Interview with the Vampire (TV Series 2022– ) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
444 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
I found it pretty entertaining
Supermanfan-1312 April 2024
I actually enjoyed Interview with the Vampire even more than I thought I would. I liked the movie so I thought this would be a disappointment but it wasn't. Far from it. This one actually takes place in our current year. Vampire Louie de Pointe du Lac is currently living in Dubai and is telling his live story to a journalist. The story starts in New Orleans in the 20th century and shows how he met vampire Lestat du Lioncourt and how they started their family with the two of them and teen vampire Claudia. It's much like the movie where the story follows the Louie telling his story to the journalist. It's also different in many ways to the movie, not bad just different. I'm not even sure what I like more the movie or this show. I liked it enough that I binged the the whole first season in just a couple days.
44 out of 44 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
I really like it!
mauramartindale2 May 2024
I thought this was a good reimagination of the book. I like it a lot more than the movie. It's atmospheric and entertaining, and I liked the way they went about telling the story. The acting is really good, especially Jacob Andersson. I didn't find the interview plotline boring, it was very well-done and I kept looking forward to watching those parts as well. I also think the changes they made were for the better because it added a lot to the story. They're all also so messy which is entertaining to watch since it causes so much drama and that's what I want from a story about vampires. All in all it's a really good show.
33 out of 33 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Better Than Expected
Rob133110 December 2023
Interview with the Vampire was actually even better than I was expecting. It's based on Anne Rice's popular novel about a family of vampires through the years. This is made with mostly unknown actors who all do a great job in their roles. There was also a popular movie about this made in 1994 with Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt and Kirsten Dunst. Obviously most people will compare the two and even though I liked the movie a little more this more than holds up and stands in its own. I never read the books but I've read that this show is a lot closer to it than the movie was. You can tell they try to respect the source material as much as possible and even had Anne Rice help create the show and have her on as an executive producer before her death last year. After reading through the reviews I'm glad that most people seem to agree with me that this is a good show.
66 out of 81 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Everyone should give it a chance
uwuwithluv2 May 2024
After watching it and loving every second of it, i went and read some reviews. I came to the conclusion that the only way you can hate this show is if you come with a close mind and expect to see every word of the original books acted out, I'm here to say it, you will not, but that doesn't make it bad. It has everything i could ever ask from a tv show about vampires; action, romance, horror, and a deep dive about the struggles that come with being a powerful immortal? Great and interesting script, amazing actors and beautiful clothing. I truly love the movie and the books, and sadly i wasn't interested in watching this show, but for some reason I ended up binge watching it a few days ago. What a great decision, I'm relieved i did it just in time to get season 2 (hopefully season 3). Amazing, that's all i can say and urge you to give it a watch and see for yourself.
33 out of 33 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
A perfect follow up!
siophmedia4 May 2024
Warning: Spoilers
The role of Claudia will now be played by Delainey Hayles opens the long-awaited second season of AMC's Interview with the Vampire in typical theatre fashion to set the scene for an immersive second act. The first season of Interview with the Vampire was a renowned success, capturing the essence and detail of the books while making changes to update them without flaw, and is a welcome continuation throughout the new season. This time, it's a slower build but heightened in every sense, which leaves you still reeling from the betrayal and revelations.

We continue, wasting no time as Louis (Jacob Anderson) and Claudia seek out more of their kind to find out where they come from. Claudia hungrily seeks out all the clues as World War II wages on behind them, making the blood different from their kills. They feel sad and cold after eating. Louis wants to stop, angry that they are seemingly seeking out the Adam and Eve of the Damned, but his betrayal from last season still stings. That betrayal perfectly mirrors Daniel's (Eric Bogosian) bitter anger that Rashid was Armand (Assad Zaman), who takes no prisoners this season.

