The movie Let me in is a remake of the Scandinavian vampire film Let the Right One. The 12 year old Owen is bullied child of divorce and outsiders and learns in his dreary housing estate a same age mysterious girl (Chloe Grace Moretz) know and both become friends. Soon you realize that Abbey is not a normal girl and they both soon benefit in an unusual manner from each other. Anyone who has seen the original film, will naturally look for parallels that are apparent or inherent in the nature of things in remakes. Do not worry, however, it is not a 1: 1 copy with only other actors. Let me in manages a fresh, some glamor and of course Americanized interpretation of the substance with a signature role for Chloe Moretz Garetz which often pretty cool youngster rolls (Kick Ass 1 + 2; Third Person) and gets these perfectly staged. Both young people are on their way outsiders who grasp only by their distrust slowly trust each other. Here I find their dialogues particularly successful. The peculiarity of the relatively silent, but rather intriguing vampire film, it is beyond the Twilight clichés (nothing against blockbuster movies!) To play and to make a point as much as possible realistic representation. The main theme of the film is actually but friendship, which is represented in a very sensitive manner. The film is accompanied mostly with a fresh soundtrack 80s because he also plays in this decade. Both films have pleased me well, which I prefer, let-me-in since it is interpreted less dry-sober and is more explicit in the presentation.
PS: only critical: the few animated scenes are a bit wooden-plump, but this is not particularly troublesome.