Practical Magic
Note: I am not setting this up as one of my October Movies since it is not really horror, and I have seen it so many times now that I could not count it.
FOR MORE THAN two hundred years, the Owens women have been blamed for everything that has gone wrong in town. If a damp spring arrived, if cows in the pasture gave milk that was runny with blood, if a colt died of colic or a baby was born with a red birthmark stamped onto his cheek, everyone believed that fate must have been twisted, at least a little, by those women over on Magnolia Street. It didn't matter what the problem waslightning, or locusts, or a death by drowning. It didn't matter if the situation could be explained by logic, or science, or plain bad luck. As soon as there was a hint of trouble or the slightest misfortune, people began pointing their fingers and placing blame. - Intro to Practical Magic by Alice Hoffman (and the movie as a voice over by Aunt Jet).
Sally Owens: I dream of a love that even time will lie down and be still for.
While I set out to like The Craft and didn't so much, I was also set to dislike Practical Magic and found it to be very enjoyable. Sure both Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock can get on my nerves at times, they both turned out a very enjoyable performance. What really increased my enjoyment of this film was the book.
Practical Magic is based on the novel written by Alice Hoffman. Ill admit that I have never read anything else of hers and I read this book only after seeing the movie. But I am glad I finally did. Despite the title and subject matter, Practical Magic is not really about magic or witches but about sisters and their bond. It is also about love, both platonic and romantic, but mostly about a deep connection between people. Hoffman showcases this with her portrayal of the three generations of Owens witches; Frances and Bridget, Sally and Gillian, and Antonia and Kylie. It is interesting to note that the only Owens witch without a sister is Maria, the same Maria whose spell against love turns into the Owens Curse.
Practical Magic, the movie, has a lot going for it. Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman make very fetching witch sisters. It is the first major roles for future stars Goran Visnjic (Hotel Sarajevo was his break out role, but this was his big American one) and Rachel Wood. Plus I always liked Stockard Channing and Dianne Wiest from their earliest works as well, not to mention a soundtrack by Stevie Nicks. Although she had no lines, I also thought Caprice Benedetti was great as Owens clan matriarch Maria.
The Movie vs The Book
The movie is really is more in line with the universe of WitchCraft than the book (the witches have more power), but the book is much better. The movie and the book do have some significant differences. In the book Sally spends a great deal of time away from the Aunts to try to live a normal life, only to discover that normal is not really what she wanted. This is touched upon in the movie, but not to the same degree. There is more interaction with and between Sallys daughters Antonia and Kylie in the book. Plus the movie reverses the two daughters and has them a little younger. In the movie Jimmy Angelov is Bulgarian and a lady killer in the figurative and literal sense. In the book Jimmy Hawkins is American and just a dumb hood that sells some kids some bad drugs. Both are though are close enough to each other to me to be the same character, so I opt for using Angelov. Goran Visnjic gave an inspired performance as Eastern European-cowboy-Dracula; much more interesting than Hawkins punk thug. Besides, a drunk Goran Visnjic singing You Were Always on My Mind while planning to kill Gillian is very creepy. Not the same creepy as his I am really into sisters now, but still creepy.
So where the movie and book differ, I am likely to go with the book. Ill use the casting from the movie, keep the movies power level for the witches and minor bits here and there.
The Owens Sisters
Each generation of Owens sisters is presented below. You will notice that in most respect the sisters, while physically different from each other, have very similar stats. This is on purpose. The sisters were one part of the genesis of my Anamchara Quality and my example of their use for non-romantic love and for WitchCraft.
In the case of these stats I kept them at the power level and age they were in the movie (the movie was out in 1998).
Gillian Owens: You southern shrew!
Aunt Jet Owens: Ingrate!
Aunt Frances Owens: Goodie two shoes!
Sally Owens: WITCH!
Associations and Concepts
Well, Alice Hoffman didn't consult with C.J. first, so the Owens don't quite fit, but that is not to say we can't make them fit somewhere. Their attitudes, powers and history remind the most of the Wicce. They, Frances and Jet in particular, are great Weird Ones, but really Eccentric ones would be a better choice of words.