As Louis reckons with his own memories and corrections and figures them out, so does Daniel. Memory is a monster, but it is unreliable, something the series leans into and builds up to harsh revelations, such as in the '70s in San Francisco, when all Louis, Armand, and Daniel are forced to deal with what happened. One of the things up for much discussion with book fans is the conflicting narratives as the vampires tell their story, more so shown between Interview with the Vampire and The Vampire Lestat, but now we have an older Daniel, emblazoned to find the truth after the Armand/Rashid revelation that not only brings a deep rage but some of the best comedic moments as he jibes and pokes at the two vampires, mostly Armand. In the most enthralling episode of the season, Daniel revives his own memories with Louis' help about the original interview, which answers many questions from the first season but brings more intrigue with each revelation and unearthed memory. It feels like there is more between the glares and gazes of Daniel and Armand-something book fans will truly enjoy. If memory is a monster, it seems like there is a consequence for unearthing them.

Memories may be questioned, but they linger with Lestat (Sam Reid) being a ghost-like figure or hallucination to Louis, who invades his time with Armand as their relationship builds, waiting for him to be happy to get his revenge, or so he says. Despite his supposed death from the previous season, the visions make Louis doubt his state of mind, making an excellent link to 2022 in making Louis question his memories. The lingering of Lestat adds a great rift between Louis and Armand, even as a hallucination and an idea, but shows that Louis has tender moments with his former love. The reduced screen time of Lestat could easily be missed if it weren't for the charming Armand. Master of the Paris coven, Armand watches Louis for months before making contact and tries to recruit Louis and Claudia into the coven, but instead builds a love with Louis that is calmer than his love with Lestat but just as palpable and toxic. We see Armand a variety of times: after Lestat was turned, meeting Louis, in 70's San Francisco, and in present-day Dubai. In each iteration of Armand, Zaman gives new depth to Armand that, despite his manipulation, you want to be drawn into him.

In a similar vein, new character Santiago (Ben Daniels) adds to the theatrical element of the show with exquisite screen presence and a seductive performance in the Théâtre des Vampires. He's dangerous and makes that known instantly, yet there is something almost romantic and peaceful when he kills, despite the violence. Like Claudia, you'll want to see more and be completely taken with him. We see him as the season's thespian, a mentor to Claudia and a business partner to Armand, but with that comes a leadership challenge brought forward by Louis' refusal to partake in coven matters, creating animosity between Louis and Santiago, stemming from Louis falling asleep at a performance. Their comparative relationship creates great tension in the series and intrigue for the Théâtre, which comes to a head at dinner when, sick of Louis' pretension, Santiago uses his mimic-gift to call out the other vampire. It starts off funny with apprehension underneath, resulting in fierce animosity between the two.

Visually, the series has turned things all the way up with grand set designs, costumes, and framing that are a treat for the eyes. The Théâtre is where this shines, mixing the practical elements of the theatre with the grand, high-camp nature of the vampires. The stage is bright and extra, and using the cinematic projection makes a whole new world, but underneath it is bloody, cold, and dark, yet each part of this world brings you in to marvel at the intricacies. It can look erratic at times, but that brings a heightened element to the deadly fun and makes a great stage for Armand's cruelty to Claudia when she steps onto the stage.

Bailey Bass was a treat in the first season, but taking over that role is Delainey Hayles, bringing a much angrier but hopeful Claudia trying to find her place in the world. She is granted much more agency this season. Hayles makes the role her own but brings a more complicated Claudia, who reels from betrayal and finds love and a community. Like Santiago, she breathes fun into the role but is able to flawlessly switch, showing a more compassionate and deadly mix.

