Wednesday 19 Jun
 
 

Ninja III: The Domination

Don't ask why Ninja III: The Domination begins with a ninja assault on a municipal golf course. Just be grateful it does. You also may wonder why its sex scene employs a can of V8: Don't question it. Just lie back and enjoy it.
06/14/2013 | Comments 0

Lifeforce

Tobe Hooper got a raw deal. The director of horror hits The Texas Chain Saw Massacre and Poltergeist didn't deserve to be sent to movie jail for 1985's Lifeforce. It's a well-crafted, well-intentioned work that was mismarketed and misunderstood, losing a bundle of money and soon sending Hooper into the lands of episodic television and direct-to-video features.
06/14/2013 | Comments 0

Dead Souls

With Dead Souls, we can prove something about the Chiller cable network's original features that Remains could not: Source material is not to blame for their pervasive generic nature — it's the economy, stupid.
06/11/2013 | Comments 0

The Philadelphia Experiment

There's a theory about remakes that perhaps Hollywood should stop remaking good movies and instead remake the bad ones, so that they may be improved. The problem with that theory is one runs the risk of the remake being bad, too. Case in point: The Philadelphia Experiment.
06/12/2013 | Comments 0

Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters

A few surprising things about Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters:
• It comes from MTV Films,
• is produced by Will Ferrell,
• and is as fun as its title is dumb.
06/11/2013 | Comments 0
Home · Articles · Movies · Thriller · Let Me In
Thriller

Let Me In


None October 7th, 2010

let_me_in_7-06x2-68cm
The odds don't favor young Owen (Kodi Smit-McPhee, "The Road"), a greasy-haired outsider who lives in a crummy apartment complex in Los Alamos, N.M., with his soon-to-be-divorced religious whack-job of a mother (Cara Buono, TV's "Mad Men").

Mom drinks too much, fights on the phone too much and does a lot of nagging. Owen, who's 12, but looks 10, suffers severe bullying at school "” the kind of torturous, homoerotic hazing that breeds both great stand-up comedy and mass murder "” and he's taken to sitting alone in the apartment complex playground at night, singing to himself and eating candy.

When he's not spying on neighbors with a telescope, he practices stabbing a penknife into a tree. When Abby (Chloe Moretz, "Kick-Ass") moves in with her dad (Richard Jenkins, "Eat Pray Love"), Owen is creepy enough himself to willingly accept all the girl's oddness.

She smells funny, doesn't wear shoes in the snow, doesn't go to school and only comes out at night. But she's cute, and standoffish enough at first to hook Owen, who's eager for a friend and, hopefully, a girlfriend.

It's no spoiler to point out that Abby isn't what she seems. Her demented thirst rests somewhere between vampire and chupacabra, and it's Dad's job to don a garbage bag mask, and head out in the shadows to help satiate her relentless bloodlust. It's a thankless task, and his age means he's getting careless and sloppy, enough so that a local cop (Elias Koteas, "Shutter Island") is poking around, asking questions about missing persons and cold corpses.

"Let Me In" begins at the beginning of the end, backtracks a bit and carries through without answering all the questions. Director Matt Reeves ("Cloverfield") wrote the screenplay, which was adapted from Sweden's "Let the Right One In," which in turn, was based on a novel by John Ajvide Lindqvist.

The film presents a slower burn than its trailer might have you believe. It's more thriller than horror flick, and while it's got bits of blood, it's far from a bloodbath.

Smit-McPhee is perfectly cast. He's simultaneously sympathetic and spooky; the kind of kid you would hug if you could avoid touching. Moretz is fantastic as well. She's cute and creepy, and really sells the loneliness her character requires, which comes with an empty void that belies her youthful exterior.

Reeves is wise with his eye and the focus of every scene, which switches between central characters and fleeting shoots of scenes and atmospherics. Snow, sweaty window condensation and clutched hands do as much to sell the story as scenes with dripping veins and iridescent eyes. "”Joe Wertz
 
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
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