It's gratifying that, in the week that Twilight was about to demonstrate the ease with which our degraded popular culture is able to assimilate a ludicrously sanitized version of vampirism -- Stephenie Meyer's vampires normally drink only animal blood, and not that of endangered species -- to the sexual fantasies of teenage girls, I was able to see Let the Right One In (Lat den rätte komma in) by the Swedish director, Tomas Alfredson. This movie is also a fantasy but not, at least until the end, a childish, wish-fulfilling one. On the contrary, it almost succeeds in the seemingly impossible task of coaxing a flame of originality and even profundity from the cold, dead ashes of the vampire legend. He does this by doing a sex-change on the central fantasy figure transferring her from the realm of Gothic sex imagery -- gone camp for two generations now --- to the enchanted but already semi-sexualized world of pre-pubescence.
His vampire, Eli (Lina Leandersson), is an ethereally-beautiful child who is half Lolita, half Peter Pan. She befriends the lonely, epicene Oskar (Kare Hedebrant) who is the victim of bullies at school and an often-absent single-mother at home. We would be disposed to believe that Eli, with her combination of beauty and power, was a figment of his imagination were it not for Hakan (Per Ragnar), her strange companion who murders and drains the blood from random victims -- human, not animal -- in order to feed her. He is one of the film's better ideas. We don't know what his relations to Eli is, and he doesn't appear to be a vampire himself. But for whatever reason he has taken it upon himself to adopt a parental role towards her, going out to do difficult and dangerous work in order that she may be protected and nourished.
The trouble is that, he does it so badly, on more than one occasion nearly getting caught in the midst of his halal-style butcheries of the neighbors and leaving her to do the more traditional vampire thing of fastening her teeth into people's necks and drinking their blood fresh from the source. Even vampires, it seems, can have feckless or incompetent parents and providers and so be forced to make their own way in the world. The mock, two-person family made up by Eli and Hakan mirrors that of Oskar and his mother, Yvonne (Karin Bergquist), in the neighboring apartment of their featureless, down-market building, except that the balance of affection and fear -- of the would-be child in the would-be parent -- is somewhat exaggerated in the former. Also, of course, the child in that case can never grow up.
"Are you dead?" Oskar asks when he realizes, about three quarters of the way through the film, what his new friend really is.
"No," she replies. "Can't you tell?"
"But are you old?"
"I'm twelve. But I've been twelve for a long time."
The point about J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan, as P.J. Hogan recognized in his fine film of 2003, was that he was a boy. There is both good and bad about never growing up, but it is only, really, an option for boys. Not the least fantastical element of "The Twilight Saga" is the typical pop-cultural pretense that girls are just the same. Wendy is there to remind us that girls are not the same, that they are biologically programmed to get on with life in a way that boys are not, and that this fact of nature was always destined to put an end to the Neverland idyll. Eli, as she keeps insisting to Oskar, is not a real girl. Oskar says he doesn't care. He wants her to "go steady" with him anyway, but the fact that he will grow and she won't would seem to put the same sort of unbridgeable gulf between them as exists between Wendy and Peter. "Just so you know, I can't be your friend," is the first thing Eli says to Oskar -- though thereafter Mr Alfredson seems intent on denying this.
Is that because he means to suggest to us an allegory of what Pope Jean-Paul II used to call "the culture of death" or -- and the two are very far from being mutually exclusive -- a gloss on Shakespeare's Sonnet 94 ("They that have power to hurt and will do none")? It says something for the film that the question even arises, but I'm afraid that's not where he's going with it. For much of the movie, he does a marvelous job of capturing the child's sense of a permeable membrane separating reality and enchantment, and, at least for so long as this is sustained -- for so long as vampirism is a secret shared by the two childish friends, like how to solve the Rubik's cube -- it is the best thing about the movie. I also like the fact that Eli, in spite of her otherworldly origins and interests, has enough of a sense of ordinary, down-to-earth moral difficulties and dilemmas -- what should the undead have to do with schoolboy honor, anyway? -- to give Oskar some good advice about how to deal with the trio of bullies.