Season two is without flaw. A visual masterpiece that carries multiple perspectives, leans hard into a theatrical nature, and carries masterful performances all around. Revelations are built up with expert precision, but with possible twists hinted throughout to grip and entice book readers while promising to give much more. The only time things start to feel a little off is, surprisingly, Lestat's past. At first, it feels jarring and rushed without the nuance of the book, but given that Armand is relaying the tale and how the series leans into the unreliable narrator and conflicting memories, it works perfectly and brings more to Armand's character in a moment when he isn't the main character yet feels like it.
24 out of 24 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
As good as the movie, maybe even better
Freakazoid117520 April 2024
I was a little hesitant going into this because I was a big fan of the movie, Interview with the Vampire. I thought there's no way anyone's going to be able to do it better than Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt, two of the best actors there are. Well, somehow this show was able to be almost as good, maybe even better than the movie. I've never seen Jacob Anderson or Sam Reid in anything before besides Anderson as Brey Worm in Game of Thrones so I wasn't familiar with their work. They both played the part of Louis and Lestat perfectly. I blew through the first season in less than two days. Anne Rice, who wrote the book and created these characters, was very hands on for this show and you can tell. I know they just recast the Claudia character but from what I can tell the new actress is even better. Some people (we all know who) don't like the fact that they cast a black actor as Louis which is just ridiculous. These people never fail in bombarding any show that has anyone who's not a straight white man as the lead with negative reviews.
40 out of 43 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
The Obvious Racial Stereotypes
YosefHawel4 October 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Anne Rice created a thoughtful meditation on the legacy of racial injustice in the United States. Her character Louis de Pointe, a sugar plantation owner with many slaves, Louis drains them of their happiness and freedom in order to feed the sweet tooth of white America. Slavery, in other words, Louis devastated the lives of blacks for the frivolities of white consumerism. At the time, Louis does not give much thought to these ideas. For him, it was just another part of his idyllic plantation life. Rice uses Louis' blindness to the ingrained racism of the South to call attention to its ongoing legacy in America. Only after being turned into a vampire does Louis reflect on how a few of his slaves were rather intelligent, deserved better treatment, and this detail sought to condemn the racist ideology ingrained in American culture that whites can only recognize it in death. Well-written. Beautiful indeed.

Rolin Jones has flailed the skin from the Anne Rice's novel and created a mockery of her work. Slavery is a far gone conclusion adrift in the new era of the early 1900's. Gone is the 1791 start date and lapsed wit towards the complete acceptance of slavery. Louis and his family still own a plantation. The de Pointe family has procured some wealth with sugar, but the father abandoned his responsibilities. The father of Louis walked away from his family in the first of the worst racist stereotypes Rolin Jones gleefully introduced upon shocked fans. The next repulsion is a constructed means for a black man to be successful through his merits by making Louis a common pimp. A black man selling bodies for money is a direct slap in the face to what Anne Rice presented so fluently. I'm reminded of an interview with Jones applauding himself with his idolatric whims towards black men in general. I ponder his self-entertaining platitudes as I watch Louis and his religious brother Paul tap-dance for others' amusement.

Sexuality is throughout 'Interview with the Vampire'. Rice played on the preconceived notions of heteronormative culture by neither idealizing nor demonizing homoerotic relationships. The relationships were presented as natural. The understanding that it can be beautiful, as was the relationship between Louis & Armand, and also hostile and messy, as with Louis & Lestat. The subtext of homoerotic relationships in her book was Rice's method of critiquing homophobia, because she is presenting homosexuality & heterosexuality as sharing similar characteristics. Neither one is presented as inherently good or bad. Rolin Jones aborts this notion and thrusts us into headlong into fantasy. Louis a black pimp is seduced by Lestat easily. He fights objectively in vanilla distaste, only to embrace it fully for the first time. It clearly presents Louis as the underling with Lestat as the master in this scenario. The final racial stereotype being the sexual lust of the black man being untamed. Louis can not pull away from Lestat's charisma. I remain unconvinced that Rolin Jones will refrain from diving into broad detail the breadth of Louis' physical endowments as I refuse to watch another episode of this sick fan fiction. This is one man's imagination blindly piecing a grand story for his own desires. I'd expected this from some hidden spot within the internet, but never on the channel of AMC.