Aunt Frances Owens (Stockard Channing)
Sally Owens: All I want is a normal life.
Aunt Frances Owens: My darling girl, when are you going to understand that being normal is not necessarily a virtue? It rather denotes a lack of courage!
Aunt Frances is the older of the two aunts. She is tall, thin, formidable and looks very much like a Harry Potter witch. If we continue with the book timeline she would 90 today, and most likely still alive.
Strength: 1 Intelligence: 4
Dexterity: 2 Perception: 6
Constitution: 2 Willpower: 5
Life Points: 32
Essence Pool: 51
Skills: Rituals (Wicce) 5, Driving (car, standard transmission) 1, First Aid 1, Herbal Medicine 4,
Qualities: The Gift, Essence Channelling 3, Increased Essence Pool 6
Drawbacks: Accursed (The Owens Curse), Emotional Problems (Fear of Commitment) 1, Status -1
Metaphysics: Affect the Psyche 3, Cleansing 4, Consecration 2, Symbols of Protection 3
Aunt Bridget Jet Owens (Dianne Wiest)
Aunt Jet: This is what comes from dabbling; I mean you can't practice witchcraft while you look down your nose at it.
While Frances would allow the girls to eat chocolate cake for breakfast because others say she cant, Aunt Jet would let them do it because she cant say no to them. Cheerful, plump, short, she would be 88 in 2010
Strength: 1 Intelligence: 5
Dexterity: 2 Perception: 6
Constitution: 2 Willpower: 5
Life Points: 32
Essence Pool: 52
Skills: Rituals (Wicce) 6, First Aid 2, Gardening 4, Herbal Medicine 4,
Qualities: The Gift, Charisma 2, Essence Channelling 3, Increased Essence Pool 6
Drawbacks: Accursed (The Owens Curse), Emotional Problems (Fear of Commitment) 1, Status -1
Metaphysics: Affect the Psyche 3, Cleansing 4, Consecration 2, Symbols of Protection 3
Frances and Jet thought they were going to die together at ages 94 and 92 respectively. That all changed when they had to take in their youngest sisters daughters Sally and Gillian after her death. They raised the girls as their own for years. Their own husbands had died years ago due to the Owens Curse. Frances and Jet are old-school witches. They dress in all black, with funny hats to hide (barely) wild and crazy hair. They ran a very successful, but secret (secret in the way that everyone knew but no one ever talked about it) potion business. They provided potions to cure all sorts of ailments, the get rid of spirits, but most famously were their love potions. They would warn the women who came to them that they were asking for trouble, but in the end they took the money and women left with a small vial. The Owens sisters where also well known for their gardens. When spring came theirs would be in full bloom with jasmine, rosemary, verbena and garlic while their neighbors would still be muddy from the thawing snow. The lilac, lavender and roses grown there could be smelled from blocks away.
Sally Owens (Sandra Bullock)
Sally Owens: Since when is being a slut a crime in this family?
Strength: 2 Intelligence: 5
Dexterity: 2 Perception: 6
Constitution: 3 Willpower: 5
Life Points: 34
Essence Pool: 26
Skills: Rituals (Wicce) 2, Craft (botanicals) 3, Herbal Medicine 3
Qualities: The Gift, Attractiveness 1, Essence Channelling 1 (3), Increased Essence Pool 1, Anamchara (Gillian)
Drawbacks: Accursed (The Owens Curse), Emotional Problems (Fear of Commitment) 1, Impaired Seneses*
Metaphysics: Affect the Psyche 2, Cleansing 1, Elemental Fire 1
*Cant see orange since her first husbands death (from the truck that hit him).
Sally Owens wanted nothing more to live a normal life. Her mother died soon after her father did. He died from the Owens Curse, she died from a broken heart. So she and her sister Gillian went to live with her two aunts. From a very early age Sally displayed the greatest potential, but she turned her back on magic and witchcraft to avoid the curse. She even tried to avoid love, but as fate would have it she fell in love with man named Micheal, got married and had two wonderful daughters. They opened an herbal bath products store. Sally used her knowledge of herbs to create botanicals. Then one day she heard the Deathwatch Beetle clicking away the minutes of her husbands life, Sally ran to find her husband, only to see him get hit by an orange truck. She spent the next year depressed and never left her bed.
