Anne Rice interview with the vampire is an eternal story of eternal love, undying anguish, and grief-frozen. It is also the story of Lestat de Lioncourt, the worst person in history and an eternal object of fascination and adoration.
It’s no exaggeration to say that Lestat is the worst person ever. He intimidates the characters as much as they charm them. Especially to the characters he declares his love for.In fact, you’re probably worse off as someone who loves Lestat more than you hate: AMC’s interview, Lestat is obsessed with his love Louis, stalking him, emotionally manipulating him, and murdering anyone who approaches him. That is before Lestat turned him into a vampire.
The AMC adaptation of Rice’s classic novel resulted in some fundamental changes to Rice’s text. Instead of telling the story of a plantation between plantation owners Louis de Pointe-du-Lac and Lestat de Lioncourt in the 1800s, we’re moving forward in time to the early 1900s. Instead of being a plantation owner, Louis is a little-accepted black man who lives in New Orleans as a brothel owner, and has already balanced his life between two worlds before meeting Lestat. For the most part, fans of the series have accepted these changes.In particular, fans are drawn to Sam Reed’s portrayal of Lestat. Lestat plays a character with a recognizable, infuriating charm and a barely restrained capacity for violence.
Fandom does not excuse or rationalize this behavior. To love Lestat is to know he will let you down.Recently, the fandom of interview with the vampire TV program At a crossroads over Lestat’s behavior in the seriesCan you love a character who lies like he’s breathing, doesn’t care if he hurts people, and often intentionally hurts those he cares about? , the answer to that question was yes.
In the novel, which is told from Lestat’s point of view after the first book, he does things so badly that it feels like a joke to describe them out of context. Once inside, it immediately sexually assaults women. As a young vampire, he changes her mother and makes up with her.throughout interview, as said from Louis’ point of view, he does things specifically to anger Louis. Louis tackled Lestat in the mud of the Louisiana swamps, and the moment the victim won the duel and Louis loosened his grip, Lestat wriggled free and the poor man fell. kill humans His pettyness and theatricality are terrifyingly delightful. When Lestat’s father dies, Louis asks Lestat not to play the piano, so Lestat resorts to beating pots and pans.
Lestat is the kind of character that people go crazy for.Anne Rice clearly did, and she was the one who made him up. Brolbo on my show —fictitious characters who can endlessly speak as if they were real people, even if they are fake and have committed war crimes in fiction.
Lestat isn’t the only or most important moral-deficient Brolbo, but he could be the blueprint for many other Brolbos.
fan of House of the Dragon We’ve also worked on the show’s character growing into the evil Brolbo.Aymond Targaryen became a recognized heartthrob among some after losing his one eye and growing his hair out House of the Dragon It’s a fact that fans can’t get enough of it, but it’s more evil and crazy than it looks. Vriska, from the webcomic home stackshe felt designed to rage in the lab. The active, vocal fandom debates her actions for months at a time. even, Jessica Jones Nevertheless, there was a fandom who liked him because of his wickedness. It also has the ability to commit acts of violence to do so. The appeal of these characters is that even after seeing their abilities, you still want to have them.
In the film adaptation of the previous work, when Lestat finally appears in the present age, interview with the vampire, he whines Louie loudly. He can’t help but laugh. After two hours at Lewis he might want to change the pace. It feels like a trick — you have to admit he’s making a point, even after Lestat saw everything he let Louis through. For the sake of a polite society, Lestat isn’t just saying what we’re all dying to say. As fans of Rice’s novels know, Lestat’s appeal is that he, like many of us, has scarred the world in the same mundane way, and accordingly, he will spend the rest of his time decided to take revenge on everything, everywhere, every second of . Lestat is so wrapped up in his own pain — his wounds are festering with selfishness — which gives him a kind of clarity that can be mistaken for empathy. I don’t like or trust people, but I do understand them, or at least understand how they act to give him what he wants. He is the answer to the question. Don’t you just want to appease? ”
Not everyone has pain as deep as Lestat’s, but like Lestat, there are many people around the world who have been abused, abandoned, treated cruelly, and watched loved ones die. increase. If these experiences have given us great insight into human nature, it is a mercy. The ability is not a dark gift bestowed upon him by the sickness of the world.
Reid’s performance as AMC’s Lestat interview It captures both his dangerous lack of restraint and basic immaturity.so often when i’m watching interview I am amazed at the expressiveness of Sam Reed’s face. His eyes beg for love while killing people and insulting his chosen family. The emotional scars when Louis and Lestat fight each other show on his face through anger as well as grief. , is a kid who lashes out at people. After Luis finds out about Lestat’s cheating, they agree to an open relationship. Lewis has the audacity to actually connect with someone. Lestat confronts Louis about his stupidity. Lestat is dead wrong, but “I could hear your heart dancing!” This hurt is entirely self-inflicted, but the pain is real.
in this recent interview They are both two people frozen in a moment of grief, unable to change or move on due to their vampiric nature. It reminds me of how I behaved as a teenager. Full of anger at the world and taking that anger out on everyone I met. I don’t think I would be different from Lestat if I were trapped in that moment forever, like an insect in a drop of amber.I don’t think I would be different from Lestat.