It is still early in the first season. I am finished granting this series attention. There echoes the promise of a season 2, and yet my hopes and prayers are that others will recognize this trite as the wasted effort it may have been.
303 out of 534 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
A huge swing, not bad, but could have been more (updated review after watching the season)
deakon75-575-4235924 October 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I have decided to update my initial review, and up increase my rating some, after having finished the first season (Initial angry review still listed below)

It comes down to trying to understand a little more what the writers have tried to do with this series. It's an attempt to tell the story a second time. They really broke away from the proper time line, back-stories, and relationships of the primary character, and this I cannot move past, as much as I try.

HOWEVER: I feel that anyone that has not read the book(s), loves anything vampires, and would like to dip into the some of the basic fundamentals of The Vampire Chronicles, will most likely, thoroughly enjoy this series. Once I decided to ignore the missing, finer points of the original telling of the story, it was entertaining, and i authentically look forward to the next season, to see how the story is re-told in this new lens.

***Original, angry fan review from October 4, 2022*** As others have mentioned, this is a show called "Interview with the Vampire", but it's not Anne Rice's.

Amazing production, paired with phenomenal actors. The story is absolute garbage, nowhere near the book of the same name.

Fans have waited for years for someone to make a series out of the books. This is not the way. Hopefully it gets cancelled early on before completely downing the name, and someone comes and does it right. A massive, multi year series, using the original material is 100% doable. I can't fathom why they felt the need to re-write Anne's story, when the original story was so amazing and detailed.

So saddened and disappointed that I had to come here and rate & review in this negative light.
110 out of 221 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Great show can't wait for season 2
alijahrosser-688192 April 2024
Great show love it so much can't wait for season 2, season 1 was good think it's better then the interview with the vampire 1994 film with (Tom Cruise) & (Brad Pitt & (Kirsten Dunst) keep up the good work can't wait for Anne Rice's Interview with the vampire series season 2 I highly recommend it honestly. It's different from the interview with the vampire film (1994) film but it still got the same thing to do with them telling the story it's a great show, acting is top notch, set design is superb. It's and updated retelling of the classic novel, and it does a fantastic job, better than the 1994 film.
36 out of 42 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Still a great story!
colinsouth3 January 2024
I loved the original story, and this is no exception. Most of the characters are rich, the two main actors are brilliant with highly emotive performances, some of the other characters feel like "fillers" with little purpose other than to extend the running time.

What I find most disappointing, although true to the essence of the original story, the producers and director have added an element of racial politics. If the directors were going to be inclusive then replacing white actors with black ones isn't the way to do it. If you wanted equality, then young Claudia would be Asian, Native American, Portuguese, Mexican or even Indian. Racial exclusivity isn't cool, regardless of the direction.
11 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Just take her name off and change the title
MissCherylA19 December 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Nothing in this resembles anything she wrote. Armand was never the love of Louis life and that's why they eventually went their separate ways and he was why Claudia died which Louis never forgot or forgave him for. Louis did not kill Lestat. Claudia is a child who never grows up not a horny teen. Changing the time period and their races changes everything. You do know white passing children did inherit plantations. Had you followed the story you could've done so much to give fans a final show of Loustat love on screen. Instead we get race swapped gay porn. Armand changed Daniel because he loves him. What is he gonna do with an old man? You changed much and added nothing.
118 out of 173 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Fantastic show
alijahrosser-957893 April 2024
Fantastic show I love it to the death of me and the bad ratings like y'all just some haters like just enjoy the show it don't have to be the exact things on the books like come on now grow up it's not that deep the acting is top notch and everything else like they already told y'all that Anne Rice worked on it with them like that should be good enough for the people the hate ratings that y'all some of y'all been giving them that they don't deserve like she literally wanted the show to be like this and the Anne Rice must be rolling in her coffin yea from this fantastic show that her and the others made Anne rice literally in her coffin sleeping peacefully y'all the only one making her roll in her coffin from all the hate and honestly this adaptation way better then the books and the film I feel like it's more truer to the books then anything like just give the show a chance y'all don't even know what y'all missing out on this show is fantastic show I adore this show.
36 out of 42 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Research I BEG of you.
attendantofsavagegardens3 November 2022
First of all, reviews going "Anne was a producer so she must have been okay with it" no she wasn't. As soon as she passed they shoved Christopher out of the producing and rewrote what Anne had given them of her first three episodes she had written. Stop living in that fantasy of her approval I beg of you, use you're context clues of Chris not talking about this train wreck. Malloy is irritating, Louis has been stripped of all of his depth and reason, and Claudia is even more insufferable. Sam Reid is the only thing keeping me going and that the second season isn't like this offal set in political agendas.
23 out of 45 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Not the right story
chadcpeplinski4 October 2023
Warning: Spoilers
It feels like yet another changing of excellent material to fit today's sensitivities and social debates. The original story was complex and wonderful. It was about interpersonal relationships and this just wants to spark emotion by today's standards for offending people. This is superficial and the changes are unnecessary. If they wanted to tell this tale, write something new and original without degrading the original work. It's not even close to capturing the spirit of the novels. It completely misses on the path of the characters or the journey they take. This is almost as bad as Disney's betrayal of Star Wars.

