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  • The Vampire Lestat Graced Us With a Release Window. And a Bite Out of Season 3

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    We have four months to get our act together. According to IGN, who revealed this news and debuted an exclusive look at the new season as part of IGN Fanfest, The Vampire Lestat will debut in June of 2026.

    So much happens in the three-minute scene IGN released that it’s kind of dizzying for IWTV fans. The clip features Sam Reid as Lestat de Lioncourt and Jacob Anderson as Louis de Pointe du Lac in the third season of the AMC series adapted from Anne Rice’s The Vampire Chronicles. Stop reading now if you want to avoid Season 3 spoilers!

    First, we learn that Lestat has relocated from New Orleans to Montreal in the present timeline. (Y’all know he’s Canada down!) “Less baggage here,” he says, while also taking a dig at the locals and their, in his words, “mangled” French. There’s a garage band playing in his neighborhood called Satan’s Night Out–which readers will recognize as the name of The Vampire Lestat’s canonical backup band. In the scene, Lestat plays new music on the piano for Louis over Facetime via their respective iPads. His hair is clean and his curls are defined. Overall, he seems to be in a better mental space than we last saw him during a hurricane in New Orleans.

    They chat about Lestat’s new neighborhood and whether or not Louis can come visit and sell him a painting for his guest room… among other things. Their back and forth is all very pleasant, cordial, affectionate, flirty and honestly sweet given what we’ve seen so far of Louis and Lestat’s relationship on bad days and good days. Of course, this is not a flashback from Louis’, or heaven forbid Armand’s, point-of-view. It isn’t a ghost or a memory. This is pure, unfiltered Lestat de Lioncourt. He might not be as melodramatic as we were lead to believe.

    It’s so tame compared to the rockstar The Vampire Lestat trailers thus far. This is clearly the calm before the storm. This scene plants the seeds for chaos. Lestat gets a notification on his iPad encouraging him to purchase a copy of Interview with the Vampire, the in-universe book written by Daniel Molloy. To evoke a certain Cynthia Erivo meme, he didn’t know that was happening. While Lestat does not immediately erupt, he’s not thrilled that his former companion Louis A) sat for this interview with a mortal B) talked about him C) knew for a month that the book was getting published and failed to mention it. They were doing so well! On the defense, Louis seems convinced that the book won’t make a cultural impact because “no one reads anymore,” which… fair! Alas, I don’t think that’s going to be the case this time.

    Then, to add insult to injury, Lestat goes into a bookstore and overhears its employees dismissing the character Lestat completely. They instead thirst over the layered, sexy, mysterious “betaboi” Armand. (Or, rather, the book’s depiction of Armand as conveyed by Daniel’s writing. Interesting…) The salesgirl even boasts that went to the Louvre and pushed past tourists trying to see the Mona Lisa so that she could, instead, take a selfie with Palma Vecchio’s “Adoration of the Shepherd with a Donor.” In the show’s canon, the painting features a young Armand. By the end of the clip, Lestat politely but loudly snaps at the “would smash” Armand-loving clerk. He storms out of the store, paperback in hand. It’s only going to get worse. The brat prince is so back.

    What was with that voiceover at the beginning of the clip?

    There’s just one thing in that scene that I don’t quite know how to process. (Well, two if you count the book store clerk referring to Armand as a “betaboi.”) The clip opens with some radio static, and a voice that sounds like a bit like Eric Bogosian saying “You’re listening to The Failures: Album 8, Side A.” To tis millennial, it resembles what audiobooks used to sound like when they were on cassette tape. You may have seen a rumor online that “The Failures” is one of the episode titles. But that has yet to be confirmed. If so, perhaps this is the beginning of that episode? We could be hearing some kind of framing device for the season? Cannot wait to find out–and while four months is way too long to wait, at least now we know.

