Pages

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Week Two: Writing Assignment



Let the Right One In by John Ajvide Lindqvist is both my favorite book and my favorite movie, so it was great to be able to review both of these amazing pieces of media. Let the Right One In is a story about a young boy who is ostracized by his peers. He finds solace in a girl who moves in next door. Their relationship grows quickly and unhealthily. The two become uncomfortably close and use each other to get what they both desire. Oskar, the boy, uses Eli, the girl, to displace the hatred for his classmate aggressors and find a friend. Eli, on the other hand, uses Oskar to escape from her caregiver Håkan. Their relationship buds from intense, but base necessity. Their relationship grows from this point. Eli helps Oskar stand up for himself against the bullies at his school and Oskar eventually begins to care for Eli after the death of Håkan.

The fact that Eli is a vampire is a huge component of her relationship with Oskar. From just the beginning, Oskar is constantly questioning Eli about the difference and alienness he can sense about her. Eli's being quickly becomes apparent as time continues. In the book, when Oskar and Eli kiss she transfers her life memories to him with their touch. In the movie, the two share a piece of candy and Eli becomes violently ill. This added with Oskar's deductions from earlier (her cold skin and the smell of rotting meat surrounding her) adds up to something not quite human. Oskar slowly discovers that Eli is truly a centuries old boy who was castrated and turned into a vampire. After he learns the truth, Oskar battles with what to do with his relationship with Eli. The fact that she was born as a male and a vampire takes him a while to adjust. After questioning her, he slowly begins to accept her again and after Håkan's death in the movie and semi-death in the book, he begins to help and take care of her. The fact that she is a vampire is the base of their relationship in the second half of the book and movie. He protects her, especially in the book where he distracts a man who intends to kill Eli and subsequently allows Eli time to kill him. In the end, it is Eli's vampiric nature that saves Oskar and forces them to run off together. The fact that Eli is a vampire frames the whole story and ultimately decided how her relationship with Oskar developed.


No comments:

Post a Comment