I couldn't take 30 min.
45 out of 64 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
I can't even believe it could be so gooood.
ferrfrost12 February 2024
The perfect series. I can't even believe it could be so gooood.

I have read all the books of Anne Rice. Anne Rice wrote three of the episodes with her son.

New times, a new Interview with a Vampire for these times. I really like erotica, such passion, feelings, it's so beautiful.

Unrealistically wonderful actors, directors, everyone who contributed to the creation of this series.

I haven't seen such a beautiful series with great actors in a long time.

In my 40 years, it's the best series, something so special and heartbreaking.

I really hope there will be more seasons of the series.

I don't understand the bad reviews about the series because it's was created by Anne Rice, her son and other talented people.
35 out of 41 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Excellent Show
alijahrosser-6454816 February 2024
I actually love Interview with the vampire series more than the Movie in my option I really don't care what they changed about the series from the movie because either way they both good but the show just hit harder than the movie. This one takes place in the current year of 2022. Vampire Louie de Pointe du Lac is currently living in Dubai and is telling his live story to Daniel Molloy a Journalist. The story starts in New Orleans in the 20th century and shows how he met the vampire Lestat du Lioncourt how they started a family with the two of them and teen vampire claudia. It's a little like the movie but the series tell more backstory to the characters.
35 out of 41 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Brilliantly executed!
mizdangels1 March 2024
I would like to believe that if Anne Rice lived to see this recreation of her novel that she would be ecstatic. The acting is outstanding and execution of the written text into storytelling was flawless.

I've never been satisfied with the original movie and I hated Tom Cruise as Lestat. I'm aware that Ms. Rice was pleased with his performance, but I believe she would adore this depiction of Lestat. The series shows his multidimensional personality as well as showing Louis as more than the brooding bore he was depicted in the original movie. I can understand that the time constraints of a movie cannot truly show the depths of character that a miniseries can.

This miniseries is brilliantly done and does the book and its author proud.
34 out of 40 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Please watch it without prejudice
erimerdi29 January 2023
I'm a big fan of Mrs. Rice's work especially the Vampire Chronicles. When I first saw the interview with Vampire the first time I was astonished. That movie made me read Rice's books and I fell in love with the stories and characters. Although the 1994 movie was somewhat a poor adaptation of the book, since I had seen it before reading the book, I fell in love with it too. The Queen of the Damned was even a worst adaptation but I guess Rice's imagination was so great and she managed to create her beloved vampire characters so good it was watchable. At first, I convinced myself as if I was watching a vampire movie not related with Rice's work so in time I have learned to appreciate it but never actually have learned to like it.

When I first heard Rice's vampire chronicles is a possibility I was super excited. I guess at that time Mrs. Rice was alive and negotiating with the studios and she wanted to involve in the process. Nothing came out of it and after she had passed AMC picked up the entire Vampire chronicles catalog which was a great news until of course the details about the new IWV series surfaced. Just like most of the diehard fans, I rejected the cast, time period alongside the most of the story. Maybe the only promising aspect of the story that still resembling the original book was Lestat himself. I did not watch the series at all but of course the love of the vampire chronicles and the curiosity bested me. I decided to give it a try after all I was so sure that I will not be able to finish even the first episode.

