Let Me In has one of the most engaging openings and following hospital sequences in a horror film since Zombie’ Halloween 2. Its intense and utilizes less-is-more, exemplified in Jaws and From Hell, a ...
He deserved to be let in back in 2016, and he still deserves to be today. Here's the story behind the iconic meme format from The Eric Andre Show.
Matt Reeves, the director of 2008’s Cloverfield, is back this weekend with his new vampire film, Let Me In. Let Me In is a remake of the popular Swedish film, Let the Right One In. How does Let Me In ...
Some of the most demanding challenges for a filmmaker are to adapt a novel for the screen, translate a foreign work for an English-speaking audience and to put their own mark on a remake without ...
So, let’s have some fun. If you have seen the original Swedish vampire film Let The Right One In by Tomas Alfredson, read the original novel by John Ajvide Lindqvist, and saw Matt Reeves’ Let Me In ...
Anyone who goes into Let Me In having seen Let the Right One In will be hard-pressed not to make comparisons. And that’s more than fair. Let Me In, directed by Matt Reeves (Cloverfield), is so similar ...
Let Me In, the unusual story of a child vampire and the human boy she comes to love, is moody and quiet. It’s a movie whose horror slowly creeps up on you, leaving a profound feeling of disturbance ...
Any remake is going be judged, at least by film critics (a notoriously persnickety bunch) against its original. Before press screenings of Let Me In, director Matt Reeves’ remake of the spectacular ...
Matt Reeves proves that it is possible to succeed at remaking a beloved property by giving it a new reason to exist. With readers turning to their home viewing options more than ever, this daily ...
The “Let Me In” meme originates from a special episode of The Eric Andre Show that was filmed at the 2016 Democratic National Convention. The meme typically appears as a reaction image or short ...
Although the early 21st century saw many non-English language films becoming popular in American markets, Hollywood was still unwilling to let imaginative works of genre fiction exist within their own ...