List of Let the Right One In characters

Left — Oskar (Kåre Hedebrant) and Eli (Lina Leandersson) in Let the Right One In (2008)
Right — Owen (Kodi Smit–McPhee) and Abby (Chloë Grace Moretz) in Let Me In (2010)

The following is a list of characters in the 2004 Swedish vampire fiction novel, Let the Right One In by John Ajvide Lindqvist, as well as its two film adaptations Let the Right One In (Swedish, 2008) and Let Me In (English, 2010). Some individual characters appear in all three works, while others appear in only one or two of the works. The given names of the novel's main characters remain the same for the 2008 film, but are anglicized for the 2010 film. Most of the characters were created by Lindqvist.

Main characters

Oskar Eriksson / Owen

Oskar or Owen
Created by John Ajvide Lindqvist
Portrayed by Kåre Hedebrant (2008)
as Oskar
Kodi Smit–McPhee (2010)
as Owen
Information
Species Human
Gender Male
Nationality Swedish (Oskar)
American (Owen)

Oskar Eriksson is the name of the main protagonist in both the novel and the 2008 Swedish-language film Let the Right One In, while Owen is the name given to this character in the 2010 English-language film Let Me In. In all three works, the character is a 12-year-old boy living with his single mother in a dreary housing estate during the early 1980s. He resides in Blackeberg, Stockholm, Sweden in both the novel and original film, and in Los Alamos, New Mexico, United States in the 2010 film.

Initially, Oskar/Owen is a loner that has very few friends and lives in isolation. One of the few friends he has is Tommy, who is a major character in the book, but is omitted from both films save one fleeting mention by Owen in Let Me In. Oskar/Owen is constantly harassed in school by a group of bullies that enjoy torturing and humiliating him, and he fantasizes of one day standing up for himself and injuring or disposing of them. As a result of these experiences, he is initially defensive when he first meets Eli/Abby. The two eventually form a close bond when she notices he is playing with a Rubik's cube, and, because of her fondness for puzzles, Eli/Abby's interest is piqued. After a particularly bad experience with the bullies, Eli/Abby advises Oskar/Owen that he needs to stand up for himself, and offers him words of encouragement, as well as support if he needs it. This leads to him standing up to the bullies and injuring the main bully while on an ice skating trip. After this, Oskar/Owen develops a closer relationship with Eli/Abby, even after he sees her vampiric form and discovers that she is a vampire. At the end of all three stories, Oskar/Owen and Eli/Abby have decided to flee, and are last seen on a train to an unknown destination, exchanging love messages through Eli's trunk lid.

Oskar has a closer relationship with his mother in the novel and 2008 film than Owen does in Let Me In. In the novel and original film, Oskar's mother is caring, loving and spends time with him. In the 2010 film, Owen's mother is a neglectful Christian alcoholic and her face is never shown, which might explain why he is drawn to Abby. This is comparable to Oskar's father in the novel and original film, who is also an alcoholic and neglectful of Oskar when he visits on weekends. Owen's father is never seen in Let Me In, his voice is heard once during a conversation with Owen on the telephone, where he seems very caring and concerned about Owen living with his mother.

In the novel, Eli directly asks Oskar if he would ever consider becoming a vampire as well, to which he declines (this is not seen in either film). However, in the short story Let the Old Dreams Die, the sequel to the novel, it is learned that Oskar has eventually consented for Eli to turn him into a vampire as well, thus joining her as a hunter of the night.

Eli or Abby

Eli or Abby

Created by John Ajvide Lindqvist
Portrayed by Lina Leandersson (2008)
as Eli
Susanne Ruben (2008)
as Aged Eli
Chloë Grace Moretz (2010)
as Abby
Voiced by Elif Ceylan (2008)
as Eli
Information
Species Vampire
Gender Male (novel)
Androgynous (Let The Right One In)
Female (Let Me In)

Eli is the name of the androgynous centuries-old child vampire in both the novel and original film Let the Right One In, renamed Abby for the 2010 film Let Me In. When Eli/Abby moves into the apartment nextdoor to Oskar/Owen, the two characters become very close friends. Eli/Abby requires the consumption of human blood to live, and cannot eat or drink anything else without vomiting it out. Her hunger is shown to take a severe physical toll on her. As Eli/Abby is immune to the cold and the snow, she is sometimes barefoot when she goes out which makes climbing things like walls and trees easy for her. The character also cannot be exposed to the Sun without being burned up to the eventual point of bursting into flames, and cannot enter the home or room of an individual unless there is verbal permission given by that individual to do so (i.e. "you can come in") or the character will bleed profusely (to death if not invited in). This, along with a metaphorical allusion to "letting someone into" one's life, is the basis for the titles Let the Right One In and Let Me In. In the original film, the child Eli was portrayed by one actress while another actress provided the character's voice. The elderly Eli was played by a third actress.