Oh boy, I was so wrong! I instantly started enjoying the show and the characters were just great! The time period didn't bother me at all because everything crafted deliciously good the writers actually did a great job. Without any spoilers I want to say all the fans of the Vampire chronicles please watch it without prejudice. It's a good show and very well written one. Yes, it's not what Anne Rice wrote for the most part but when you start watching it you will fall in love!
15 out of 31 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Loved it!
lisabbee17 January 2024
I'm so late to this show! I regret putting it off for so long in fear of disappointment. I never leave reviews for anything and felt compelled. This show is amazing! Beautifully done! Do not listen to the negative reviews that are mad about the changes. The changes imo, enhance the original story by tenfold. And yes, they were always lovers in the books! Give it a try. It's breathtaking, and the actors gave it their all. The main actors, the side characters. All brilliant. Beautiful and stunning sets and costumes. I can't wait to see what season 2 has in store. The show deserves more recognition!
34 out of 40 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Maton Dressed As Sexy Cool Lamb
mha-893271 December 2023
Having seen the 1994 iteration of this story, portrayed by Brad Pitt and Tom Cruise, this later version is entirely more accessible.

However, in some ways, this time, the brash, incisive manner of Daniel Malloy's character, (the ailing, elderly journalist), informs an uncurated mirror for Louis de Pointe du Luc, inhibiting attempts to sanitise and self-curate his own story. He (Molloy), tries to cut through the spin. In this sense, both Daniel and Louis' characters present as both compelling and believable in their roles.

Unfortunately though, we must set fanciful romantic notions aside concerning inhuman longevity and super human physicality. Louis is really just another serial killer. That is, he is a murderer, a master manipulator who victimised and killed people without terrestrial accountability. He has indiscriminately ended lives and caused wave upon wave of grief, pain and harm with little or no consequence.

What then does Louis hope for from Molloy? It seems, in some regards, he wants to curate his own history, to rewrite and reinterpret the human wreckage that is his life as a demon-like criminal. Likely, he, (Louis) wishes to use Molloy to achieve this.

While wealth and privilege may allow Louis to position his identity and persona as self abhorrent, recalcitrant, repentant and contrite; honestly, it's difficult to swallow. This is especially true, given he appears to have entirely and actively avoided culpability, responsibility for his actions.

It is in this sense, the plotline backstory struggles for significance and meaning. Molloy labours to hold Louis accountable. Though, in the end Molloy seems more interested in the book sales his interviews will yield than anything else.

The actors are well cast. The lead characters faultlessly deliver inherently believable performances. Yet, like other prisoners imprisoned for serial murder, they plead their own victimhood. The intrinsic self denial and inhumane disconnect between victim and perpetrator is a seemingly an unbridgeable gulf their self image cannot seem to reconcile.

I can not help thinking this story's portrayal is nothing more than a depiction of two appalling criminals. Two mass murders, whose story is made up to look sexy and cool. Surely this is like poisoning the very well you drink from; is it not?

Accordingly, we see many dramas these days which market crime, violence, and indiscriminate selfish disregard for the welfare of others, as fine; as long as you can make it appear cool and sexy. Ocean's Eleven makes you feel crime is good, cool, sexy and clever. Is that really what we want our children to believe?
8 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Losing interest in this.
scottand30 January 2023
Warning: Spoilers
I signed up for AMC+ to watch "Interview With the Vampire" and I'm already regretting it. I knew going in that changes had been made to the story, most notably the race of some characters and also the time period, but I was still not prepared for THIS. The story of an ambitious and well-to-do gay black man in a relationship with a white man in the racist and segregated South could have been compelling enough in its own right. I see no good reason why it had to be shoehorned into Anne Rice's vampire tale. All of the racial aspects of the story, as told in this series, just draw things out and detract from the vampire story which itself feels almost extraneous at this point. I have to remind myself that I'm watching something based on Anne Rice's novel.