One day her sister comes back into her life.
Gillian Owens (Nicole Kidman)
Gillian Owens: Hang onto your husbands, girls!
Strength: 2 Intelligence: 3
Dexterity: 2 Perception: 6
Constitution: 3 Willpower: 4
Life Points: 32
Essence Pool: 26
Skills: Rituals (Wicce) 2, Craft (botanicals) 3, Herbal Medicine 3
Qualities: The Gift, Attractiveness 2, Essence Channelling 1 (3), Increased Essence Pool 1, Anamchara (Sally)
Drawbacks: Accursed (The Owens Curse), Emotional Problems (Fear of Commitment) 1, Mental Problems (Mild Lechery)
Metaphysics: Affect the Psyche 2, Cleansing 1, Mind Hands 3/3
Gillian was the younger of the two Owens sisters. She was the partier. While Sally even at a young age tried to get her homework done, eat her vegetables and go to bed at a decent hour, Gillian was running off with first one boy or another. Soon boys that were terrified of her when she was a preteen, couldnt stop following her when became a teenager and adult. If Sally inherited Maria Owens magic, then Gillian inherited her ability to break hearts and turn other women against her.
Gillian and Sally also have the Anamchara Quality, WitchCraft version. While there is obviously a strong love here, it is the sisterly type. The type born out of tragedy, only Gillian understood Sally and visa versa. While they were as different as night and day, they were really one complete person. Maybe this is a by-product of the Owens Curse, since no man could become their soul mate they needed a proper substitute.
It would be interesting to see if the same unfolded for Antonia and Kylie.
Antonia Owens, 16 (Alexandra Artrip)
Kylie Owens, 15 (Evan Rachel Wood)
blond (dyed, normally black) hair.
NOTE: in the book, Antonia was the oldest and Kylie was the younger. In movie this was reversed. I am opting for the movie casting, but the book characters. This is fine since Kylie ending up much taller and looking more like Gillian.
Kylie Owens: Mom, I'm worried about Antonia. Did you know that she put on her mouse ears and drives around town, all liquored up, NAKED?
Children (to Antonia): Witch! Witch! You're a bitch! Witch! Witch! You're a bitch!
Sally Owens: You'd think after three hundred years they'd come up with a better rhyme!
I have not stated out Kylie and Antonia yet. My plan was to introduce them into a game as sisters, but nothing more than that and see where they go. But at last count I have the stats for close to a hundred different witches. Its hard to keep up, let alone try to work them all into a game.
Both are Gifted and are more powerful than Sally and Gillian. I had decided on not giving them Anamchara. In the book they just didnt get along so well, except at the end and it left me wanting more.
Can love really travel back in time and heal a broken heart? Was it our jointed hands that finally lifted Marie's curse? I'd like to think so. But there are some things that I know for certain: Always throw spilled salt over your left shoulder. Keep rosemary by your garden gate. Add pepper to your mashed potatoes. Plant roses and lavender, for luck. Fall in love whenever you can.
- Sally Owens
http://practicalmagic.warnerbros.com/
http://www.alicehoffman.com/hoffman-practical-magic.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Practical_magic
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0120791/
http://www.amasveritas.com/
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
October Movie Reviews: Countess Dracula
Stuck in the 70's with another one of the Hammer Films.
This time we are getting into what would be fertile ground for Hammer, beautiful young women killing other beautiful young women.
Countess Dracula (1970/1971)
This one is a bit mis-titled, and a bit of different one for Hammer. It is the story of Countess Elizabeth Bathory, but the twist is here the blood she drains and bathes actually does make her young again in the form of Scream Queen Ingrid Pitt.
The story is not a bad one, but not memorable. Bathory kills girls, dupes dumb men into being her pawns, finally gets caught in the end. We are missing some of the characters from Bathory's history, but that is fine really.
The one ups the blood and gore (too be expected) and the sex and nudity (also to be expected).
