Transferring  Anne Rice's trend setting and intense novel "Interview With The  Vampire" to film must have been a daunting task. Trying to fit in all of  the social commentary, mythos, and agony of that book into 2 hours of  screen time that makes any sort of logical sense was an intense work out  for everyone involved I'm sure. Luckily, Anne Rice herself screen wrote  for it and under the direction of Neil Jordan with its stellar cast,  they pull it off damn near brilliantly. "Interview With The Vampire"  comes off as one of the best vampire films yet crafted. 
Louis  (Pitt) was done with his life. After losing some family in the late  1700s, he goes on a death wish. He is swayed to convert his life to that  of the undead by a rogue vampire Lestat (Cruise) who proceeds to teach  him the how to survive and continue 'living' as the undead. Louis fights  his new vampiric urges but Lestat refuses to let Louis go and tries his  best to keep his new found brother in death even to the point of  turning a young girl (Dunst) into a vampire 'daughter' to keep him  there. Soon the two creations of Lestat find themselves struggling  against their maker and what they are. Can they find a way to free  themselves from the bondage of being vampires or shall they go on in  world feeding off of the living?
With a great and well paced  script that Anne Rice must have had headaches over figuring out what to  cut and what to leave for the film, "Interview With The Vampire" flows  like an art house film bursting with both brutality and beauty in all of  its Gothic mysticism. Neil Jordan (whose previous Horror/symbolic  picture "The Company Of Wolves" was also stunning) tackles the Gothic  atmosphere and primitive beauty of the different ages and the struggles  of Rice's vampires in perfect form. He never lets up from brash moments  of violence to the subtlety of the language through the entire picture.  Its his blend of visual prowess and Rice's writing that truly spark some  chemistry in the film and make it the modern classic that it is. 
Of  course, having such a talented cast at the helm doesn't hurt either.  Pitt's heart heavy portable of our hero-esque Louis comes full circle  for the audience and Cruise's cold and calculated (yet deep and  sorrowful) take on Lestat could never be touched again - even by Cruise  himself as he stated later on. These two work brilliantly together and a  rather young but striking Dunst as Claudia would make the rest of her  rather already too long career look like hogwash compared to this role.  Not to mention a stellar supporting cast of Antonio Banderas, Christian  Slater, and Stephen Rea and this film has a cast that ably handles the  deep and roving characters with relative ease despite the heavy task of  doing so. They round out the stellar production and behind the scenes  film work nicely.
The film can be rather too subtle and artsy for  people looking for your average modern vampire flick, but if you happen  to keep an open mind, your thinking cap on at full capacity, and let  the characters sweep you into a whole other world then "Interview With  The Vampire" will likely hook you deep. It holds its own even against  Rice's novel (which might I add is one of the best novels I have ever  had the pleasure of reading) and creates a universally substantial film  that will easily find its way into the classics section quickly.
Written By Matt Reifschneider 
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