For those who are familiar with the book, I have watched up to the episode where we are introduced to Claudia. I was compelled to turn the show off at this point. The character of Claudia was only five years old in Rice's novel and a bit older in the original movie. In this series she looks to be a teenager but still behaves like a whiny, bratty child. It's quite jarring. And annoying. Not really feeling this show. Such a disappointment.
100 out of 154 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Misleading but...
berbunc1 December 2022
I wanted to watch Anne Rice's Interview with the Vampire hoping to enjoy, (finally), an adaptation that does justice to Anne's great novel. Instead I got a vampire show that borrows from her novel.

First, the positive, Sam Reid, Bailey Bass, and Jacob Anderson are good, the show has good production values, and direction is solid from episodes 4 trough episode 7.

However, all the main characters are miscast as Lestat, Claudia and Louis; in this aspect the TV show mirrors the 1994, and 2002 films. Both projects failed with the age of the characters, but the TV show unnecessarily also changes race, (Louis, Claudia), for the sake of inclusion.

Also, a complete change of time-period, events, characters, sexuality elements, and dialogue that never occurred in the original source. Which, to be fair, is not new in these kind of vehicles - see, CW's The Vampire Diaries.

To make it very clear, this TV show uses Anne Rice's brand as a hook not as an homage. This product is a different creature made by different creators who didn't bother to try to faithfully adapt the main story. They didn't set themselves to honor Anne's tale, instead they went and built on top of her best work, and the result is a lesser product.

No doubt, Anne and her son Christopher probably got paid handsomely.

Is it a bad show? No, it's not. In fact it is a good vampire show.

However, that's the real shame - why would anyone just want to make a good show? Why don't just be faithful to the source and aim for greatness instead?

I guess is a good thing Anne didn't got to watch it.

With another title and different character names this show; in my book, is an easy 8 - however, the mislead brings a bitter taste, and for that I can't force myself to give more than a 6.

Just a missed opportunity.
10 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
I don't like it..
DaniyBoimdb19 January 2023
This is not Anne Rices Interview with the vampire.

This is a complete different story.

I really do not understand why they had to change so much it's frustrating.

I watched the movie a couple of times and it is one of my favorite movies and I read the book.

Louis wasn't a Pimp in the book or the movie. His family died. He was married and his wife was pregnant (wife and child died during labor)..

Well..iam disappointed.

The only thing in this show that is correct are the names of the characters everything else has nothing to do with the original story! This show should have a different name.
40 out of 60 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
A brilliant reimagining of this vampire tale
petrablake5 January 2024
I really enjoyed the re-imagining of this vampire tale. I loved the movie with Brad and Tom, but I must say how impressed I was with this series. You will feel seduced and terrified by this wicked beautiful trio of vampires but also a great sadness for them all.

The attention to character development and the historical period in which this series is set is impressive. You will think the Interviewer is both lucky and foolish to enter Louis de Pointe du Lac's lure again for an insight into his life. I watched this over a few days around the holidays. Highly recommended !

Hoping for a new series soon.
36 out of 43 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Beautiful & Electric
oliviasuzzannesharp4 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
I've watched this series twice now and it's what compelled me to actually start reading The Vampire Chronicles. I'm now in the middle of watching it again because the whole cast does a brilliant job. The chemistry between Louis/Jacob and Lestat/Sam is palpable. The show did a great job conveying a new and interesting time period while still keeping the same energy of the characters. I loved what they did with this being the second meeting between Daniel and Louis. It really added an interesting passage of time between a vampire and a mortal. As I'm reading The Vampire Lestat, I can't not envision the cast and am really excited to see what I'm reading come to life in more seasons. It's my favorite book and show so far. PLEASE CONTINUE RENEWING SEASONS.
22 out of 27 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed