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- <text id=94TT1631>
- <title>
- Nov. 21, 1994: Cinema:Toothless
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 21, 1994 G.O.P. Stampede
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/CINEMA, Page 112
- Toothless
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Interview with the Vampire falls flat, despite Tom Cruise
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Corliss
- </p>
- <p> Why would Tom Cruise be playing Lestat, a gaunt, suave European
- vampire with a taste for young men? Because a big movie star
- can do whatever he wants. And why would Neil Jordan be directing
- Interview with the Vampire: The Vampire Chronicles? Because
- his signature films, Mona Lisa and The Crying Game, are gay
- fables with mass appeal. Once again he has a sympathetic fellow
- (here it's Brad Pitt as Louis, a New Orleans landowner in the
- 18th century) falling in with a charismatic homosexual (Cruise's
- Lestat). Louis tells his story to a young interviewer (Christian
- Slater) in a sort of Donahue with spooky flashbacks.
- </p>
- <p> So far, so promising. In Anne Rice's screenplay, which she adapted
- from her megaselling 1976 novel, Lestat and his crew are displaced
- aristocrats, glorious anachronisms. They are enslaved by bloodlust:
- every night a little death. They lean into the victims' necks
- and give them the hickey from hell, the infernal overbite--the kiss that bleeds. The nightly rampages of these putty-faced
- predators suggest an aids metaphor: voluptuous sexuality with
- fatal consequences. And after a couple of hundred years, the
- vampires get the edgy sourness of people married too long.
- </p>
- <p> It's a cute idea to have Cruise, the movies' all-American guy,
- gussied up like Pierre Clementi, protopunk of French art films.
- It's a bad idea to let Cruise vanish for almost an hour in the
- middle of his picture. But by then the film's central flaw has
- been exposed. A vampire story needs vampires, sure, but it also
- needs a human victim to lead the audience into the vortex and
- help them escape it. Otherwise, the fear factor evaporates,
- and you get this mishmash: an interview in a void, a vampire
- movie with underbite.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-