ANNE RICE ON IWTV
From
Anne Rice: On the film, Interview with
the Vampire
Dear readers and viewers,
As you may know, while
the film IWTV was in production with David
Geffen, the author of the book had no
legitimate contact with him or with the
studio or with anyone connected with the
film. When the announcement was made that
Tom Cruise would star as Lestat, I had
deep reservations and severe criticisms.
So did many many of my readers. I talked
openly about this. A curtain thereafter
divided me from the entire production,
and with reason. Nobody likes to be criticised,
and that includes movie people too. I
understand and accept what happened. But
to me, movies and books are not like sports.
There is no immediate consensus on whether
a player had scored a home run or a touch
down. So it was okay to speak my mind
on the casting, and I don't have any regrets.
But to continue... I saw no rough cuts
of IWTV; I saw no clips. I went to no
screenings. It wasn't until David Geffen,
himself took the unusual risk of sending
me a VHS tape of the movie, that I saw
it. And I approached this tape with deep
fear of being hurt, crushed, disappointed,
destroyed by the finished work. When I
saw the film on VHS, I came out at once
in favour of it, declaring that I loved
it. I bought two pages in Variety to talk
about it in a frank and unedited announcement.
No one controlled what I wrote, or had
any opportunity to delete any part of
it. I loved the film. I said so. I had
no idea at the time that the film would
be a huge success. I really hoped it would
be, but I didn't know. It was so eccentric,
so extreme, so weird. I came out in favor
of it, fully prepared to sink with it
if it failed, that is, to look stupid
in my praise of it. I had no other moral
and aesthetic choice. I went by the heart.
What happened on opening weekend is now
history as they say. The movie made about
$35 million dollars, and broke all kinds
of records to do with seasons and ratings,
etc. I don't remember all the details,
but is was a luscious American success.
And I marveled then and I marvel now.
Whatever, I have not up till this date
discussed the film in detail publically.
I didn't want to program anyone's response
to it. I made my positive comments very
general in order that my recommendation
would not shape the public's acceptance
or rejection of any particular aspects
of the film. Well, over a month has passed.
I have had a listed number (504) 522 8634
in New Orleans for weeks; to receive by
answering machine people's responses to
the film. The film is now open all over
the world. Therefore, I think it's okay
now to go into detail about how I saw
this film. The film has established itself
in the public consciousness. It's okay
to talk about details. I want to do it.
That's why I'm writing this. This essay
or commentary or whatever it is - is shaped
entirely by personal feeling and preference.
It doesn't conform to anyone's standards
as a piece of writing. It is simply my
point by point discussion of the film.
I wrote it for myself and anyone else
who wants to know how the author responded
to Interview with the Vampire, the film.
If this personal statement seems arrogant,
please reconsider. I am striving to make
my remarks in full, and not to trust them
to an editor or journalist who might for
valid reasons cut them, or quote them
out of context. Look upon this gesture,
if you will, as an American gesture. I
have something to say. I say it. I do
not wait to be asked, interviewed, packaged
or covered by the news. What fuels this
statement is a passionate love of the
film, a marvelous relief that it exists
now in a form that can be preserved; that
it was what I dreamed it could be, and
that I got through the whole experience
without being destroyed. A mediocre film
would have destroyed me just as much as
a bad one, I thougt IWTV was exceptional.
So here goes, point by point: The look
of IWTV was for me perfect. Dante Ferretti
knew exactly what he was doing with the
sets. The costumes were impeccable. And
the cinematography of Philippe Rousselot
was extraordinary. Stan Winston's makeup
achieved an eerie and effective otherworldly
look. The score by Elliot Goldenthal I
found to be quite wonderful. Minor note:
The hair of the characters in the film
was eccentric - it was not in conformity
with the descriptions in the book or my
script, or with historical evidence. But
it was very interesting, at times more
than beautiful, and it worked. The opening
shots of San Fransisco caught the grimness
of the city, the urban mixture of desperation,
poverty and affluent life. Though Brad
Pitt did not appear as "beautiful" as
I had wanted in the opening scene (the
actor is incredibly beautiful actually)
he was divinely other worldly - the Stan
Winston make up had its own perfection
and appeal with the blue veins beneath
the skin, and Brad spoke his lines boldly
and well. As the film plunged into 18th
century Louisiana, it had the atmosphere
and feel of a pirate film - rugged, ragged,
and full of rats and candles. Superb.
This was infinitely better than the fussy
Dangerous Liasons look which worked beautifully
for that film but which would never have
caught the humid, friable, and doggedly
makeshift life of the colony of New Orleans.
The shift to Paris was superb. In a few
words and shots, the film caught the unmistakable
vitality of a great capital city, and
the contrast to the colony was splendid
and thrilling. The final New Orleans scenes
had exactly the right pitch. They caught
the shabbiness of New Orleans and the
mysterious loveliness of its overgrown
and neglected gardens. The art direction,
costumes, lighting, cinematography and
craft of the film were sumptious and thrillingly
successful to me. I was grateful for the
uncompromising lushness of the film, for
its magnificent interiors and brutal exteriors
for its relentless attention to detail
throughout in creating an immense and
tantalizing and utterly convincing world,
all of one fine and infinitely varying
fabric. Bravo! Now I would like to discuss
the actors and actresses. I'm using first
names not because I know these people
really well or anything, but because using
last names always sounds cold to me. I
don't like it. So....