Only the novel details explains that Eli is a centuries-old vampire in the body of a child (in the film, Eli gives an age of 12, but qualifies this once with, "I have been 12 for a very long time"). The origin of this condition is likewise only revealed in the novel, that Eli was in fact a boy castrated by a vampire nobleman as part of the sadistic ritual that turned him into a vampire. This detail is omitted entirely from both film adaptations, but is referenced in a brief scene showing Eli's scarred genitalia in the 2008 film. The original film ultimately leaves the character's gender ambiguous, as the scene showing Eli's scarred genitalia is not explained. In both films, the vampire tells the boy "I'm not a girl". In the 2010 film it is quite clear that Abby was born female, and there is a brief scene that was deleted from the final cut, showing that Abby's vampirism had originated from her having been attacked by a psychotic vampire centuries before as a young child.

In the sequel Let the Old Dreams Die, Oskar and Eli make a blood pact shortly after leaving Blackeberg, thus making Oskar a vampire as well. By 2008, the two have traveled to Barcelona, Spain and are pursued by the married couple Stefan and Karin Larsson.

Håkan / Thomas

Håkan or "The Father"
Created by John Ajvide Lindqvist
Portrayed by Per Ragnar (2008)
as Håkan
Richard Jenkins (2010)
as "The Father"
Information
Species Human (films)
Vampire (novel)
Gender Male
Nationality Swedish (Håkan)
American ("The Father")

Håkan is a middle-aged male that lives and travels with Eli in the novel and 2008 film Let the Right One In. His counterpart's name in Let Me In is not revealed, and he is credited as simply "The Father", although a later comic series based on the 2010 film names him Thomas. Håkan is a pedophile in the book, with pertaining activities detailed explicitly. He first met Eli when he was already an adult. While the character of the same name in the 2008 film is assumed to have similar characteristics, any details surrounding his potential pedophilia or history with Eli are not revealed, only hinted upon in their dialogue and a few scenes. The comparable character in Let Me In is heavily implied to not be a pedophile, and having instead met and possibly been with Abby since he was a young child, and it is implied that he acts more as a protective "father" figure to Abby in his old age, rather than as a lover. In the 2010 film, he is used as a foreshadowing of what Owen will eventually become - this is also hinted at in the 2008 film.

In addition to acting as Eli/Abby's legal guardian when they travel, Håkan/Thomas is also responsible for seeking out fresh human blood for Eli/Abby to consume. He must kill a living human being, and bring back the blood to Eli/Abby as quickly as possible before it spoils. In all three works, Håkan/Thomas carries a bottle of acid with him when he goes out to hunt for a victim, with the intention to douse his face with it in an attempt to distort it beyond recognition if he gets caught. In the novel and original film, he uses the acid when some other persons come to investigate as he is trying to murder the boy in a changing room at the local school. In Let Me In, he uses the acid when he gets trapped upside down in a car with the boy he murdered after losing control and crashing into a ditch while trying to escape. After Håkan dies in the novel, he comes back to life as a living dead and seeks out Eli. This does not occur in either of the film adaptations, where he remains dead. His death visibly traumatises Abby, and is one of a number of tragedies which befall her throughout her life, while Eli hardly reacts when she hears about Håkan being hospitalised - suggesting she has already moved on to Oskar as a replacement.

Secondary characters

Lacke

Lacke
Created by John Ajvide Lindqvist
Portrayed by Peter Carlberg (2008)
Present in Let the Right One In (novel)
Let the Right One In (2008 film)
Information
Species Human
Gender Male
Nationality Swedish

Lacke is a local middle-aged male resident of Blackeberg whose story and group of friends play a major role in both the novel and the 2008 film Let the Right One In, where he eventually becomes an antagonist to the main characters. Lacke is completely omitted from the 2010 film Let Me In, and is replaced by an unnamed authority figure credited as "The Policeman". Lacke is an alcoholic who has a strained relationship with his girlfriend Virginia. He spends a lot of time with his friends Morgan, Jocke and Larry at a local bar, which is where he first meets Håkan.

Lacke first becomes involved in the main storyline when his friend Jocke disappears after Eli attacks him for blood, an event that is witnessed by Gösta, one of the townspeople. When Jocke's dead body is found and it is revealed that Eli must have killed him, Lacke is determined to investigate the situation. When Lacke's girlfriend Virginia is attacked by Eli, an event that slowly transforms her into a vampire, Lacke is furious and becomes determined to exact his revenge against Eli and whoever else might be responsible. He eventually breaks into the apartment, and goes to murder Eli. Before he can do so, Oskar shouts, waking Eli up and distracting Lacke. Although Lacke recognizes Oskar and throws his knife aside, he is immediately attacked by Eli and killed.

