Interview with the Vampire: The Vampire Chronicles

  • USA Interview with the Vampire: The Vampire Chronicles
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In 1790 the evil Lestat (Tom Cruise), a 200-year old vampire, decides he wants a buddy and chooses Louis (Brad Pitt). However, despite Louis' desire for death after his young wife's demise, Lestat hasn't banked on Louis being so guilt-ridden when it comes to sucking blood from humans. So whilst Lestat continues to feast upon human flesh, Louis sticks to rats and chickens. That is, until he meets the young Claudia (Kirsten Dunst). Two hundred years later, Louis tells his story to a young reporter (Christian Slater). (Warner Bros. Home Entertainment)

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Reviews (9)

3DD!3 

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English A stellar, long haired duo in the lead roles of a vampire movie that’s entertaining at last. A convincing atmosphere and the passing of the ages is almost tangible (Superman roolzz). Even so, IWTV is a bit too slow for my taste, and at two o’clock at the morning my eyelids had were heavier than was practical. After all, I am not a vampire. At least I think not... ()

D.Moore 

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English So far, I haven't given an above-average rating to any of Neil Jordan's films, and this one is no exception, although it's probably the closest. Great actors, dense dark atmosphere, several excellent scenes... And that's where it ends, because the plot seemed rather empty to me most of the time, almost uninteresting and tedious. In the story of a vampire who retained the remnants of his humanity, I did not notice any added value. Sometimes it seemed to me that I was watching more of a parody (for example, sleeping in coffins seemed to me more like What We Do in the Shadows or Dracula: Dead and Loving It), and I was quite annoyed by how the film defined itself against almost everything that belongs to the genre, just to be different and interesting. ()

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Marigold 

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English A remarkable vampire epic, which certainly does not rank amongst vampire horror movies, but rather, with surprising elegance, balances on the edge of drama and a relatively controversial love story. The quintessence of this spectacle is the convincing performances of Cruise and Pitt, whose homosexual relationship is hinted at throughout the film. In the end, in Interview with the Vampire, the relationships between the characters and the kind of "realistic" view of the vampire underworld play a much bigger role than any vampire props. Definitely an interesting film, which is not quite perfect perhaps only due to a lack of significant gradation and a slightly better built story. But these deficiencies are replaced by the atmosphere and some really great and powerful scenes that will stay with you. ()

DaViD´82 

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English A very well-made picture, brought down mainly by the actors. Not that their acting is bad, quite the opposite, most of the performances are above their usual standard, but the casting could certainly have been better. Mainly Lestat (but I have almost nothing against Cruise) completely lacks the aura of charisma that the book gives him. The only one who manages to get under your skin with her acting is “young" Claudia, played by the splendid Kirsten Dunst. The adaptation went well, but all that remains are nice illustrations of the book, because they left out its philosophical level. Absolutely completely. Which, considering the whole story, atmosphere and message is founded on it, is rather a serious shortcoming. ()

gudaulin 

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English When I saw Interview with the Vampire a few years ago, I had mixed feelings about it, so I decided to revisit it and I had to lower my rating mercilessly because it served as a prelude to what Twilight would later become much more decisively. Vampire stories have their foundation in gothic novels and especially in romanticism, so those romantic motifs of torn souls and passions somehow belong there, but the story took a path of diminished romanticism, and listening to the pathetic dialogue is quite a suffering in some places. The philosophical plane about the immortal being struggling with the passage of time and its immutability is plainly superficial, even though it receives quite a bit of attention. Neil Jordan has an interesting experimental horror film with a special artistic poetics called The Company of Wolves, but here he fully subordinates his talent to the interests of the studio, and it's noticeable. The result is such an ambitious and grandiose adaptation that mainly sells itself by having Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt, and the youthful charm of future star Kirsten Dunst. There is nothing scary in it, though there is some tension, but the budget is quite noticeable in the production design. Overall impression: 45%. ()

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