Interview With The Vampire recap: “It’s a story of love, not of butchery”

“The vampires out there are vicious,” so Lestat had told Claudia when she returned from years away and had voiced her intention to cross the Atlantic to pursue monsters like her from the old world. Those words had set up a violent, heartbreaking fight between Lestat and his lover Louis. And with “I Could Not Prevent It,” they now echo like the presaging warning they were intended as. For here, as these three reunite once more (on stage, no less—how apt!) we see just how vicious those vampires are. So vicious, in fact, they prove to be Claudia’s own undoing.

"Interview With A Vampire" stars Sam Reid and Jacob Anderson talk Anne Rice - and Pharrell
Share
Subtitles
  • Off
  • English
view video

This Paris-set season has long been leading up to this moment: the one when Claudia’s journals come to a screeching halt. When her story ends in a blaze—not of glory, alas, but of righteous anger. But we’ll get to that in a moment.

Last we knew, Louis, Claudia, and Madeleine had been abducted, sold out as they were by Armand to the vampire coven who’d been busy preparing a stage show for the ages. Louis recalls little of the abduction, only the cruelty inflicted on the three, who were badly injured before being trotted out for an admiring audience eager to see the Theater des Vampires’ latest production, a The Crucible for the Parisian crowd eager to be involved in a presumably fictional trial. And what a trial! Santiago & Co. spared no effort (or expense, it looks like) when designing the most theatrical way to torture these three vampires. There are wigs! There are costumes! There’s even the most elaborate animated projections they’ve produced yet!

The setup is simple: Bloody and beaten, with their cut ankles keeping them from moving too much and their brains mush through the whims of the entire coven’s telepathic powers, Madeleine, Claudia, and Louis are centerstage as they’re tried for the murder (well, attempted murder) of one Lestat de Lioncourt. In a powder wig and robes to match, Santiago oversees the proceedings with a deliciously devilish attitude. He’s in his element playing ringleader to this farce of a scripted trial.

And he is most proud of the two pieces of evidence that damn Claudia and Louis (less so Madeleine): the young-appearing vampire’s journals and, of course, the testimony of Lestat himself who appears onstage soon after Louis himself senses him in the building.

Lestat’s return to the stage is a delight. This is clearly where he belongs, basking in the adoration of an audience who cannot help but be beguiled by the striking blond vampire. No matter that he often goes off book and rankles Santiago’s stern proceedings. The audience loves him, and would follow him wherever he went.

The journey he takes them on is one those of us at home watching Interview With The Vampire

With animated sequences helping tell his side of the story, Lestat’s scripted tale feels like a rewriting of what’s happened—or what we’ve been told has happened. For instance, onstage Lestat offers up a tale about how it was Louis who first pursued him, who seduced him, who made him open his heart (and fangs) after having lost his first love (the reason he moved to New Orleans in the first place). He even recasts his own words (“Come to me!”) as words said by Louis.

The more Lestat warps their love story, with Louis unable to set the record straight, his thoughts and lips sealed and garbled by the coven around him, the more we’re encouraged to wonder how biased what we’ve seen so far has been. Especially when, in the middle of telling his teary version of how Claudia was first made, Lestat gets Louis to (in the present) suggest to Daniel that he go with that retelling over his own and Claudia’s. Decades have helped him see that there may be some truth in how Lestat presented that pivotal moment between them and the many fights that ensued.

We’ve known Lestat to be a vengeful, violent vampire. Here, though, he casts himself in the role of the seduced, of the betrayed, of the scorned. Of the victim, really. Which is what he is in this mock trial.

Rebecca Riisness as Guigonette and Sigismund Haggkvist as Male Guigonette
Photo: Larry Horricks/AMC

But even in that role he finds he cannot fully commit to that script. At times he goes off book and all but threatens to derail the play, much to Santiago’s chagrin. He finds time to be more empathetic toward Louis and to shoulder some of the blame for their toxic relationship and how it all went down. He wanted Louis to love him, he says, but Louis couldn’t offer him that. That’s what eventually led to the violence: “I couldn’t force him to love me so I broke him,” he confesses, as he recounts how he flew Louis up into the sky and let him fall several kilometers down below.

Daniel is as suspicious as we are—especially with regards to what Armand was doing through all of this. He had his own box to watch it all—a punishment, he says, especially since he could do little to derail the proceedings. Little but not nothing.

By the time Lestat snaps out of his self-pitying monologues and takes up the banner of star witness (in all senses of the word), Santiago asks the audience to weigh on the punishments for all three vampires assembled:

Madeleine is first up. She’s offered lenience if she opts to rebuke Claudia and join the coven. She refuses. “Death!” the audience intones.

Claudia is next. She goes full-blown fury, vowing that if there is an afterlife she’ll come back to avenge herself. (If there isn’t, she’ll still find a way to come back.) “Death!” the audience repeats.

Louis, broken by having to relive his story with Lestat seems resigned to his fate. Only this time the audience yells “Banishment!” It’s Armand’s doing: He used up his remaining energy to coerce the audience into sparing his lover, a last bit of atonement that doesn’t sit right with Santiago.

“To Belgium!” that vamping vampire tells the audience. But we all know better. As it turns out, Louis is transported downstairs and put in a coffin that’s then filled out with rocks.

That leaves just Claudia and Madeleine onstage, who embrace one another as rays of sunshine designed to hit exactly where they’re at slowly make them crumble into dusted pieces. And we end with arguably one of the most evocative images the episode offered: a pile of dusted clothes set against an emptying audience leaving soon after they cheered on at this double conviction, the projector light lending the shot an eerie theatricality.

We have one more episode to go. With Claudia gone and Louis locked away in a box, it looks like this is Armand’s story to finish telling. I, for one, can’t wait to see how this turns out.

  • “It’s a story of love, not of butchery,” Lestat says while going off book and really, he could be offering up a tagline for Interview With The Vampire writ-large, no?
  • Lestat had all the best lines this episode. Him calling New Orleans “the humidified double of Paris” was just divine.
  • Actually, the most poetic lines came courtesy of Claudia: “I was just a roof shingle that flew off of your house” (when talking about her place in Louis and Lestat’s relationship) and “It’s not a trial. It a stoning” (which brought the theater to a standstill) are forceful examples of how mature she was even in her final moments.
  • I know there’s a degree of suspension of disbelief when watching, well, a television show about vampires but I have to admit the polished animated projections in Santiago’s trial play were almost distracting. That’s how great and inventive they were—both for 1940s Paris and for 2024 American TV.
  • Lestat shaming a member of the audience when they yelled out “fag!” (by humiliating them, revealing them to have been a coward during the war) had big Patti LuPone energy, and for that I am very thankful.


Post a Comment

Previous Post Next Post

Contact Form