Virginia

Virginia
Created by John Ajvide Lindqvist
Portrayed by Ika Nord (2008)
Sasha Barrese (2010)
Present in Let the Right One In (novel)
Let the Right One In (2008 film)
Let Me In (2010 film)
Information
Species Human
Vampire
Gender Female

Virginia in the novel and original Swedish film is a middle-aged woman who is the on-again/off-again girlfriend of major secondary character Lacke. A much more youthful and physically attractive character of the same name appears in Let Me In (2010), and she and her boyfriend (named "Larry" after a different character in the original) play a much smaller role in the story. She is the only character besides Jimmy whose name is the same in all versions.

In the novel and original film, Virginia is very weary of Lacke's alcoholism, and is on the verge of breaking it off with him permanently because of it. Virginia is attacked by Eli on her way home after walking out on Lacke at the local bar. She survives the attack, but has been infected and begins to slowly transform into a vampire. Her transformation is chronicled in detail in the book and original film. At first she begins to notice that she cannot stand to be in sunlight, and also that she has lost any appetite for normal food or drink. Lacke tries to visit and comfort her in the days following the attack, but she refuses to allow him around her. She is eventually hospitalized, where she makes the decision to commit suicide by having her nurse open the blinds and expose her to the Sun, causing her to burst into flames.

In the 2010 film, Virginia is initially introduced as being the subject of Owen's voyeurism. She has no speaking lines in the film. After she is attacked by Abby who sucks her blood, she is immediately hospitalized where "The Policeman" asks her boyfriend Larry questions about the attack. Rather than intentionally committing suicide by asking her nurse to open the blinds, she mindlessly chews on her own flesh after awakening into vampire mode. Oblivious to the situation, the nurse opens the blinds causing Virginia to burst into flames.

Tommy

Tommy is a young rebellious boy who is described as Oskar/Owen's only friend other than Eli/Abby. His story is a significant part of the novel's narrative, but he is completely absent from the 2008 film, and is only mentioned by Owen once in the 2010 film, where he is not seen. Tommy lives with his mother Yvonne and her policeman boyfriend Staffan (not to be confused with "The Policeman" from Let Me In), with whom he has a very strained relationship. He also has an older brother that is seldom around anymore.

"The Policeman"

"The Policeman" is the credited namesake of a middle-aged, balding authority figure (possibly a detective) in the 2010 film Let Me In who effectively replaces the character of Lacke and other townspeople from the novel and original film. Unlike Lacke, "The Policeman" has no personal interest in bringing justice to those responsible for attacking the townspeople, he is merely responsible for doing so. He is the first major character that is seen on-screen in Let Me In, and serves alongside Owen's bullies as the main antagonist of the film.

Jonny/Conny/Kenny

Owen/Oskar's bully and antagonist in all versions of the story. He sadistically attacks Owen/Oskar every chance he gets. He never relents until Owen/Oskar stands up for himself. He is the leader of a posse of bullies, who is seen doing acts such as beating Owen/Oskar with an antenna rod (a light tree branch in the novel), in the 2010 film, he is seen trying to pull off a girl's bathing suit in a public swimming pool, and even willing to kill Owen/Oskar. In the film version, when Owen/Oskar stands up for himself, he splits Jonny/Kenny/Conny's ear open with a metal pole when he was threatened to be thrown into the icy pond, but in the original novel, Oskar furthers this by setting fire to a photo of Jonny's father. In spite of this, Jonny/Conny/Kenny later decides to retaliate with his brother Jimmy. They set fire outside of the community pool to lure out the gym teacher (in the novel, Jimmy's friends knock the teacher unconscious with blunt force) and scare everybody else out. They threaten to drown Owen/Oskar, but in the midst of this, they are attacked by Eli/Abby, who kills all the bullies in the American film, all except for Andreas in the Swedish film, and only Jonny and Jimmy in the novel.

Jimmy

The older brother of Jonny/Conny/Kenny and antagonist in all versions. He is shown to be more sadistic than his younger brother and just as much a bully. He shows up in the story after Oskar/Owen stands up to him. He openly treats his brother poorly but he decides to help him and his friends retaliate against Oskar/Owen. His role becomes important at the climax of the story; he sets a fire outside of the community pool and scares the students out.

In the 2010 film, he steals a knife that Owen threatened him with when he made a run for it, but in the novel and 2008 film he had a knife of his own. Jimmy tells Oskar/Owen that if he can hold his breath for three minutes, he'll give him a little cut, if not then he will carve out his eye. As he begins to drown Oskar/Owen, Eli/Abby arrives and slaughters the bullies, Jimmy was the first to die in the American film as his head was ripped off and thrown in the water. He is the only character besides Virginia to keep their name in all versions.

Other characters

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.

Novel only

Novel and 2008 film

2010 film

See also

References

  1. Lindqvist: Let the Old Dreams Die and Other Stories (UK Edition), pg. 264. Quercus, 2012.
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