On Brad Pitt:
Brad Pitt immediately infused
the despairing Louis with understandable
feeling. He played it passive and quiet,
and for me and for lots of viewers (they
call me and tell me) he got what guilt
was about, a guilt sometimes that is unattached
to any one death or loss. He captured
the despair of some one who has fallen
from grace, lost his faith, seen what
he cannot abide. Brad's eyes, his manner,
his soft voice throughout the film were
magical. Ironically, the Louis whom Brad
played on the screen is more passive than
the Louis of the novel or of my first
draft screenplay (which of course was
rewritten and changed and edited and enlarged
by Neil Jordan). But Brad Pitt made this
passive suffering character totally appealing
and sympathetic. His seemed to combine
youth and patience, acceptance and conscience.
Favourite Brad Pitt
moments for me:
Brad's soft voice saying
the single syllable "No" when Lestat prepares
to give the Dark Gift to Claudia. Brad's
last real scene with Claudia, their discussion
on the balcony outside the hotel room
- another contribution from Jordan which
was never in my original script. Brad's
face when he finds the ashes in the airwell,
and when he turns to confront those who
have hurt hims so deeply. Absolutely masterly
acting. One of the most painful and exquisite
moments in film that I have ever watched.
Brad did it without a word. Magnificent.
Brad's soft conversation with Armand,
especially the last conversation, which
was not written by me, but represented,
I thought, a wonderful dramatisation of
the parting of these two characters. The
intimacy of this scene, its delicacy,
the restraint and the love - were all
glorious to behold. Brad's anger with
Christian Slater in their final moments.
Excellent. There were many other such
moments with Brad Pitt. I respect and
am amused by Brad's recent redneck persona.
I've been tempted to write a satire 'Interview
with the Redneck Vampire' just for him
and probably will. (I loved Brad in Kalifornia.
I've got the story all worked out and
I think the Consitution protects satire.
Who knows? Maybe Saturday Night Live will
want it. One of my dreams for years has
been to write for Saturday Night Live.)
The readers calling me really want Brad
in the future Vampire Chronicles films.
Well, Brad? Is a burrito really better
than immortality? All jokes aside, you
were a delicate and heartbreaking Louis;
whatever you felt, you swept people off
their feet.
On Tom Cruise:
From the moment he appeared
Tom was Lestat for me. He has the immense
physical and moral presence; he was defiant
and yet never without conscience; he was
beautiful beyond description yet compelled
to do cruel things. The sheer beauty of
Tom was dazzling, but the polish of his
acting, his flawless plunge into the Lestat
persona, his ability to speak rather boldly
poetic lines, and speak them with seeming
ease and conviction were exhilarating
and uplifting. The guy is great. I'm no
good at modesty. I like to believe Tom's
Lestat will be remembered the way Olivier's
Hamlet is remembered. Others may play
the role some day but no one will ever
forget Tom's version of it. (Let me say
here that anyone who thinks I did an "about
face" on Tom just doesn't know the facts.
My objections to his casting were based
on familiarity with his work, which I
loved. Many many great actors have been
miscast in films and have failed to make
it work. I don't have to mention them
here. Why hurt anyone by mentioning the
disaster of his career? But we've seen
big stars stumble over and over when they
attempt something beyond thier reach.
That Tom DID make Lestat work was something
I could not see in a chrystal ball. It's
to his credit that he proved me wrong.
But the general objections to the casting?
They were made on solid ground. Enough
on that subject. Tom is a great actor.
Tom wants challenges. Tom has no transcended
the label of biggest box office star in
the world. He's better.)
Favourite moments with
Tom:
Tom's initial attack on
Louis, taking him up into the air, praised
by Caryn Jones so well in the New York
Times. Ah! An incredibly daring scene.
The finest romantic scene in any film,
and here please read the word romance
as an old and venerable word for timeless
artistic forms of peotry, novels and film.
Romance is a divine word which has never
really been denigrated by the drugstore
novels with the swooning ladies on the
cover. Romance will be with us for all
time. If you want to know more about Romance,
put on a video of 'The Fisher King' and
listen to Robin Williams describe the
deeper meaning of romance to his newfound
girlfriend. It's worth it, believe me.
Back to Tom: other great moments. Tom's
bedside seduction of the dying Louis,
in which he offers Louis the Dark Gift.
Once again, Tom gave Lestat the virilty
and the androgyny that made both him and
the offer irresistible. He was near blinding,
I would have accepted the Dark Gift from
him then and there. Only an actor with
complete confidence and conviction could
have done that scene or any of the others.
Tom's angry outburst in the face of Louis'
repeated questions. His stride, his voice
both loud and soft, his frustration, his
obvious discomfort, and inner conflict.
Once again, Tom took over the screen,
the theatre, the mind of the viewer. Immense
power. Tom riding his horse through the
slaves' fire, and then turning the horse
around so that he could face the suspicious
mortals. That was on a par with Errol
Flynn and Rudy Valentino. It was on a
par with the opera greats who have played
Mephistopheles. Only a genuine "star"
can make a moment like that, and I'm as
confused as to why... just as much as
anyone in Hollywood. Let's close this
one out with one word: Grand! (No, can't
stop talking about it.) If I had to settle
for one picture in this film, it would
be that shot of Lestat on horseback looking
back at the suspicious mortals. That was
and is my hero. That was and is my man.
Lestat just won't be afraid of anybody.
He won't stand for it. He hates what he
is as much as Louis, but he cannot do
anything but move forward, attempt to
make existence worth it, attempt to create.
He knows the formula for success, and
has no patience with the formula for failure.