    (featured image: Sophie Giraud/AMC)

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    Leah Marilla Thomas

    Leah Marilla Thomas (she/her) is a contributor at The Mary Sue. She has been working in digital entertainment journalism since 2013, covering primarily television as well as film and live theatre. She’s been on the Marvel beat professionally since Daredevil was a Netflix series. (You might recognize her voice from the Newcomers: Marvel podcast). Outside of journalism, she is 50% Southerner, 50% New Englander, and 100% fangirl over everything from Lord of the Rings to stage lighting and comics about teenagers. She lives in New York City and can often be found in a park. She used to test toys for Hasbro. True story!

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  • How ‘Talamasca: The Secret Order’ Made Jason Schwartzman’s Character an ‘Unexpected Vampire’

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    Fans of AMC’s Interview With the Vampire and Anne Rice’s Vampire Chronicles know its world contains a wide range of vampire types. Interview With the Vampire‘s third season, retitled The Vampire Lestat, will give us a rock n’ roll creature of the night when it arrives next year. But AMC’s latest Anne Rice series, Talamasca: The Secret Order, has its own offbeat vampire variation in Jason Schwartzman’s character, Burton.

    The show’s main character, Guy (Nicholas Denton), is a new recruit into the Talamasca. He’s startled by his first meeting with Burton, an “unexpected vampire,” according to co-showrunner John Lee Hancock. In an interview with the Hollywood Reporter, Hancock explained why the show wanted the offbeat character to stand out.

    “We’ve got this skeptic [Guy] who’s going to meet a vampire, and who is that vampire? I wanted it to be complicated,” Hancock said. “I didn’t want it to be a dark room with someone in a velvet chair, looking, and you see their eyes, even though I knew that would be scary. I wanted to meet it on its own terms. So who’s the unexpected vampire?”

    He continued. “The thing about that character is that he is someone who has sold out vampires. He is being put up in the Dakota in New York and has a wonderful life. Yet it’s lonely, and he doesn’t fully trust the Talamasca, even though they’re paying his way and bringing him gifts,” Hancock explained. “In my mind, all those televisions that are up on the wall—he doesn’t have a lot of friends, so he and the woman who runs his life, along with Helen [Elizabeth McGovern’s character], probably sit on Tuesday night and watch reality television on Bravo. That’s not a vampire that I’ve seen, and I like that.”

    Like those rigorously glamorous Real Housewives, Burton is also image-conscious, according to Hancock.

    “He knows he’s being presented. He’s the first vampire that [Guy] has ever met. How does he expect me to look? I told Jason, ‘Here’s the thing I can tell you about this character: he changed clothes five times in anticipation of this meeting to be just right.’ Jason said, ‘That’s a character I can play.’”

    New episodes of Anne Rice’s Talamasca: The Secret Order arrive Sundays on AMC and AMC+.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Cheryl Eddy

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  • In Interview With the Vampire’s Latest Episode, the Paris Coven Lets the Right One In

    In Interview With the Vampire’s Latest Episode, the Paris Coven Lets the Right One In

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    In “No Pain,” the third episode of Interview With the Vampire season two, Armand (Assad Zaman) shares the story of the Theatre des Vampires as Louis (Jacob Anderson) expresses reluctance to join—something that doesn’t stop Claudia (Delainey Hayles) from eagerly wanting to be a part of it.

    This week we bite into the history of Paris’ vampire coven and Lestat’s (Sam Reid) role in its founding, as well as vampire rules, dark gifts, and more immortal romance. Levan Akin directs “No Pain” from a script by Heather Bellson in Anne Rice’s Immortal Universe of vampire lore, airing Sundays on AMC and AMC+.

    Taking a break from the isolating room at Louis and Armand’s penthouse, Molloy (Eric Bogosian) gets a real meal at a posh sushi restaurant in Dubai. There he’s accosted by a man who goes by Raglan James (Justin Kirk), who represents another mysterious party tracking vampires that knows more than Molloy is being told by Louis and Armand. Book fans definitely geeked out a bit here at the character’s introduction and little foreshadowing lines from James thoughout (if you know you know). Molloy thinks he’s not exposed, but after James advises him to be open to communication, he ends up getting hacked by the mysterious figure anyway when he gets back into the penthouse. Talk about a poor firewall, friend! Daniel is immediately sent files of more vampire information that he ever imagined in relation to his interview subjects and himself.

    Molloy tries to play it cool and hide James’ helpful info dump via chat box, as Armand arrives before Louis to share an on-the-record history lesson about the Paris Coven’s origins. The soft-spoken Armand is very old, despite his perpetually angelic-looking appearance: in 1556, the Roman Coven he was a part of sent him to Paris to head up its enclave, which lived in squalor deep in the shadows underground. They were run by sects driven through ancient religious laws and gods to keep them in eternal damnation mode under Satan. It got old very quickly for Armand; by the 18th century, when Lestat began to run amok in the city above, flaunting his alluring menace on the unsuspecting living, it drove most of the Paris Coven crazy to see such heretical behavior. But it intrigued Armand.

    In order to exert dominance as the Paris Coven’s maitre, Armand reveals himself to the fledgling Lestat and informs him he’s his new master as he exists in their domain and must follow vampire law. So of course Lestat blows him off, with the swish of his cape and his blond bouncy hair, because he does not want to be an obedient, poor, peasant vampire. The rejection only makes the brat Frenchman more hot to Armand, who’s never faced a challenge. Naturally, the coven wants severe punishment for Lestat as they see him break so many more rules including taking a mortal lover. That’s the breaks for letting Lestat run his showman lifestyle—and Armand uses his ancient powers to literally drop his ass and drag him into cooperating with a show of power that switches Lestat’s view on Armand.

    The boy wants power and he immediately plans to get it, so he shows up to the coven’s hovel with Christ on a cross (literally) to dismantle the old ways, which is what Armand wanted but knew he couldn’t get away with. He pisses on their rules and old god worship, because to Lestat they’re not there to stop them from being gods themselves. The coven breaks loose into the night; some end up taking to the sun to escape meaningless existence, while others jump into power. Knowing they need to be reeled in, because careless killing endangers all of them, Lestat encourages Armand to begin the coven anew through the Theatre des Vampires, a show where they perform their true identity and take their prey while the living laugh at the fiction they think they’re seeing.

    Lestat’s reformation leads to a new age of the vampire, giving Armand the freedom he sought, and he tells Lestat he loves him while Lestat being Lestat only covets Armand’s dark gifts. As soon as he learns them from the maitre, Lestat abandons him and the coven but leaves them the means to continue without him. Lestat’s ghosting and lover melodrama is something Louis is aware of and helps provide insight on when he sits with Armand and Molloy. It would take Armand 150 years to tell someone else he loved them, and you can deduce it’s Louis—oh, the piping hot tea!

    Molloy resumes Claudia’s Paris diaries, as she campaigns to join the coven that Louis wants no part of except to see her happy (and also he’s sweet on its maitre). She takes on the tasks of cleaning the theater house as she learns more about the coven, particularly Santiago. The acting troupe’s lead inspires her with his performances and dark gift of making people accept death before killing, and with her Daddy Lestat’s ambitious streak, she wants that power too. So Santiago takes her under his wing because he was also orphaned by a terrible maker, but of course he doesn’t know hers was Lestat—just some rando vamp named “Bruce.”

    Lestat’s presence is also felt in Louis’ motivations; like his former lover, there’s an independent streak that prevents him from having any interest in the coven, and that makes him attractive to Armand. The Paris Coven resents that even though all Louis does is enjoy Parisian culture and take up photography, with sporadic human meals, Armand begins to join him on his late-night wandering throughout the city. They fall in love over discourse about good vs. evil and enjoying music at jazz clubs—even with the occasional mental projection of Lestat showing up in Louis’ mind. Last season’s “Come to Me” song reappears in a fun scene as a diss track with Lestat on piano singing to Louis, “You little whore, you only want him because you’re feeling blue,” which disrupts the romantic evening—and Armand reveals he knows his maker is Lestat. Foolishly, Louis tells Armand everything and the maitre reprimands him over breaking so many rules he needs to enforce punishments for. Honestly, the expectation that Lestat would even teach Louis any rules is ridiculous, so when he says Lestat told him “shit” the frustration is understandable. Thankfully, Armand is stupidly sprung on Louis too, so he doesn’t kill him or Claudia immediately as was probably expected.