But, finally, Let the Right One In cannot escape from vampire camp and the wish-fulfilling likes of Twilight. The final revenge fantasy is too obvious, vulgar and Stephen Kingish, in my view spoiling much of what has gone before. Up until then, the unhappy home and school life of the hero is hinted at without being insisted upon or made too much of, and his retreat into a private world comes to seem natural and right. Likewise some of the more spectacular effects, by becoming too explicit, too much given to typical "horror" movie fare, break the illusion so painfully built up with music and painterly camera-work and the fine performances of the two children in the film's best passages. This is a movie that could almost have been an apology for fantasy, if the fantasy did not end up being too trite and familiar and, like most fantasy, frankly unbelievable.
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Alan Brooks| 12.4.08 @ 6:16PM
Strange film. Will pass on it though, thanks.
I wish Hollyweird would stick to making films with just a dash of depravity, such as (yes it's old) Breakfast At Tiffany's. Or if it's a horror flick, then Silence Of The Lambs will do just fine.
But vampire-lolita?? no thanks. You need a strong stomach for that. When I have dinner and then see a film I like to keep the steak and potatoes down inside, and not have to rush for the lavatory.
Ms. Know| 12.6.08 @ 10:02PM
The right one would be the GOP, and not the socialist illuminati who are in now.
SSB| 12.9.08 @ 7:23PM
Uh - the vamp is in the film a boy - not a girl. How are you missing this in the film? This is a film about 2 boys - one is a vamp and borders on pedaphilia...
Vicki| 12.12.08 @ 1:30PM
Great film, saw it last night/haven't read the book. Always liked vampire lore (so avoiding Twilight). You just don't get "it,' she is not his friend. Eli is a monster (as humans are inhuman) and has been around for who knows how long. The golden egg to the riddle/puzzle is the Hakan relationship ending and the Oskar initiation into this role. He was an ideal selection and the ending just reinforces his submission to her in servitude, she saves his life so it will be given fully to her/unwavering just as Hakan was hers until his last breath only friendship superficially. She can't stomach friendship, its sweet like candy.
BTW, I also have felt let down by Stephen King's endings. Like your Peter Pan perspective.
Vicki| 12.12.08 @ 3:27PM
...even submission and servitude are not quite right, complete surrender and true intimacy (both were able to be who they were in each other's company)/horrifically and perfectly awesome enmeshed counterpoints.
Re: SSB comments
I couldn't/didn't understand the "hole" scene ;and it hadn't occurred to me that not being a girl meant Eli was a boy. I just thought it underlined that Eli was not human.
Aghhhhh, may have to go see it again & soon. :)
aak| 12.14.08 @ 1:32AM
Nice review. Ending indeed annoying.
And the Freudianism of it all is quite a bit heavy-handed. The hole, into which he is almost dipped by the 3 boys. Eli's scar which we only get to see briefly -- but that's enough -- the scar left by the absent penis of childish misunderstanding? Oskar then going to check on his mom asleep.
And then there is the other thread, Oskar's dad & his "friend"?
The novel may have been about pedophily, but the movie is about something else. The insistence on the psychosexual symbolism is, well, again, annoying -- but the relationship between the two, that is indeed great, like in Herzog's Nosferatu, or indeed in Ettore Scola's Passione d'Amore.
John| 1.8.09 @ 8:35PM
Its interesting. The "scar" scene is one that really sticks with audiences (to the point where the movie name + scar is one of the most popular Google terms). My immediate reaction to the scar was it meant that Eli was sexless and that type of relationship between the two was impossible.
I read on another site that the book explained that Eli was born a hermaphrodite and had the penis remove leaving Eli a girl (some 200 years before the film's time). If that's the case, I'm not sure why the director needed to surface that vague bit of her backstory without further exposition.
links london| 9.10.09 @ 11:05PM
Thanks for your information, i have read it, very good!