[film] Let Me In
Dec. 14th, 2011 03:55 pmSo, a couple weeks ago Lovefilm finally sent us the remake of Let The Right One In. I always have to watch the English-language remakes of foreign films I like, just to see what gets done with them.
The good news is, it hasn't been all Hollywood-ized and glammed up. It's very faithful to the Swedish version, to the extent that some of the playground outside the apartment block shots could be frame-for-frame. It's a bit shorter, so that the minor characters are really nothing but vampire food, but that's not a big quibble.
In fact, it's so close to the original, that I ended up just feeling "why did they bother?" Aside from people who won't watch anything with subtitles, but most of those people wouldn't watch something this "art-cinema" anyway.
The good news is, it hasn't been all Hollywood-ized and glammed up. It's very faithful to the Swedish version, to the extent that some of the playground outside the apartment block shots could be frame-for-frame. It's a bit shorter, so that the minor characters are really nothing but vampire food, but that's not a big quibble.
In fact, it's so close to the original, that I ended up just feeling "why did they bother?" Aside from people who won't watch anything with subtitles, but most of those people wouldn't watch something this "art-cinema" anyway.
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Date: 2011-12-14 04:51 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-12-14 05:20 pm (UTC)Unfortunately it omits my favourite part of the original, the "I don't speak Swedish" in-joke.
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Date: 2011-12-14 06:21 pm (UTC)Though, the author of the book said he liked a lot of the US version of his book, though not as much as the Swedish version.
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Date: 2011-12-14 08:29 pm (UTC)It was weird because a lot of the things I would normally criticise a Hollywood film for (ie: simplification, teal/orange photography) I actually found was done so well in Let Me In that these became elements I actively praised about the film. Plus, I felt it captured the emotional side of the book far more effectively than the Swedish version which just left me a bit cold.
Neither film comes close to the book but I did really like Let Me In and felt it had enough of its own take on the source material and enough of its own visual ideas and identity to warrant being made.
Unlike any other horror remake I can name from the last decade. :/