It is not quite as good as Daughters of Darkness that came out a year later. But it has more of supernatural feel to it and more of a Hammer feel to it if that makes any sense. Ingrid Pitt also stared as another famous vampire, Carmilla, in the Vampire Lovers. Female vampires became very lucrative for Hammer in the end, but not enough to save them it seems.
I had forgotten I had seen this one till I got into it. So I watched it with the audio comentary on instead. Very interesting insights to Hamer in the 70's to be sure. Makes me want to go back and listen to the audio comentary tracks on the all the other Hammer films I have watched.
This time we are getting into what would be fertile ground for Hammer, beautiful young women killing other beautiful young women.
Countess Dracula (1970/1971)
This one is a bit mis-titled, and a bit of different one for Hammer. It is the story of Countess Elizabeth Bathory, but the twist is here the blood she drains and bathes actually does make her young again in the form of Scream Queen Ingrid Pitt.
The story is not a bad one, but not memorable. Bathory kills girls, dupes dumb men into being her pawns, finally gets caught in the end. We are missing some of the characters from Bathory's history, but that is fine really.
The one ups the blood and gore (too be expected) and the sex and nudity (also to be expected).
It is not quite as good as Daughters of Darkness that came out a year later. But it has more of supernatural feel to it and more of a Hammer feel to it if that makes any sense. Ingrid Pitt also stared as another famous vampire, Carmilla, in the Vampire Lovers. Female vampires became very lucrative for Hammer in the end, but not enough to save them it seems.
I had forgotten I had seen this one till I got into it. So I watched it with the audio comentary on instead. Very interesting insights to Hamer in the 70's to be sure. Makes me want to go back and listen to the audio comentary tracks on the all the other Hammer films I have watched.
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
15 Games that Inspired Me
Doing that blog-o-sphere thing again. I am listing the 15 games that had the most influence on me a player, game master and a game designer.
- AD&D 1st Ed. (credit where credit is due)
- Moldvay Basic D&D (toss up which one influenced me more, this of AD&D)
- C. J. Carella's WitchCraft (THE modern horror game)
- Ghosts of Albion (fairly obvious I think)
- D&D 3.0/d20 (a revolution in game design and publishing. Gave birth to the entire OSR)
- Chill (showed me there was more to RPGS than just killing monsters in dungeons)
- Traveller (opened up new worlds to me)
- Star Frontiers (the Sci-Fi game I played the longest)
- D&D 4 (sacred cows make for tasty burgers)
- Vampire the Masquerade (sometimes you get to be the monster)
- Call of Cthulhu (despite playing it in the 80's it was not till the 90's that I figured out how good it is)
- Mutants and Masterminds (showed more than any other game that the OGL was working)
- Shadowrun
- Paranoia (Role-playing should be about fun too)
- The OSR (I am lumping them all together since they inspired me to go back and look at the games I played ina new light)
Monday, October 18, 2010
Pakistan Flood Relief
Long time readers might recall the Haiti Flood Relief done by OneBookShelf Inc (Drivethru RPG and RPGNow). Well they are doing it again for the recent flood in Pakistan.
http://rpg.drivethrustuff.com/product_info.php?products_id=84741&affiliate_id=10748
So for a $25 donation you get over $700.00 worth of products.
It is worth checking out and for a good cause.
There are at least four books I saw right away I wanted and that would have cost me 45+ bucks right there. I am also certain there are more.
Hell, it has Starblazer Adventures included and that is $50 right there.
http://rpg.drivethrustuff.com/product_info.php?products_id=84741&affiliate_id=10748
So for a $25 donation you get over $700.00 worth of products.
It is worth checking out and for a good cause.
There are at least four books I saw right away I wanted and that would have cost me 45+ bucks right there. I am also certain there are more.
Hell, it has Starblazer Adventures included and that is $50 right there.
The Essentials Druid
The new Druid build for Essentials made it's preview today.
You can read about it here, http://www.wizards.com/DnD/Article.aspx?x=dnd/4ex/20101018.
On first glance I like the changes. There is no wild shape ability in the first 10 levels that I can see and focus is more on their animal companion.