That's Lestat. Tom's rage and obvious
pain in the scene with the bleeding wench
and the coffin, one scene from the book
which I did not include in my script,
it was probably put in by Neil Jordan.
If Tom had not given so much depth to
this scene, it might have been unwatchable.
His desperation, his vulnerability, made
it work, and he made himself in it the
worthy object of compassion. No small
feat! I found the scene, otherwise, to
be disgusting. The shot of Tom looking
through the green shutters, and the falling
rain, knowing that Louis is somewhere
out in the night. This was a gorgeous
and eloquent shot. Again, it was the actor
who gave it the depth in all the subtle
ways that only he can do. Tom's making
of Claudia, and here I want to praise
the entire trio... Tom, Kirsten, Brad...
The scene is directed delicately and captures
the intimacy, the blasphemy and the undeniable
innocence and blundering of the human
who has a supernatural gift to give and
in his pain and confusion, chooses to
give it, come what may. That's a scene
for now, for our world of scientific and
medical miracles, as much as any scene
in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, and Tom
pulled it off right to the last second.
Later, Tom's confusion when after bringing
Claudia a doll, he sees Claudia turn on
him. About half of what I wrote for this
scene in the script, or less, made it
into the film, and I liked what I saw
very much. I wish they'd gone on with
the version of this scene that is in 'The
Queen of the Damned' (see Jesse's discovery
of Claudia's diary, and the entry describing
what happened), but alas, what they did
was great. Tom's manner and expression
on the dangerous night that Claudia comes
to him and offers him her "reconciling
gift." Close in on those two at the harpsichord.
Tom is seated, I believe. Kirsten is behind
him and apparently offers him the acceptance
he needs so desperately. Scenes like this,
with Tom, make this film work. Every humorous
scene Tom attempted was a complete success.
The rat and the glass, I adored it. The
humor added apparently by Neil Jordan
- the poodles, the piano teacher hitting
the keyboard, the dressmaker biting the
dust... well, I didn't adore all that,
but Tom carried it off with true wit and
style. And yes, its all right to laugh
at those parts. We do every time we go
to see the movie. There are many other
great Tom Cruise moments throughout the
film. Many. But these are the ones I cherish
now. The readers calling me desperately
want Tom to play 'The Vampire Lestat'.
I hope he does. I hope I get to write
the script for the movie. Tom's power,
knowledge, skill, magnetism, and artistic
integrity are part and parcel of the success
of IWTV, and there is no doubt that Tom
would bring power and magic to TVL. (Let
me digress again. For those of you who
haven't read TVL, it is not really a sequel
to IWTV. It's a complete full novel on
its own, beginning the Vampire Chronicles.
IWTV was the truly difficult film to make.
TVL will take commitment, money and immense
faith as well as talent, but compared
to IWTV, it is much, much easier to film.
Lestat is the true hero of TVL. He is
entirely sympathetic. The trick, I think,
will be achieving a texture in that film
that includes all of Lestat's adventures...
from the snows of the Auvergne, to the
boulevards of Paris, through the sands
of Egypt, and through the visit to Marius'
sanctuary, and on to the twentieth century
rock music stage. The tales of Armand
and of Marius all also excursions for
Lestat essentially. I hope Tom makes the
journey.) One point: I am puzzled by what
seems to be a discrepancy between the
way Tom played Lestat, and the way my
hero, Producer David Geffen, and others
have described Lestat as a character.
Did Tom on his own make this role a little
bigger, brighter and more complex than
anyone else realized it could be? I don't
know. David Geffen called Lestat "nasty"
when he was interviewed by Barbara Walters.
Nasty? I don't get it. But David Geffen
is my hero for getting this film made.
No one else could have done it. So why
quibble about what David said? There is
one problem created by the compelling
charm of Tom's performance, obviously.
Since he isn't all that nasty, why does
Louis hate Lestat? How can he? Well, I'll
take that problem any day over a more
shallow solution. Tom hits the right note.
And Louis was Louis. Nothing could comfort
Louis. The film got it.
On Kirsten Dunst:
Magnificent and flawless
as Claudia, shocking in her soft, perfectly
paced shifts between adulthood and childish
innocence. The role as she played it is
far less sinister than the Claudia of
the book, and perhaps even a little more
innocent than my first draft script. But
the change seemed to work wonderously
to deliver the heartbreak of Claudia's
dilemma to the audience. She was a woman,
but she was in a child's body. The actess
showed incredible intelligence and cunning,
and yet a child's tragic vulnerability
and heartrending capacity to be disappointed.
Anybody who doesn't see what this is about
- all women are locked in the bodies of
dolls; all self contemplating human souls
are locked in mortal and often confounding
bodies - isn't perhaps asking enough of
himself or herself as a viewer. To say
this film contained only one idea or no
ideas as Janet Maslin said in the New
York Times, is, I think to severely underrate
it. The better part of the ideas of this
film revolve around Claudia, and her dilemma
is truly one shared by everyone. That
the film arouses and sustains sympathy
for her so that her inevitable fate is
tragic is a great cinematic accomplishment.
What Kirsten did in this film has dealt
a body blow to the rigid, stupid cliché
of the demonic child. Kirsten blew 'The
Bad Seed' out of the water. She is utterly
beyond the evil puppet like child vampires
of other movies. She drew us into her
motives for violence and offered us a
deeper understanding of all the moral
rules given us, of created by us. That
none of her gestures, words, or actions
was purient was a major achievement.