    Louis, of course, does not tell Claudia that his new boyfriend knows the truth; he continues to build a fake story around their history with “Bruce” and bond with her over their shared Lestat trauma. It really mirrors the complex PTSD that survivors of emotional and physical abuse can carry on from loved ones—even after making it out of the situation, it can haunt you, and in Louis’ case this presents as that manifestation of Lestat always following him. In anger, Louis kills a random person imagining them as Lestat and carelessly leaves the body behind. Within the coven, Santiago points out that his own maker was killed for less.

    Tensions begin to rise as the coven wants Louis dealt with, even as they embrace Claudia. As they begin to induct her into the coven by reciting the rules every vampire should follow (not knowing she’s broken a few of them), Armand takes Louis through the sewers to finally kill him. Louis is ready for it and asks for Armand to take care of Claudia, but the maitre reveals her being in such a young body will break her in time. Louis doesn’t accept that and begs for the coven to give her a chance, but Armand insists he’s seen it before; over the centuries, vampires in children’s bodies are not able to evolve past their physical limitations. Louis defends her, insisting she’s strong and it wouldn’t break her—perhaps blinded by her love for her. Seeing the damage Lestat has caused, Armand asks if Lestat broke him and Louis says no, but he carries him. The trauma bonding brings them together as do the life and death stakes here. The tension is too much and they kiss, starting a tryst and avoiding all the punishment talk for now.

    Interview With the Vampire airs Sundays on AMC and AMC+.


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel and Star Wars releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about House of the Dragon and Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power.

     

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    Sabina Graves

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  • ‘Anne Rice’s Mayfair Witches’ Release Window, Cast, and More | The Mary Sue

    ‘Anne Rice’s Mayfair Witches’ Release Window, Cast, and More | The Mary Sue

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    AMC has hit a gold mine with Anne Rice’s work, first with The Vampire Chronicles (Interview with the Vampire ), and now fans will be getting Anne Rice’s Mayfair Witches on their screens as a series.

    Although I’m not personally familiar with the books, I do see the appeal of them—not to mention how there isn’t a mile long list of adaptations to compare it to. Having Alexandra Daddario be the lead of the series does help, too. She’s becoming somewhat of a scream queen, with her most popular mentions being Texas Chainsaw 3D (2013), American Horror Story: Hotel, and We Summon the Darkness (2019).

    Though how much in the way of details have been revealed about the film? Keep reading to find out about this upcoming supernatural horror drama.

    What’s the plot and release window for Anne Rice’s Mayfair Witches?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8uwIto8dn4U

    The trailer promises an enriching story and very spooky moments. Daddario (who is playing Rowan) certainly has the range for horror with a more serious tone. And given everything that’s been revealed about the series, we’re certainly getting some intensity.

    The premise is as follows:

    “Brilliant neurosurgeon Dr. Rowan Fielding learns she is the heiress to a dynasty of powerful witches haunted by a sinister spirit.”

    – AMC

    Anne Rice’s Mayfair Witches will premiere on January 8th on AMC as well as AMC +.

    Who will be in the Mayfair Witches cast?

    • Alexandra Daddario as Dr. Rowan Fielding
    • Harry Hamlin as Cortland Mayfair
    • Tongayi Chirisa as Ciprien Grieve
    • Jack Huston as Lasher

    Recurring:

    • Annabeth Gish as Deirdre Mayfair
    • Beth Grant as Carlotta Mayfair
    • Erica Gimpel as Ellie Mayfair
    • Jen Richards as Jojo

    Who is behind the series?

    Anne Rice’s Mayfair Witches is based on Anne Rice’s novel series Lives of the Mayfair Witches. But this TV series adaptation’s creator is Esta Spalding. Production credit is as follows:

    Executive Producers

    • Esta Spalding
    • Michelle Ashford
    • Mark Johnson
    • Anne Rice (she passed away on December 11, 2021)
    • Christopher Rice (who is Anne Rice’s son)

    Here’s what both Esta Spalding and Michelle Ashford have said about the series:

    “The world of witches has fascinated and terrified for centuries, and yet Anne Rice’s particular lens on witches explored something new altogether—women who are powerful, and often brutal, and always committed to subverting our current power structures.”