Points of Light is also talking about them, http://daegames.blogspot.com/2010/10/essentials-druid.html.
I had expressed my displeasure with how 4e had done Druids before (here and here). So far this new one looks better than what PHB2 gave me.
Will have to wait and see.
You can read about it here, http://www.wizards.com/DnD/Article.aspx?x=dnd/4ex/20101018.
On first glance I like the changes. There is no wild shape ability in the first 10 levels that I can see and focus is more on their animal companion.
Points of Light is also talking about them, http://daegames.blogspot.com/2010/10/essentials-druid.html.
I had expressed my displeasure with how 4e had done Druids before (here and here). So far this new one looks better than what PHB2 gave me.
Will have to wait and see.
October Movie Reviews: To the Devil a Daughter
Back to the 70's with one of the last Hammer Films produced till the present day.
To the Devil a Daughter (1976)
This one has an all star cast, which in a horror flick usually means bad news.
Richard Widmark, Christopher Lee, Honor Blackman, Denholm Elliott and introducing a young Nastassja Kinski. Really it should not get much better than this.
I mentioned this one in the past. It was less of the Gothic horror tradition and more into the supernatural horror. It was the time in the 70's, movies like The Exorcist and Rosemary's Baby were big hits. The Devil had never been more popular.
The story involves an excommunicated priest (Lee) and an occult investigator (Widmark). Lee is secretly a worshiper of Astaroth and hopes to use a young nun (Kinski) as the vessel of his lord.
The script is actually rather well researched and certainly is a better portrayal of what real occult practices were like. Widmark even repeats something I have repeated myself many times about how most "satanists" out there are really just perverts looking for some kinky sex. It it the other ones you have to worry about. Lee is great in this role, as usual. Widmark seems bored and Blackman utterly underused here. There are some places in the script that left me scratching my head about why one thing or another was done. But all in all it was a fun, if not all that great, movie.
Of course the movie is rather infamous for it scenes of full-frontal nudity from a then 15 year old Nastassja Kinski. The DVD version I have has those scenes intact as well as the Satanic orgy often cut from most American versions of the movie. They are pretty risqué for our time, so imagine what they were like in 76.
What I liked best about this DVD though were the interviews. Christopher is always great to watch in interviews. He reads part of the original book that this was based on and left me with wanting to hear him read all of it.
I guess in the end I just wanted this to be more than it was.
To the Devil a Daughter (1976)
This one has an all star cast, which in a horror flick usually means bad news.
Richard Widmark, Christopher Lee, Honor Blackman, Denholm Elliott and introducing a young Nastassja Kinski. Really it should not get much better than this.
I mentioned this one in the past. It was less of the Gothic horror tradition and more into the supernatural horror. It was the time in the 70's, movies like The Exorcist and Rosemary's Baby were big hits. The Devil had never been more popular.
The story involves an excommunicated priest (Lee) and an occult investigator (Widmark). Lee is secretly a worshiper of Astaroth and hopes to use a young nun (Kinski) as the vessel of his lord.
The script is actually rather well researched and certainly is a better portrayal of what real occult practices were like. Widmark even repeats something I have repeated myself many times about how most "satanists" out there are really just perverts looking for some kinky sex. It it the other ones you have to worry about. Lee is great in this role, as usual. Widmark seems bored and Blackman utterly underused here. There are some places in the script that left me scratching my head about why one thing or another was done. But all in all it was a fun, if not all that great, movie.
Of course the movie is rather infamous for it scenes of full-frontal nudity from a then 15 year old Nastassja Kinski. The DVD version I have has those scenes intact as well as the Satanic orgy often cut from most American versions of the movie. They are pretty risqué for our time, so imagine what they were like in 76.
What I liked best about this DVD though were the interviews. Christopher is always great to watch in interviews. He reads part of the original book that this was based on and left me with wanting to hear him read all of it.
I guess in the end I just wanted this to be more than it was.
Saturday, October 16, 2010
October Movie Reviews: The Lestat Movies
Double Feature weekend!
I watched, for the first time "Queen of the Damned" and rewatched after a long time "Interview with a Vampire". Both based on the first three books of Anne Rice's Vampire series.
