MC
Marco Castellini
•Louis, a centenarian vampire, decides to tell a journalist his life story: barely more than twenty years old, he lost his wife and, about to commit suicide, was transformed into a "bloodsucker" by a young and fascinating vampire named Lestat. From that day on, Louis's existence unfolds in the company of the satanic Lestat, the vampire who condemned him to an existence in the darkness, and the young Claudia, dragged into the same vortex... Adapted from one of Anne Rice's most famous novels, the film boasts a cast of top Hollywood stars including Antonio Banderas, Tom Cruise, and Brad Pitt, but, as almost always happens in these cases, it cannot afford truly strong scenes to avoid censorship bans that would have made it lose a significant portion of the audience upon its release. Therefore, if you're looking for blood and splatter, it's better to look elsewhere, "Interview with the Vampire" remains without a doubt an excellent vampire film that benefits from an absolutely original subject, excellent scenery, and top-level actors. Certainly, it is not a particularly terrifying film, and perhaps, due to the stardom of its actors, it may make "turn up one's nose" to genre enthusiasts, but the quality and care with which it was made are undeniable. Curiosity: upon the film's release, some newspapers reported news of presumed audience malaises due, it seems, to the disturbance caused by the viewing of certain sequences in which the protagonists feed on the blood of mice... ah, those delicate stomachs! What would happen if cinemas re-screened films like "Buio Omega" or "Antropophagus"?