    – Esta Spalding and Michelle Ashford

    For now, you can check out the first 2 episodes of Interview with the Vampire to satisfy your Anne Rice adaptation cravings.

    (featured image: AMC)

    The Mary Sue has a strict comment policy that forbids, but is not limited to, personal insults toward anyone, hate speech, and trolling.—

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  • ‘Interview with the Vampire’ has an undying legacy. Look inside its TV rebirth | CNN

    ‘Interview with the Vampire’ has an undying legacy. Look inside its TV rebirth | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    It’s been nearly half a century since “Interview with the Vampire” was published, leaving its mark on popular culture. Penned by the late Anne Rice, the book became the first of the “Vampire Chronicles,” which include 12 follow-up novels. “Interview” itself was adapted into a 1994 feature film starring Brad Pitt and Tom Cruise, while a loose “Queen of the Damned” adaptation hit theaters in 2002.

    Now TV audiences can revisit “Interview with the Vampire” in a new series on AMC Sunday night. Beloved characters like Louis, Lestat and Claudia are back – albeit with some updates to their stories.

    “We have these books that have literally been played in everybody’s head a million times, and then there’s this movie that has grafted that onto another generation of people,” said executive producer and writer Rolin Jones, who acknowledged feeling a “push and pull of how to be reverential and how to make sure that you’re not going to be boring for the people that already know these stories quite well.”

    Jones and production designer Mara LePere-Schloop spoke with CNN about reimagining “Interview with the Vampire” for television and keeping the adaptation supernatural, sensual and sumptuous, in line with the source material.

    Bringing “Interview with the Vampire” to TV involved building a “universe,” said Jones, who kept the other “Vampire Chronicles” in mind while planning everything from character details to the bigger picture. (Lestat, played by Sam Reid, saw some “rewriting” in the later books, as Jones observed – starting with a more fleshed out backstory in the second novel, 1985’s “The Vampire Lestat.”)

    The titular interview takes place in the present day; the 1994 film, its screenplay written by Rice, also placed the interview in then-modern times. Like the novel, the new “Interview with the Vampire” is centered on Louis, who shares how he became a vampire with Daniel Molloy, a character first introduced to readers as an unnamed young reporter.

    This Daniel, portrayed by Eric Bogosian, is an older seasoned journalist, but he’s essentially “the same guy,” Jones said. The show alludes to an earlier interview between Daniel and Louis from the ’70s – a callback to the novel.

    The vampire Louis de Point du Lac (Jacob Anderson)  with his mortal sister Grace de Pointe du Lac (Kalyne Coleman) in

    Louis, played by Jacob Anderson, has some new origins. In previous iterations, he was the owner of a plantation near New Orleans in the late 1700s, which is when he met Lestat. The new Louis, still prone to periods of melancholy, guilt and self-loathing, is a Black brothel owner in early 20th century New Orleans when his story begins.

    The changes made were partially the result of wanting to focus on a “time period that was as exciting aesthetically as the 18th century was without digging into a plantation story that nobody really wanted to hear now,” said Jones. He noted that the character’s lineage can still be traced back to “plantation money” and that his original occupation did not particularly come up as a point of “self-reflection” in the novels.

    Another significant character update involves Claudia – just 5 years old when she was made into a vampire in the novel, though she was portrayed by an 11-year-old Kirsten Dunst in the film. AMC’s adaptation ages Claudia further by making her 14 at the time of her transformation. This doesn’t make her any more prepared for the internal turmoil that sets in.

    Bailey Bass plays a slightly aged-up Claudia, now a 14-year-old when she's turned into a vampire.

    As actor Bailey Bass said in a featurette shared on the show’s Twitter account, this Claudia has to “deal with the emotions of a 19-year-old, then a 30-year-old, then 40-year-old, while still being stuck in this 14-year-old young body.”