Favourite moments with
Kirsten:
The entire transformation
scene in the bed from suffering waif to
glorious child killer. When she looks
down from the balcony in the Rue Royale
and says, "It means... I shall never grow
up." Her quiet voice in the scene where
Lestat brings her the doll (again, about
half of what I wrote survived there, maybe
less, but I liked Jordan's changes except
for one minor point which I'll make below).
Her suduction of Lestat and subsequent
attack on him, especially the moment when
she tumbles back on the couch next to
the young boys and smiles up at Lestat.
Perfection. Her loving and intimate scenes
with Louis in which she becomes a woman,
remaining both a daughter and a mother.
The perfect pitch of prepubescent innocence
throughout. The movie isn't about peephole
sex, and nobody exemplifies that better
than Claudia. It isn't about perversion
at all. It never was. It is about the
attempt of all of us to live in the light
and with grace. Kirsten got the whole
thing. Her final scene. Again, there are
many, many other moments throughout the
film with Kirsten.
On Antonio Banderas:
As Armand, he gave the
role an original interpretation, quite
different from mine in the book or the
script, but it worked for me as an interpretation
of unique and spectacular charm. Antonio
had the magnetism of a master vampire.
He had the quiet confidence and the obvious
power to spellbind. He redeemed the Theatre
of the Vampires scene I think, with his
sheer authority. He embodied the mystery
of Armand and Armand's particular brand
of utterly pragmatic evil. We know why
he did what he did; we know it was bad;
but in a way we can understand him. I
would have preferred to see his beautiful
curly hair as it appears in 'House of
the Spirits' or 'Philadelphia'. But he
was overwhelmingly successful as Armand,
"the oldest surviving vampire in the world."
The readers have totally embraced him
in this part. I hope he will move into
the next film and maybe without the black
wig? But he can come on any terms as far
as I'm concerned. He was in the film so
briefly that I can truly say my favourite
moments with Antonio were all of his moments.
But to those who have flipped over this
actor, let me recommend again 'House of
the Spirits' and 'Philadelphia'. There
you will see more of our Armand than in
IWTV.
On Stephen Rea:
This actor was quite marvelous
as Santiago, which is not a sympathetic
role at all, and in one scene Stephen
makes cinema history. This is the scene
where Brad Pitt steps out of the airwell,
having seen the ashes collapse. Brad looks
at Stephen, Stephen smiles. Who will ever
forget the malice of that smile? (Or the
pain in Brad's face.) Incredible. Truly
one of the staggering moments of the film.
On Christian Slater:
He is utterly convincing
as the interviewer and he made the story
all the more powerful by his entirely
understandable reactions to the tale.
For me, he was plenty young enough to
be Daniel Molloy, and I hope we'll see
him in TVL too, but again, I don't know.
Like Antonio, Christian is in the film
so briefly that I can truly say my favourite
moments with him are all of his moments.
Minor Players:
All flawless as far as
I'm concerned. There was never a false
word from anybody. Quite a back up for
the stars. The quadroon, Yvette, seemed
real Louisiana. No simple thing. They
were all good, really. In sum, the cast
of this film contained actors of undeniable
talent, charisma and near enchanting manner.
The performances alone are worth the price
of admission as far as I'm concerned.
Another Digression:
Beauty
Over and over again, I've
said these stars were beautiful. I've
talked about their physical gifts, but
surely their beauty is the result of something
infinitely deeper. These actors and actresses
shape their own physical appearance with
their educated brains and hearts. Beauty
surrounds them and emanates from them.
They walk in it, to quote Byron. If they
had not expressed depth of soul in every
word or gesture, their "beauty" would
have been brittle, and not beautiful at
all. I want to make this clear, because
beauty is such a misused word. I would
also like to say that the beauty of the
players seems to work for the audience
nationwide, regardless of gender or age.
The men calling my machine to voice their
opinions are straight as well as gay.
They are young and old. They were captivated
by the spectacle. Lestat has fans among
truck drivers as well as brain surgeons.
They don't relate Lestat to gender or
to sex necessarily. Same with the women.
They have responded wholeheartedly to
what they have seen on the screen. And
even if I speak for women alone, allow
me to say that a feast of gorgeous men
is much appreciated, and rather long overdue.
Women are starved for the sight of beautiful
men. They are hungry for stylish and profound
scenes with beautiful men. Before IWTV,
I had seen precious little of male beauty
I craved. Two examples are Tom Berenger
in 'Last Rites' when he takes off his
Roman collar and makes love to the girl
in the sacristy of St. Patricks. Another
would be the scene where Madeline Stowe
caresses Daniel Day Lewis in "The Last
of the Mohicans', a scene largely focusing
on her and her feelings about the man
in her arms. Let me add again that straight
men are in no way turned off by such scenes.
Why should they be? They watch Kurt Russell,
Tom Cruise, Tom Berenger, Brad Pitt, Antonio
Banderas, Jeremy Irons, Aiden Quinn and
all the other beautiful men for their
own reasons. And why not? But it's a relief
to have lived long enough to see movies
begin to seriously consider the erotic
taste of the female audience as well as
the male. Men are highly romantic, and
they crave romance and they always have.
What could be more romantic that a Ludlum
novel or a James Bond thriller or a film
like 'Backdraft'? Now Hollywood seems
to get it - that this kind of romance
and 'Jane Eyre' are really the same. Maybe
we're seeing the whole concept of the
romantic film reexamined. We are seeing
a renewed commitment to emotion, to heroism,
a new abandonment to passion. Again, it's
about time!