I watched them in the same order I originally read the books way back when. I read "The Vampire Lestat" first then "Interview with a Vampire" next. It gave me a very different point of view of Lestat than others reading the same books at the time.
Let's be 100% honest here. If it was not for Anne Rice we would not have had "Vampire the Masquerade" and certainly she gave birth to the latest modern trend in vampires. More so that "Sookie Stackhouse", "Buffy" and even "Twilight". While Rice's vampires are appealing they are also monsters. Sometimes they struggle with that. So we have her to thank (or blame) for the Agnsty Emo Vampire in whole or in part.
Queen of the Damned (2002)
This film combines and shortens the tale found in the books "The Vampire Lestat" and "Queen of the Damned". Lestat (Stuart Townsend this time) comes back after his self imposed exile/sleep to be a rock star (who sounds an awful lot like Korn). Hey in the books it worked. It comes off a bit rushed in the movie though. His songs, especially about the really old vampires wakes Akasha, Queen of the Vampires (played by the late Aaliyah). Wackieness ensues. Vampires that don't want to be outted try to kill Lestat, Akasha wants to keep him alive. Marius shows up. The ancient vampires fight to stop Akasha.
To start out with, this is not an exact sequel to "IwaV", more of a separate interpretation of the same universe. That being said lets look at the good and the bad.
Good. The vampires here are very cool. Their powers have a nice affect on screen and they are still bloodthirsty killers. The movie itself is better than I had been lead to believe all these years, but if one compares it to the book then it fails. Lestat does not come off as a spoiled brat in this one as he did in "IwaV" and the books. More like a vampire that kinda wishes he was still human. Which of course was NOT Lestat in the books.
Bad. The script is kind of a mess. They are trying ram two very dense books into a movie footprint and don't do so well. Granted, Rice's later books needed pruning, but that is the fine skill of an editor, this was the work of a guy with a chainsaw. Characters have disappeared, entire plots lost and the resolution does not have the same impact in the film as it does in the books.
In the end I enjoyed the movie, but only as a vampire flick, not as something that I know belongs in a larger universe.
Interview with a Vampire (1994)
Everyone had such high hopes for this one. On the tail of Bram Stoker's Dracula this was supposed to open up a new era of vampire films. Maybe it did. But the movie was a disappointment.
Based on the book of the same name, this one has an all star cast. I mean really. Brad Pitt as Louis, Tom Cruise as Lestat, Kristen Dunst as Claudia (long before she would kiss Spider-Man), Christian Slater (filling in for the recently late River Phoenix) as Daniel and Antonio Bandaras as Arman. I mean wow. Look at that.
Visually the movie is very appealing. Pretty (and petty) vampires feeding on humans while Louis frets and mourns his lost humanity. Yeah agnsty emo vamps.
Tom Cruise was great as Lestat, but in some ways not as good as Townsend. Now, I'll be honest, I don't like Tom Cruise I think he is a nut-job with a lot of issues and belongs to a wacky cult. But so do a lot of people. But he certainly made me believe he was Lestat here. I am going to come back to why in a bit. Now Brad Pitt I do like, after his bit in "12 Monkeys" and "True Romance" he convinced me he was not some pretty boy actor. Watching him "Snatch" confirmed that. But here he is the pretty boy vampire and frankly the best line in the movie was Lestat's "Oh shut up Louis."
I really liked this movie when it came out, but now almost 10 years later I seen the cracks in the veneerer, the flaws.
Basically I have the EXACT same issue I have with the books. I can't stand Lestat in "Interview" (book or movie) and I liked him in the Vampire Lestat and Queen of the Damned.
Anne Rice's vampires are creatures of their times. Not meaning when they were turned, but when the books and movies were made. Since then the entire sub-genre of Paranormal Romance and Urban Fantasy has grown up in the soil she tilled. Vampires are no longer monsters, they are potential date/S.O. material. To be fair, Rice's vampires are monsters. They just whine about being monsters.
I am glad though I got to watch them both back to back like this.