    The decision to age Claudia was made in part due to concerns about filming certain scenes, especially those with more “adult” connotations. Child labor laws were another factor.

    “If I wanted to make Claudia on this show, I need as many hours of shooting with the actor who plays that as possible,” Jones said. “And if I put anybody that was younger than 18 in there, I would have limited hours.”

    For LePere-Schloop, who read Rice’s novels as a teen and credits them somewhat with drawing her to New Orleans, her home of two decades, the changes in the TV series are not antithetical to the author’s work. After Rice died, her assets were donated to an archive at Tulane University in New Orleans, said LePere-Schloop, who met with the archivist while the series was filming.

    “Some of the things she was discovering was that Anne was writing short stories and other interpretations of the ‘Chronicles’ where Louis was a woman, or there are other fluidity things happening,” she said. “Even within Anne’s own writing, there’s a history of kind of playing with time, place and person.”

    The series was filmed in New Orleans, once Rice’s longtime home and an integral part of “Interview with the Vampire.” Immersing the viewer in the updated setting required a good amount of research.

    “We’re now talking about a period of New Orleans that has been talked about a lot, but isn’t very well documented in images or hasn’t been captured in film and television, and that’s the period of Storyville (the red-light district),” LePere-Schloop said. “Culturally, it’s had such an impact on the city.”

    As a New Orleans resident, she knew that “when a place is done wrong, you hear it in town.” So she relied on various resources, including the expertise of local historian Richard Campanella.

    “He worked with us to capture things that he knew from oral histories and anecdotal stories that he had documented through time of elements of Storyville,” LePere-Schloop said.

    The production filmed in New Orleans, using a mix of real-life locations and newly built sets to immerse viewers in the vampires' world.

    The production incorporated New Orleans’ very real history, as well as key locations within the city, in addition to building new sets – like the one for Storyville – to bring viewers into this version of Louis’ and Lestat’s world.

    “Anne used the city as research and reference,” LePere-Schloop said. “We were lucky enough to be able to film at the actual house that Anne wrote Lestat’s townhouse to be in the novels. Her inspiration for that house is a living museum and we got to use that as the exterior house.”

    Creating the inside of the house, albeit on a stage, was also great fun, she said, noting that the original source of inspiration has “really incredible design details” like a skylight (which was worked into the script) and crown molding.

    Different design aesthetics were used to show the passage of time while the vampires remain unchanged. The sets also served as a reflection of the characters, from the art Lestat brings over to New Orleans from Europe to the depressed state the vampires’ home falls into when things go awry.

    “It’s an emotional landscape as much as a physical one,” Jones said.

    Production designer Mara LePere-Schloop aimed to give AMC's adaptation of

    LePere-Schloop wanted to avoid depicting a cliché New Orleans onscreen – and similarly, she wanted to avoid vampire clichés, opting against painting everything “bordello red” or putting Gothic arches everywhere. But for all the historical details adopted by the behind-the-scenes team, there are touches (including added saturation during the final coloring process, Jones said) that feel less natural.

    While thinking up the palette for the show, LePere-Schloop turned to a book from her childhood – “The Rainbow Goblins” – which contained “beautiful, oversaturated” illustrations and helped her land on a more dynamic backdrop. The world Louis and Lestat occupy is “sexier” and “vivacious,” she said, compared to early depictions of vampires in film, which tended to be understated and “crumbling.”

    Even with some changes to the original storylines, the “Interview with the Vampire” team did not ignore the source material – rereading and “seeing what was in the crevices and the cracks” helped them make the show, Jones said.

    There are subtle references to characters from later novels and even a quick shoutout to Rice’s Mayfair witches (also the subject of an upcoming AMC series). Characters that did not appear in the film do appear here. And – perhaps the most important detail for the diehard fans – Lestat and Louis are lovers, in a move that takes the famed subtext of Rice’s earlier vampire novels and simply turns it into text.

