Movie: The Series—INTERVIEW WITH THE VAMPIRE
by Kate Beach, Staff Writer
Movie: The Series is back again, but this time it's about everyone's favorite toxic and eternal vampire relationship: Lestat & Louis.
by Kate Beach, Staff Writer
Movie: The Series is back again, but this time it's about everyone's favorite toxic and eternal vampire relationship: Lestat & Louis.
by Rosalie Kicks, The Old Sport, and Ryan Silberstein, The Red Herring
We wish Babylon loved movies as much as we do.
by “Doc” Hunter Bush, Staff Writer
Boy howdy did I have a good time with Bullet Train!
Directed by Neil Jordan
Written by Anne Rice (screenplay and novel)
Starring: Brad Pitt, Tom Cruise and Kirsten Dunst
Running Time: 2 hours and 3 minutes
MPAA Rating: R for sexual content and vampire violence/gore
by Jaime Davis, Ashley Jane Davis, Audrey Callerstrom, Emily Maesar and Ryan Smillie
The Tommy C. Appreciation Club, or TCAC, solemnly swears to watch and appreciate all theatrical performances by Tom Cruise then recap them, round-table style. In this edition, the Moviejawn crew embarks on a bonkers adventure with our pal Tommy in Interview with a Vampire: The Vampire Chronicles.
Read MoreWritten and Directed by Quentin Tarantino
Starring: Brad Pitt, Leonardo DiCaprio, Margot Robbie and a bunch of other Caucasians
Run time: 2 hours, 41 minutes (RIP Sally Menke)
Rating: Seriously? It is Tarantino, of corpse it is R
by Rosalie Kicks, Old Sport
“It’s official old buddy, I’m a has been.” - Rick Dalton
Hollywood has charmed the best of us. With its shiny bright lights, the glitz and glamour sometimes it is hard to look away.
Read MoreDirected by Neil Jordan (1994)
by Sandy DeVito
"You followed me here, didn't you?"
"Yeah, I suppose I did. You seem interesting."
Alongside Tim Burton's drippingly gloomy Sleepy Hollow, Interview with the Vampire is, in my opinion, the greatest example of gothic filmmaking from the last thirty years. This is textbook gothica, but in the least boring way imaginable - everything in this movie lends it an unforgettable miasma of dark desire and aching melancholy, that precision of emotional tone that is so essential to this subgenre. Like great gothic films that precede it (Black Sunday, Dragonwyck, Nosferatu), it has hints of deep horror but is far more concerned with the foreboding dread of the eternal questions of existence, most readily, the curse of those who will live forever with their demons.
Read MoreWelcome to this week’s installment of Can’t Care, Moviejawn’s weekly roundup of all the entertainment news we just can’t care about.
Jaime Davis, The Fixer
Brad and Angelina...Bangelina...Brange...Brangelina...Jolie-Pitt...J-Pitt...Mr. & Mrs. Smith...blah blah blabbity blah...
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