Oskar’s divorced mother and father seem completely disconnected from their son. Oskar retreats into an imaginary world where he is the tough bully threatening and debasing weaker boys. The film opens with the prepubescent Oskar standing shirtless holding a small knife commanding an unseen foe to “Squeal like a pig” (Lindqvist). Oskar is attempting to reverse the power relationship between himself and the bullies by inventing his own bully identity within the mirror image reflected in his apartment window.
Of course, neither Oskar nor Amelie’s identities remain unchanged by their films’ conclusions. Within Amelie’s world, hearing the shocking report of Lady Diana’s death causes Amelie to drop a bottle top that nocks loose a tile revealing a long lost box of a child’s treasures. Frances notes “Princess Di, often referred to in the film…represented for the collective, heart values that lie in the shadow of cultures” (2003). Inspired to find the owner and become an agent of kindness, Amelie enters a manic world where characters drives plot and plot drives characters.
Riding the maze-like subway, Amelie locates the owner, who is so touched by this anonymous gift that he vows to reconnect with his daughter to meet his grandson. Just as characters incite change within each other in Amelie’s world, Oskar is profoundly impacted by his relationship with the child-woman vampire, Eli. When Oskar and Eli meet, Oskar suffers daily taunts and brutalities. Yet, Eli exists in an equally precarious position. Dependant upon her guardian, Eli rages at the aging Hakan’s feckless attempts to secure her blood supply.
Audiences infer Eli has had several such guardians in her vampire life and come to realize that she is slowly absorbing Oskar as her new attendant. In other sexualized vampire tales, this relationship may seem parasitic, however Eli and Oskar come to help each other evolve. When bullies cut Oskar’s check with a switch, he lies to his mother but tells Eli the truth. Eli offers him advice that becomes pivotal in Oskar’s character evolution from bullied boy to protector. Eli advises Oskar to hit back, hard.
Although Oskar desires to overpower his bullies, Amelie embarks on a mission to positively influence those around her by pushing them past their safety zones. She vivaciously describes the sidewalk life to a random blind man, she discreetly inspires her father to travel, and she secretly brings closure to a woman still pining for her long-dead husband. The trickster Amelie exacts delightful revenge on the cruel market owner Collingon who has long verbally abused his clerk. However, Amelie ultimately becomes trapped in her own goose chase.
As she opens herself from her own tin box life, Amelie meets Nino, a quirky man who records strange laughs and collects passport photos. Of course, Amelie is deeply interested in Nino as a man and a companion, yet she now identifies herself as the “Zorro” of her world and is not prepared to abandon her imaginary identity. Instead, her mind focuses on the mystery she discovers within Nino’s photo album—the strange man who repeatedly takes photos of himself devoid of emotion then jettisons them.
As Oskar’s identity transition begins he starts to communicate with Eli through the Rubik’s cube and Morse code as he tries to understand her. Eli demonstrates her vulnerability by eating the candy knowing it will make her vomit and crossing the threshold of Oskar’s home knowing it will make her bleed uncontrollably. As Eli’s advice and evidence of her love embolden Oskar, he attacks his main bully with a large stick, splitting his ear. Tightening their relationship, Eli communicates to Eli through Shakespeare’s famed lines from Romeo to Juliet, “I must be gone and live or stay and die.
” This deadly-love relationship is further echoed when the two stand palm to palm as Oskar’s confirms Eli’s vampire nature. Oskar ultimately proves himself to Eli when he protects her from the prying neighbor and helps her kill and feed off him.
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