nearly of the ones out there, both domestic and foreign, which also include the worst “B” movies of all time (Jesse James meets Dracula, etc.) and I must say without a doubt this is the worst vampire movie I’ve ever seen. Ok, I’ll give it one or two points for creepiness, but the scenery is ugly, the sets unimaginative and no magnetism from the vampires at all. To me a vampire movie is sucessful if you feel some type of “pull” from the main character – this one did nothing but push me away. I’m sure some people may like it, but not this one. Such a waste of two hours.
January 26, 2006
#4
The movie opens with a long, lingering shot of a pre-teen boy standing in his underwear. It goes mostly down hill from there. The only thing that keeps it from being even more offensive is that it’s so incredibly boring. I don’t know how long the movie runs, but it felt like five hours. The only thing that’s even remotely shocking about the movie (in terms of plot, if not in taste) is when the director finally rams home the point that the pre-pubescent vampire isn’t joking when he keeps repeating that he’s “not a girl”.
January 26, 2006
#5
After watching this movie I still have no idea what it was about. OK she’s a vampire and then what? NOTHING at all. NO story, no excitement, no nothing. My movie was dubbed and it was excrutiating to watch this pitiful, useless and meaningless piece of garbage. i was highly offended by the scene where they show you the 12 year old girl’s [...](what the hell!?)then the amount of blood of her face after her kills, the children portraying whatever the hell they were trying to get across. This movie is unbelievably offensive in some parts and the others were painfully boring. this movie is the WORST I have ever seen in my life. Absolutely disgusted!