Interview with the Vampire
Tom Cruise Actor , Brad Pitt Actor , Antonio Banderas Actor , Stephen Rea Actor , Christian Slater Actor
MPAA Rating:
R
Contains:Violence,Sexual Situations
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Interview with the Vampire
Theatrical Release Date: 1994 11 11 (USA)
UPC: 883929146017
Studio: Warner Home Video
MPAA Rating: R Contains:[Violence, Sexual Situations]
Summary: Anne Rice's best-selling romantic horror tale about the origins of a centuries-old vampire inspired this popular, atmospheric chiller. One of director Neil Jordan's major Hollywood productions, the film stays close to its source material, retaining the frame of a young reporter (Christian Slater) interviewing a man who claims to be a 200-year-old vampire. The man, Louis (Brad Pitt), shares his story, beginning in 18th-century New Orleans with his first encounters with the charismatic and decadent vampire Lestat (Tom Cruise). Lestat converts Louis to blood-sucking and immortality, but Louis fails to adopt Lestat's cavalier attitude, instead tormenting himself with guilt over his new nature. The two vampires remain deeply, if reluctantly, connected over the years, while becoming intimately involved with others of their kind, including Claudia (Kirsten Dunst), a mature immortal in a young child's body. Fans of the novel raised numerous objections, particularly after Rice initially spoke out against the casting of Cruise as Lestat; further casting difficulties followed the death of River Phoenix, whose role as the interviewer was assumed by Christian Slater. Rice later recanted her objections, and the combination of thrills and gothic romance proved popular with audiences. ~ Judd Blaise, Rovi
Category: Horror
Awards: Best Supporting Actress – null Best Original Score – null Best Art Direction – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Score – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Art Direction – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Original Score – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Moti – Hollywood Foreign Press Association
Features:
Behind-the-scenes documentary In the Shadow of the Vampire, featuring interviews with the film's stars and creators
Audio commentary by director Neil Jordan
Introduction by Anne Rice, Neil Jordan and Antonio Banderas
Production notes
Theatrical trailer
Interview with the Vampire
Format: DVD
Release Date: 04/27/2010
Audio: DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1
Runtime: 122 Minutes
Sides: 1
Number of Discs: 1
Language(s) English,French
Subtitles: English,French,Spanish
Region: USA & territories, Canada
Chapters:
Disc #1 -- Interview with the Vampire
1. Credits [3:00]
2. Another Life [2:49]
3. Invitation to Death [3:39]
4. Louis' Last Sunrise [1:53]
5. Goodbye to the Light [4:53]
6. Getting Used to Killing [4:15]
7. A Cursed Place Burns [3:48]
8. "Take Her, Louis!" [6:29]
9. Claudia [5:23]
10. Lestat's Gift [4:35]
11. "You Make Us..." [4:48]
12. "Good Night..." [4:36]
13. Trail of Vulgar... [6:23]
14. Alive Again in Paris [7:26]
15. Santiago and Armand [2:34]
16. Stage Spectacle of Death [2:12]
17. The Source of Evil [1:33]
18. Crime Among Us Vampires [1:02]
19. Letting Go? [:47]
20. Stamina For Immortality [1:51]
21. A Mother For Claudia [5:32]
22. A Mob of the Undead [4:11]
23. Burned by the Light [:35]
24. Merciless Revenge [1:19]
25. A Lesson... [4:17]
26. Back to the World [4:04]
27. The Scent of Death [2:10]
28. "Do You Like Dying?" [2:11]
29. Interviewer's Passenger [1:57]
Derek Armstrong
The flap over whether Tom Cruise could pull off a blonde, long-haired vampire, about as far afield from anything he'd done as you can get, proved to be justified, but the miscasting is only one of the flaws of this intermittently pleasurable, but ultimately frustrating film. Cruise can't be blamed for giving anything less than his all, but a more European, Victorian actor (Daniel Day-Lewis had been mentioned) would have been a smarter translation of Anne Rice's seductive antihero. Brad Pitt compounds things by moping for much of the movie, bringing the number of charismatic actors misused by director Neil Jordan to two. What Jordan gets right is the gothic wantonness and moldering grandeur of old-world New Orleans, which becomes a character in itself through the Oscar-nominated art direction. The subculture of blood-sucking socialites is truly eerie, and the violence is more raw and grisly than was permissible in a stylized outing like Bram Stoker's Dracula. Making as big an impact as anything is 11-year-old Kirsten Dunst, in her Golden Globe-nominated breakthrough, thirstier for blood than most movie children get to be. Because of such heavy R-rated subject matter, audiences were divided on Interview With the Vampire depending on what they could tolerate. The only mediocre success of what could have been a franchise suggests that there is something untranslatable about Rice's stylish prose, which may also shed light on the slow crawl of her other novels toward the big screen. ~ Derek Armstrong, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Michael Cristofer
Screenwriter
George Fenton
Composer (Music Score)
David Geffen
Producer
Elliot Goldenthal
Composer (Music Score)
Neil Jordan
Director
Neil Jordan
Screenwriter
Stephen Woolley
Producer
Anne Rice
Screenwriter
Tom Cruise
Actor
Brad Pitt
Actor
Antonio Banderas
Actor
Stephen Rea
Actor
Christian Slater
Actor
Kirsten Dunst
Actor
Domiziana Giordano
Actor
Thandie Newton
Actor
Indra Ové
Actor
Laure Marsac
Actor
Susie Figgis
Actor
Miranda Richardson
Actor
Juliet Taylor
Actor
John "Spud" McConnell
Actor
Bellina Logan
Actor
Lyla Kay Owen
Actor
Helen McCrory
Actor
Monte Montague
Actor
Jeanette Kontomitras
Actor
Roger Lloyd Pack
Actor
George Kelly
Actor
Micha Bergese
Actor
Marcel Iures
Actor
Susan Lynch
Actor
Andrew Tiernan
Actor
Sarah Stockbridge
Actor
Katia Caballero
Actor
Country: USA

