Night Teeth 2021 Movie Review
Adam Randall's Night Teeth opens with an electronic score and a sharp Grand Theft Auto style. As a vehicle travels through the dull roads of Los Angeles, it's quickly evident that the film will be conspicuous and neon-doused all through. Randall and first-time screenwriter Brent Dillon present their YA vampire spine-chiller through representations of vampire history reflected onto the chrome of the vehicle by the city's lights. One point of convergence is the genuine Chicano/Mexican American neighborhood of Boyle Heights, which in the film is the main spot in LA where vampires are illegal because of a détente made a few years prior. However, one vampire in a journey for power breaks that ceasefire, bringing about a conflict, among people and vampires, yet between themselves. The vampires in Night Teeth are rich, amazing, and overwhelmingly white. They control everything, and it dives as deep as law implementation and governmental issues. Partitioning their turf like posse...