Sunday, 21 February 2010

Let The Right One In Review

Let the right one in is the most human vampire story I have ever seen. Compared to the recent trend of vampire culture (Twilight, True Blood, and Vampire Diaries) Let the right one in forgoes the traditional vampire ethos of the sexual atmosphere for a heartfelt story of friendship and true love. The fact that the film is Swedish and set in Sweden adds a lot to the atmosphere of the film, with the bleak yet beautiful snowy backdrops giving the film emptiness and loneliness which the main character Oskar feels. The film involves you more into the relationship of Oskar and Eli by not having many vampiric set pieces and when there are, they are not focused on, giving the audience a very human vampire in Eli to empathise with. Also for a vampire film, there is very little focus on Eli, the main vampire character of film; she is almost not a character, but a character development tool for Oskar, she is just a catalyst for his evolution from a weak willed boy to a confident man, knowing what it is to fight, to love, and to understand the horrors of the modern world.

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