    Lestat (Sam Reid) and Louis (Jacob Anderson) have a blatantly romantic, albeit toxic, relationship in this iteration of

    What “Interview with the Vampire” hinted at in the ’70s was progressive for its time, Jones said, adding that by the “later books, it’s as if there was this great romance that was never really written, but we all kind of agree it happened.”

    While Jones did not sugarcoat some of the more toxic “dish-throwing” aspects of the vampires’ relationship, he saw tremendous opportunity in how he could depict it in an updated adaptation.

    Between Rice’s writings and the 1994 film, which has its fans and critics alike, Jones acknowledged that the series’ main cast “had big ghosts behind them.” But he praised Anderson – who he pointed out is in nearly every scene – and Reid for their stamina, as well as the range of their performances.

    As far as the viewers are concerned?

    “I’d like them to be surprised. For those who know it really well and love it, I want them to stick with it for seven (episodes) and if they’re still angry, that’s cool,” Jones said. “But hopefully, I made something exciting and thrilling for them.”

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  • ‘Interview With the Vampire’ pumps fresh blood into Anne Rice’s story on AMC | CNN

    ‘Interview With the Vampire’ pumps fresh blood into Anne Rice’s story on AMC | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Significantly improving upon the 1994 film, “Anne Rice’s Interview With the Vampire” does more than just add the late author’s name to the title, ambitiously updating the story, introducing a racial component and serving up plenty of sex and gore. Desperate to replace “The Walking Dead,” AMC might have completed an improbable baton pass from zombies to another kind of undead.

    Although the outlines mirror Rice’s gothic novel, the series manages to simultaneously expand upon them as if this were a sort-of sequel and reinvent certain aspects, all while upping the quota on sexuality and violence into tiers occupied by the edgiest premium-TV fare. In that sense, this seems to have been produced at least as much with AMC+ in mind as the linear network AMC.

    Jacob Anderson (getting to say a lot more than he did as Grey Worm in “Game of Thrones,” and making the most of it) stars as Louis de Pointe du Lac, telling his story to a now-older journalist (Eric Bogosian) whose dismissive, sarcastic attitude seems to be flirting with fangs for the memories.

    Meeting in a pandemic-ravaged future that brings additional resonance to the story, the red meat still exists in flashbacks to Louis’ past with Lestat de Lioncourt (Sam Reid), the suave vampire who made him; and later Claudia (Bailey Bass), a slightly older (again) spin on the child vampire whose perpetual state of adolescence captures the tragedy of her arc in a slightly different manner.

    Louis and Lestat hook up in New Orleans during the early 1900s, a time and place where such interactions are possible but the racism of the times is overtly expressed, and a constant component of the narrative.

    Adapted by Rolin Jones (HBO’s reimagined “Perry Mason”) with early episodes directed by Alan Taylor (“The Sopranos”), there’s a palpable tension in Anderson and Reid’s performances, with the former managing to be wistful and scary in the future and confused, melancholy and occasionally exultant in the past. As constructed, there’s also the intriguing issue of what would prompt him to step out of the shadows to share his story.

    The action, when it happens, is swift, bloody and brutal. Yet the series format affords this incarnation significant latitude as a character study, including the immortal loneliness that would prompt Lestat to create himself a companion, and Louis’ subsequent commitment to Claudia, with all the associated growing pains that go with it. The same goes for fleshing out supporting players, such as Louis’ mother (Rae Dawn Chong) and sister (Kalyne Coleman), as opposed to just trotting smaller roles out for the slaughter.

    “Interview With the Vampire” will make its debut after the “The Walking Dead” starts its final season – in TV terms, an old-fashioned baton pass intended to secure extra sampling in launching this seven-episode opening arc.

    Unlike its ageless characters, “Vampire” might not be suited for a particularly long run, although AMC has already announced a second season, a well-deserved vote of confidence based on its extremely promising start. That’s good news for both viewers and the network, for whom – on the verge of bidding farewell to its biggest hit – the stakes couldn’t be higher.

    “Anne Rice’s Interview With the Vampire” premieres October 2 at 10 p.m. ET on AMC and AMC+.

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