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Kare Hedebrant (with ball) plays amisfit boy befriendedby a strange 12-year-old girl.
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Kare Hedebrant (with ball) plays amisfit boy befriendedby a strange 12-year-old girl.
About the movie
Let the Right One In (Lat den ratte komma in) (2008)
Genre:
Drama; Horror
MPAA rating:
R
for some bloody violence including disturbing images, brief nudity and language
Running time:
01:54
Release date:
2008
Rating:
Cast:
Lina Leandersson; Henrik Dahl; Kåre Hedebrant; Per Ragnar; Karin Bergquist
Directed by:
Tomas Alfredson
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Vampire tale gets it frighteningly 'Right'

Here's a suggestion for you vampire-o-maniacs out there: Get ready for Twilight - opening next Friday (as if you didn't know) - by checking out the very fine, very frightening Let the Right One In.

Based on the novel by John Ajvide Lindqvist, this cold, cracking Swedish noir centers on a misfit boy, Oskar (Kare Hedebrant), befriended by a strange 12-year-old girl who recently moved in next door. However, as Eli (Lina Leandersson) explains it, she's been 12 for "a very long time." She also isn't bothered by the frigid Scandinavian winter - maybe because her body temperature is already running at zero.

And now and then, she shows up with blood all over her mouth.

With a masterly stillness, director Tomas Alfredson's Let the Right One In - set in the pre-cell phone early '80s - feels a lot like what would happen if David Lynch had decided to make a vampire pic. There's an amazingly surreal scene in a hospital room, when a nurse opens the curtains on a recently bitten victim. Another scene brings new and terrifying meaning to the term cat fight. It's a real horror show here.

The usual vampire genre metaphors are in play: infection, alienation, physical and spiritual hunger, social ostracism, eternal love. Because Oskar's also a bit of a dweeb (playing with his Rubik's Cube, talking to himself), he gets picked on by his classmates. And so Let the Right One In has a bully revenge theme going for it, too.

Funny, fear-inducing, with periods of voyeuristic gore and an undercurrent of anxiety and dread, Let the Right One In is up there with the bloodsucking classics.


Contact movie critic Steven Rea at 215-854-5629 or srea@phillynews.com. Read his blog, "On Movies Online," at http://go.philly.com/onmovies.

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Whenever I was allowed to sleep in on the Saturday mornings of my youth, I'd listen for the peddler with the sharpening stone. "Knives and scissors," he'd sing-song his way through the alley behind our rowhouse. Unfortunately, my mother was deaf to his calls. To her, cheap knives were good enough. And to my knowledge, she never had hers sharpened. Thus, I came to cooking inadequately armed.