On the general direction
by Neil Jordan, the cinematography and
the editing of this film:
I'm lumping all this together
because I truly don't know how to separate
a director's contribution from that of
the cinematographer and the editor. I
don't know enough about film making. I
don't know how much David Geffen influenced
the film scene by scene. I wasn't there,
and I don't have that experience on any
film. So, let's talk about the film as
a film: Once again, the entire look of
the film was perfection. It caught the
dimness, the filth, the fragile handmade
luxury and ornate aspirations of the 18th
and 19th centuries; it caught the mud
on the hem of the garment. Over and over
again, the viewer was brought in close
to the faces of the characters, to hear
them speak softly, to watch their eyes,
their mouths. This was superbly and fearlessly
intimate. The handling of all players
was masterly. The pace of the film for
me (and most readers calling in) was terrific.
The film is genuinely thrilling. It is
entertaining! You walk out exhilerated.
You feel good and you want to go back.
Many, many readers call me to say that
they have seen the film over and over
again. There is no lag for us in the second
half of the film, and there is no conspicuous
absence of anything. It was an extraordinarily
satisfying film. The film achieved the
Dickensian goal of being meaningful and
fun; of being deep and interesting and
fun. No small feat in an age in which
"realism" has become synonymous with "serious"
and we are told that films about everyday
life should command our respect over everything
else. The film's moral themes came across
to me as clearly realised: we can conceive
of immortality, but we're mortal. Inside
each of us, regardless of outward grace,
there is a misfit. That misfit at times
feels lik a monster. That misfit may at
times behave like a monster. Whatever
Neil Jordan's comments to the press, he
seemed to believe in that and to make
it work on the screen. The film is one
which the audience starts talking about,
discussing, arguing before they ever leave
the theatre. The film invites analysis.
It invites a return viewing. It makes
a difference to the people who see it.
The boldness of the scene with the whore
and coffin is deeply disturbing in an
excellent way. It makes you think about
what you might do if you were Lestat.
It makes you think about things you've
done for entirely personal reasons. But
it is disgusting. The two panoramic scenes
in Paris - Claudia dancing with Louis
at a ball; Claudia twirling in her new
adult dress before the dressmakers - both
were appropriately immense and unstinting.
(Again, the hair of the characters is
eccentric. Louis with that long flowing
hair in a 19th century Parisian ballroom?
It makes me think of the wild west. But
I loved it!) Neil Jordan's humouros scenes
were a true comic relief. Though I would
never have recommended them or written
them - killing poodles, letting the piano
teacher fall dead on the keyboard - I
liked them and felt they were handled
cleverly. They worked. And the shift between
seriousness and humour worked. The last
scene involving Lestat: I was glad to
see him, glad to have him back. When he
said, "I feel better already," I loved
it. When he pulled the lace out from under
his sleeves, I was overjoyed. So all that
worked for me. It was enough in keeping
with the ending of my script and the book
for me to be happy, for me to see the
possibilities of a sequel. But I didn't
write it. (I see no problem in moving
from this Jordan created scene into TVL.
None whatsoever. There are all kinds of
ways to do it and be true to TVL, the
book.)
Film Choices
Made by Jordan and others,
perhaps. This movie obviously did not
go into the heads of the vampires. It
really didn't go into the swoon as they
experience it in my novel or script. It
didn't really show the distortion of the
senses of the vampries. It made, however,
a very interesting substitution. In victimisation
scenes, the camera focused tightly on
the eye of the attacking vampire; it gave
us a portrait of the attack which had
tremendous visual power. Jordan seemed
utterly unintimidated by the plethora
of bad vamprie movies and vampire scenes
that came before him. Perhaps this close
up on the eye of the vampire, this attention
to the choreography of the victimisation
scene, was trying to make us feel the
swoon. I don't know. The film very successfully
used a levitating scene as a substitute
for the swoon in the first instance. Whatever
the reason, over and over again, the film
presented the moment of attack and submission
as potent and worthy of serious treatment.
I found these choices extremely satisfying.
There's no doubt in my mind that vampires
are a metaphor for the predator in all
of us, and that Louis and Lestat and Claudia
speak directly to the ruthless part of
us... especially to those of us who live
in affluent twentieth century America,
surrounded by luxury and miracles, and
yet painfully aware of what goes on in
other parts of the world. The film never
shied away from this. Again, I am confused
by some of Jordan's statements about it.
But I found these ideas to be eloquently
embodied in the film. I have only just
begun to think about some of the questions
the film posed: how far will we go not
to be alone; how much will we sacrifice
morally in order to attain our definition
of magnificence, greatness or independence;
the nature of dependency and love. The
film isn't talking about mere survival;
it's talking about the possibility of
grand achievement as well as endurance
- it's talking about reaching for the
sublime. These camera shots of killing
over and over were rooted in these elements.
I liked them.
The Film's Point of
View
As far as I can tell, this
film is shot from our point of view, the
point of view of the reader of the book
or the viewer of the movie. This is not
a criticism. It is a comment on something
I find very intriguing. What I mean is
this: We are being told the tale by Louis,
but the camera doesn't show us what Louis
sees or how he sees it. The camera stays
at the footlights of the stage, as though
this were all a play - an acting out of
the book. Over and over the camera lets
characters enter from left and from right
as they would on a real stage; it brings
them together for medium shots in which
they speak their crucial lines. It draws
back on panoramic scenes, well beyond
the tactile sensations being experienced
and described by Louis. There are scenes
in which Louis isn't present: Claudia's
attack on Lestat, for instance. There
is as far as I can tell only one point
of view shot in the whole film. This occurs
when Claudia and Madeleine are being carried
down a passageway. You get one shot of
the faces of those carrying them. I'm
not sure whether it's from Claudia's point
of view, or Madeleine's. If there are
other such shots I missed them. Again,
this isn't a critism. I find this an interesting
approach on the part of the film makers.