I watched, for the first time "Queen of the Damned" and rewatched after a long time "Interview with a Vampire". Both based on the first three books of Anne Rice's Vampire series.
I watched them in the same order I originally read the books way back when. I read "The Vampire Lestat" first then "Interview with a Vampire" next. It gave me a very different point of view of Lestat than others reading the same books at the time.
Let's be 100% honest here. If it was not for Anne Rice we would not have had "Vampire the Masquerade" and certainly she gave birth to the latest modern trend in vampires. More so that "Sookie Stackhouse", "Buffy" and even "Twilight". While Rice's vampires are appealing they are also monsters. Sometimes they struggle with that. So we have her to thank (or blame) for the Agnsty Emo Vampire in whole or in part.
Queen of the Damned (2002)
This film combines and shortens the tale found in the books "The Vampire Lestat" and "Queen of the Damned". Lestat (Stuart Townsend this time) comes back after his self imposed exile/sleep to be a rock star (who sounds an awful lot like Korn). Hey in the books it worked. It comes off a bit rushed in the movie though. His songs, especially about the really old vampires wakes Akasha, Queen of the Vampires (played by the late Aaliyah). Wackieness ensues. Vampires that don't want to be outted try to kill Lestat, Akasha wants to keep him alive. Marius shows up. The ancient vampires fight to stop Akasha.
To start out with, this is not an exact sequel to "IwaV", more of a separate interpretation of the same universe. That being said lets look at the good and the bad.
Good. The vampires here are very cool. Their powers have a nice affect on screen and they are still bloodthirsty killers. The movie itself is better than I had been lead to believe all these years, but if one compares it to the book then it fails. Lestat does not come off as a spoiled brat in this one as he did in "IwaV" and the books. More like a vampire that kinda wishes he was still human. Which of course was NOT Lestat in the books.
Bad. The script is kind of a mess. They are trying ram two very dense books into a movie footprint and don't do so well. Granted, Rice's later books needed pruning, but that is the fine skill of an editor, this was the work of a guy with a chainsaw. Characters have disappeared, entire plots lost and the resolution does not have the same impact in the film as it does in the books.
In the end I enjoyed the movie, but only as a vampire flick, not as something that I know belongs in a larger universe.
Interview with a Vampire (1994)
Everyone had such high hopes for this one. On the tail of Bram Stoker's Dracula this was supposed to open up a new era of vampire films. Maybe it did. But the movie was a disappointment.
Based on the book of the same name, this one has an all star cast. I mean really. Brad Pitt as Louis, Tom Cruise as Lestat, Kristen Dunst as Claudia (long before she would kiss Spider-Man), Christian Slater (filling in for the recently late River Phoenix) as Daniel and Antonio Bandaras as Arman. I mean wow. Look at that.
Visually the movie is very appealing. Pretty (and petty) vampires feeding on humans while Louis frets and mourns his lost humanity. Yeah agnsty emo vamps.
Tom Cruise was great as Lestat, but in some ways not as good as Townsend. Now, I'll be honest, I don't like Tom Cruise I think he is a nut-job with a lot of issues and belongs to a wacky cult. But so do a lot of people. But he certainly made me believe he was Lestat here. I am going to come back to why in a bit. Now Brad Pitt I do like, after his bit in "12 Monkeys" and "True Romance" he convinced me he was not some pretty boy actor. Watching him "Snatch" confirmed that. But here he is the pretty boy vampire and frankly the best line in the movie was Lestat's "Oh shut up Louis."
I really liked this movie when it came out, but now almost 10 years later I seen the cracks in the veneerer, the flaws.
Basically I have the EXACT same issue I have with the books. I can't stand Lestat in "Interview" (book or movie) and I liked him in the Vampire Lestat and Queen of the Damned.
Anne Rice's vampires are creatures of their times. Not meaning when they were turned, but when the books and movies were made. Since then the entire sub-genre of Paranormal Romance and Urban Fantasy has grown up in the soil she tilled. Vampires are no longer monsters, they are potential date/S.O. material. To be fair, Rice's vampires are monsters. They just whine about being monsters.
I am glad though I got to watch them both back to back like this.
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