Perhaps it is most effective as showing
the scope of the story, which is essentially
small and gigantic simultaneously. It's
several people talking about salvation
and damnation amid spectacle that rivals
the most high tech modern extravagance.
Whatever, I'm delightedly puzzled over
it. It worked well, but why was it that
way? What would have happened if we had
seen things more consistently from Louis'
point of view? For example, when Louis
first comes upon Claudia, what would the
scene have been like if we had drawn in
close on her as he sees her, rather than
in close on both of them? What if we had
heard her heart the way Louis hears it?
What if we had gone into his head for
the swoon? What if the sudden entrance
of Lestat had been hazy? I'm not suggesting
any of this. The film is immensely effective
the way it is. I am simply pointing out
that this was a choice that the film made,
and one that worked, though I never expected
it and can't fully explain it. I suspect
that the full impact of this "stage footlights
point of view" was to make the contents
of the film appear highly significant,
which of course I believe it is. I liked
it. There is something classical about
making a film this way. The story is supposed
to be subjective, but the drama is presented
as though it has important meaning for
us all.
Quibbles
Loving the film as I do,
I hesitate to say anything critical really.
But there are a few things that struck
me as not so good. Mostly they had to
do with editing, or with the unfolding
of the story. They are the kinds of things
that can be fixed. The film watcher in
me really wanted to know: Why didn't the
vampires, Louis and Lestat, smell the
decaying human body under Claudia's dolls?
If I lived in that apartment, I would
have smelled it. Certainly they would
have. Why and how did the human body remain
undiscovered? Do these characters have
powerful senses or not? I'm puzzled. Why
would dead blood affect a vampire? Why
did Lestat get so hurt by drinking "dead
blood?" I don't get it. How the hell did
Lestat survive the fire in New Orleans?
Why wasn't Lestat in Paris? Shouldn't
he have been there to show us 1) that
he had survived and 2) to climax the dreadful
kangaroo court trial of those who had
attacked him? I missed him in Paris. I
don't think the film lagged - I cherish
the discussion between Brad and Antonio
in this portion of the film - but Lestat's
appearance would have been highly effective
for me. This doesn't mar my enjoyment
of the film. I just wish it had been different.
I thought the shot of Superman on the
theatre screen, as seen by Louis, and
the shot of the theatre marquee saying
'Tequila Sunrise' as Louis walks off were
unforgivably indelicate and stupid. To
throw up the words 'Tequila Sunrise' at
that moment blew the mood utterly. I winced.
When I watch the film now, I close my
eyes at that part! Why did the vampires
break so many necks and spill so much
blood? Aren't they too powerful to be
so unskilled? Why were we treated to the
scene of the prostitute with her legs
sprawled apart with blood gushing down
her dress? In the context of the film,
does Lestat really go for that sort of
thing? I know, I know, Janet Maslin thought
this was the central image of the film.
I didn't. Why did the vampires so brutally
bully the girl on the stage of the Theatre
of the Vampires? I don't get it. Why did
they push her and shover her? They are
immortals. They are very strong, and she
is very weak. Why the indignity, the vulgarity?
Why wasn't she thoroughly and mercifully
enchanted at the end the way she was in
the book? Why was the scene so gratuitously
nasty? Why was the final exchange between
Louis and Lestat so brief? Good grief!
Didn't Louis have a few questions? Didn't
he have more to say to Lestat after all
that time? I don't get it. How could he
just walk out of there? I couldn't have.
Again, it was beautifully done, but I
wish it had been different. How did Lestat
get to his position at the very end of
the film? How? Couldn't there have been
some indication of how he managed to be
where he was in his last scene? The overall
effect would have been stronger for me
if ther had been some clues. Again, I
love the film, it worked. But I wonder...
Once again, why didn't the vampires cry
blood tears! My last question: why was
this film an R rated film? Couldn't it
have been just as significant and just
as thrilling without being an R rated
film? I am assuming of course that the
R rating had to do with the nudity and
the misogyny in the film, the sadism towards
women with heavy sexual overtones. If
I'm right, then why was that necessary?
Vampires don't have sex. They transcend
gender. Vampire gore appears in comic
books, cartoons and PG movies, doesn't
it? What's with the rating system? And
what's with the gratuitous cruelty to
women in this film? Why? I think the film
could have kept all of its philosophical
and psychological complexity and been
PG or PG-13. I'm raising this point because
the Vampire Chronicles have thousands
of very young readers. For them, the books
are extremely accessible. They read the
books in school. They talk about them
with their teachers. They write papers
on the books. They call me with questions
and write me wonderful letters. I've been
asked to speak at schools about these
books, and I have. I have spoken at an
elementary school. I have spoken at a
college. I have been interviewed in school
newspapers as well. Couldn't the film
have been just as accessible to the young
as the books are? I hope kids and their
families disregarded the R rating. I hope
the young readers got to see the film
or that they will when it comes out on
videotape. I think it says important moral
things, and it is enchanting and spectacular.
It's a banquet of images and words and
colours and movement. I hope kids overlooked
the vulgarity and the brutality of some
of the scenes. If they can overlook prime
time TV and cable, why can't they see
this film? These nasty and mean scenes
didn't ruin the movie for me, and I would
let any child go and see it. The film
has a redeeming moral context and undeniable
splendor that kids are entitled to enjoy.
But I don't like the handling of those
anti-female sadistic parts. And I would
have softened them, tried to transmute
them with style, or - to put it bluntly
- done them in such a way as to achieve
a wider audience rating. We cannot make
only that art which is acceptable to children,
but we must remember that 'Moby Dick'
and 'The Old Man and the Sea' and 'Hamlet'
can all be read or viewed by children
without risk. Consider the appeal of 'The
Red Shoes' and 'Tales of Hoffman'. Consider
perhaps that the kids who did get to see
IWTV may remember it in the way my generation
remembers 'The Red Shoes' and 'Tales of
Hoffman'. There is a venerable tradition
to making the most serious statement in
a form that can be understood by an eight
year old. I respect that tradition. That
kids read my books gives me joy. I'm proud
of all my readers, the very young, the
very old, the seemingly mainstream, the
eccentric, the cerebral, the whole crowd.
I ought to be. I'd be a fool not to be
proud of being a "popular" and "mainstream"
writer. It feels great.
On Other Critics and
the Critical Response to this Film:
To echo the offhand remarks
of Saturday Night Live's Brooklyn characters,
"Forget about it!" As for 'Time' and 'Newsweek',
I think we as readers and film lovers
have to reconcile ourselves to the fact
that these publications have become virtually
worthless in covering books and film.
The magazines are obviously fighting a
losing battle with television and computer
networks, but they aren't putting up much
of a fight. Their reviewers seem shallow,
stupid, and unforgivably uninformed. Let's
kiss them good-bye. 'Time' and 'Newsweek',
you no longer play a significant role
in covering the news surrounding the arts,
or in covering the arts themselves. You
could turn this around. You could start
writing reviews which are actually intelligent
essays; you could return to commentary
with perspective and validity; you could
do your homework on the context of the
films and books you review. Eh. I've given
up on you. The success of 'Interview with
the Vampire' is only one of many, many
proofs that these magazines are no longer
major cultural players. It is sad. On
the 'New Yorker', Pauline Kael, I miss
you. Tina Brown, why don't you open up
the 'New Yorker' to teams of reviewers
of films and movies? Give us real controversy
of critism - review more books, more films
and publish more reviewers. I'd love it,
but I read the magazine every week no
matter what. On Janet Maslin in the 'New
York Times', though I cherish her great
praise of the film, I disagree, as already
stated, with the dismissal of the ideas
of the film and her dismissal of one of
the richest, most complex and most thought
provoking films I've ever seen. People
will be viewing it and talking about it
when we are no longer here. On Caryn James,
I treasure what you wrote in the 'New
York Times'. On Liz Smith and her very
frank and brave questions as to whether
or not IWTV was a gay allegory, and her
question as to why people just don't make
a gay film, and why do gays have to be
disguised as vampires - here's my answer.
Ms. Smith, the gays are us. That's all
there is to it. There is no disguise.
Gay allegory doesn't exist apart from
moral allegory for everyone. This is now
evident. 'Philadelphia' made the statement
in a very direct way. Tom Hanks in that
film played a man that could be any one
of us for any number of reasons! Years
and years ago, a gay allegory was made
called 'Bride of Frankenstein'. For most
of its artistic life, people have been
totally unaware that this film is a gay
allegory, and with reason. It doesn't
matter. If it's about gays, it's about
all of us, the secrets we carry, the traits
which set us apart individually from others,
the burdens we bear, the rage we feel,
and the common condition that binds us.
The characters of IWTV aren't gays disguised
as vampires. They are us. They are us
in our loneliness, in our fear, in our
spiritual and moral isolation. They are
us in our ruthlessness, and in our desperate
quest for companionship, warmth, love
and reassurance in a world full of gorgeous
temptations and very real horrors. They
are fallible beings with the power of
gods; and that is exactly what we are,
all of us. In sum, 'Interview with the
Vampire' is bigger than a gay allegory,
and so is almost any gay allegory. Gender
influences everything but determines nothing!
Vampires transcend gender. We as modern
people transcend gender, though we can
never escape it. Ours is a time for which
there are no precedents with regard to
gender and freedom. Look in vain to ancient
Rome. Look in vain to the Middle Ages.
There has never been so much affluence,
scientific knowledge and so much common
awareness of violence and injustice. There
has never been so much real wealth for
so many, combined with instantaneous media
confrontation of poverty and suffering.
Some of us see life as a horror story,
but a horror story with great, great meaning.
On the Horror Genre:
If we learn anything from
this period in film history, let us learn
this: that fantasy and horror can speak
to the ordinary and the most eccentric;
fantasy and horror can embody and reflect
the most common and the most dreaded pain
we all share; fantasy and horror can speak
to the addict, to the celebrity, to the
gay man, to the gay woman, to the housewife,
to the working man or woman, to me to
you, to the truck driver, to the brain
surgeon, to the monk, to the nun, and
to the child. Poetry thrives in fantasy
and horror books and films; so do great
visions of truth. The ambition and the
potential of these genres is limitless.
Finally, let me describe another aspect
of this unique time. Today, what we share
is more important than what sets us apart
from one another. What we have in common
is infinitely more important that what
divides us. It has never been that way
before, and the possibilities as well
as the responsibilities are endless. This
is the full meaning of 'Interview with
the Vampire'. Kinked? Yeah. Weird? You
got it. Universal? Most certainly.
With love,
Anne Rice,
New Orleans, Louisiana
1994 No rights reserved. Quote any, or
all of it, anywhere, anytime you wish.
Anne's
Variety Statement on the Movie
To my readers a personal
statement by Anne Rice regarding the Motion
Picture 'Interview with the Vampire'.
On September 16, 1994, I saw a videocassette
of the up an coming film 'Interview with
the Vampire'. This film is directed by
Neil Jordan, and stars Tom Cruise, Brad
Pitt, Kirsten Dunst, Antonio Banderas,
Stephen Rea, and Christian Slater. It
was produced by Stephen Woolley and David
Geffen. It will be released this fall.
Unable to attend a recent sneak preview
at the invitation of the producers, I
was trusted with this tape by David Geffen
so that I could have an early look at
the film because it is based on my first
novel, which was published in 1976 - the
first of the Vampire Chronicles. This
was for me an event of indescribable excitement.
Living in a dramatic clutter of laserdiscs,
and videotapes, I am nourished daily by
movies, loving them as much as books.
All my life I have looked to films for
inspiration, consolation, amusement and
enlightenment; and here at last was a
tape of the film based on my own book.
I am making this personal statement now
for my readers, and for myself. If you
have no interest in this, don't read it.
It's not a news story. I paid for the
space. I don't want to be misquoted; I
don't want my statement cut to pieces.
So I bought the page, and please feel
free to turn it whenever you wish. What
I have to say is this: I loved the film.
I simply loved it. I loved it from start
to finish, and I found myself deeply impressed
with every aspect of its making, including
its heartfelt and often daring performances
by all the actors and actresses, its exquisite
set design and cinematography, and its
masterly direction. But most personally,
I was honored and stunned to discover
how faithful this film was to the script,
the content, and the ambience of the novel,
'Interview with the Vampire', and of the
script for it which I wrote. I was shocked
to discover that Neil Jordan had given
this work a new and distinctive incarnation
in film without destroying the aspects
of it which I hold so dear. I never dreamed
it would turn out this way. Never during
17 years of development had I ever expected
the film version of this book to emerge
with so much of the heart and soul intact.
Many scripts for 'Interview with the Vampire'
have crossed my desk over the years. In
Hollywood restaurants, on Hollywood patios,
at lunch tables at Le Dome and dinner
tables at Morton's. I have talked and
dreamed aloud about this film so many
times I don't want to remember it all.
And I have shed more tears over this process
than I care to admit. But this film surpassed
my maddest expectations. Fearlessly it
presented the love shared by the fictional
characters, Lestat, Louis, Claudia and
Armand; fearlessly it told the story of
the making of the child Vampire Claudia;
fearlessly it allowed my tormented vampire
outsiders to transcend gender, and to
speak from their souls about matters of
life and death, love, loneliness, guilt
and pain. The charm, the humour, and invincible
innocnece which I cherish in my beloved
hero Lestat are all alive in Tom Cruise's
courageous performance; the guilt and
suffering of Louis are poignantly portrayed
by Brad Pitt; the enigma of Armand is
embodied in Antonio Banderas; the role
of the Interviewer is handled perfectly
by Christian Slater; Stephen Rea is delightfully
sinister as Santiago; and Kirsten Dunst's
mesmerising performance as my tragic Claudia
broke my heart. In addition, the cinema
maniac in me loved the pace of this movie,
its tension, its suspense, its deep and
spectacular sensuality. I loved its comic
moments. I loved its stamina. I loved
the relentless intensity, and its success
as pure entertainment. I could have not
hoped for anything better. To repeat,
I never dared hope for so much. I thank
everyone connected with this film - regardless
of their motives or feelings - for attempting
and accomplishing a unique work. And I
thank you, my readers - who wrote letters
to me, the press, the studio and the producers,
who called to express your opinions, who
came out in droves to my book signings
to speak your hears about this film, and
about its casting and content. Guys, you
were great. You gave to me knowledge that
the book I'd written meant something to
you. You gave to me knowledge that Lestat,
Louis and Claudia had a life in your minds,
as well as in mine. I wish every author
could know the happiness you gave to me.
I love you for it. And I hope and pray
that I never let you down. The recent
development of the film has been an exquisitely
painful process for me. Perhaps that's
as it should be, given the nature of the
book. But undoubtedly the process was
painful or uncomfortable for others as
well. I wish all of this could have been
avoided. I wish that no one had been hurt,
insulted, slighted or confused. But film
making is an art, collaborative or not,
and art can be vampiric; it can take all
the tears and blood you have to give.
When you see this film, I think you will
marvel, along with me, as to how something
that developed with so many difficulties
and so much controversy could turn out
to give so many people what they want.
I think you will embrace this film as
I do. I think you will find it spellbinding
as I did. I think you will find it such
a rich and sincere and unusual offering
that if one part fails you, another will
compensate for that disappointment; if
one twist puts you off, another scene
will engulf you; if any one incident doesn't
please, another will sweep you away. If
I'm wrong, if you don't like the picture
- let me know. Laugh in my face. Write
me letters. Call me. Come to the bookstores
when I'm there and scream. I can take
it. I've never been a cautious person.
I have to stick my neck out now and say
I think this film is great. I can't wait
for Siskel and Ebert; I have to go on
record immediately in my excessive and
impulsive fashion. I am proud to have
my name connected with the screenplay
and the film 'Interview with the Vampire'.
See this film, guys. See it!
All my love to you,
Anne Rice.