.Damned Amusing

Anne Rice's cheesy vampire queen doesn't suck

Those possessing a vampire’s keen senses may see through the goth grunge of The Queen of the Damned to a deeper ideological conflict lurking beneath. On one side there’s novelist Anne Rice, sweepingly sensuous and profoundly humorless, who welcomed the cannibalization of her second and third bloodsucker books to create this distant cinematic sequel to Interview with the Vampire. Opposing, we have Mort Drucker and Dick DeBartolo of Mad magazine fame, not technically on the payroll here, but epitomizing the spot-on caricatures and punch lines inadvertently summoned by this movie’s brooding melodrama. For every gasp there’s always a potential giggle, but since the movie arrives and succeeds as entertaining B-movie fare, we may as well appreciate all of its howls, beastly or unintentional.

It was a unique surprise in 1994 when director Neil Jordan successfully transformed Brad Pitt and Tom Cruise into naive Louis and ravenous Lestat respectively, Interview‘s primary vampires and gossamer-veiled gay icons. Now the surprises are manifold, including perilous narrative abridgment (Rice’s spellbinding The Vampire Lestat is reduced to brief flashbacks within her cheesier third installment), the deletion of Louis, and the ambitious but inadequate Stuart Townsend replacing Cruise as Lestat. In only its sophomore outing, here’s yet another studio horror franchise mucking up its storyline with glitches casual fans could correct in their sleep. But taken as a stylish and energetic one-shot, The Queen of the Damned cannot be said to suck.

We catch up with Lestat in roughly present-day New Orleans, where the flamboyant, immortal fiend is awakened from the sleep of the bored by the noisy music of radical new “gods” who play and sing quite loudly when bits of metal are shoved through their tender areas. “I would become one of them,” he coos, immediately killing a Rastafarian and prompting us to wonder if becoming “one of them” means signing up with the Klan. Fortunately (sort of) he instead joins forces with a band that resembles No Doubt beset by PMS, and, announcing his vampirism to the world, he becomes a global superstar. This doesn’t sit well with other vampires, who’d rather not be hunted to extinction by mortals enlightened by the blabbermouth Lestat. Trouble brews.

Considering the short span they’re allotted to retool Rice’s rambling prose, screenwriters Scott Abbott and Michael Petroni squeeze in a lot of detail. With the help of his valet, Roger (Tiriel Mora), Lestat munches slutty groupies in England, a practice that summons intentional laughter later in LA as he prepares for his confrontational desert concert. En route, we meet Jesse (Marguerite Moreau of, heaven help us, the Mighty Ducks trilogy), a studious member of Rice’s covert supernatural surveillance group, the Talamasca. Using Lestat’s lyrics to track him through a Eurotrash vampire coven in London, Jesse reveals a vested interest in vampires, which is reasonable since she was raised by a family of them, including the benign matriarch Maharet (Lena Olin). Her Talamascan cohort David (Paul McGann) tries to caution her in her quest, but he also opens up the tale of the vampire Marius (Vincent Perez, cheese incarnate), spilling moonlight on both Lestat’s vampiric origin (the aforementioned flashbacks) and some of his destiny.

At the core of these matters we have the vampire monarch, Akasha (the late Aaliyah, way too cute to be evil). As Rice’s legend has it, Akasha and her man Enkil (Peter Olsen) are the eldest of vampires, harking back to ancient Egypt, and must be kept safe to prevent their bloodline from dying out. This would be fine for all eternity, except that Enkil has lost his appetite — impotence, vampire style — while Akasha has gotten all hot and bothered by Lestat and his crazy jams. As Akasha reanimates herself (and disintegrates others), the big, dumb, loud concert looms for all concerned. Hint to rock fans: Vampire assassins don’t mosh. Hint to vampire assassins: Forget Lestat; kill the band!

As with any adaptation of a beloved book, director Michael Rymer (Perfume) can’t please everyone, so he wings it, cloaking clinkers in sleek design. His native Melbourne stands in for Southern California, the UK, and the Mediterranean, just as Townsend and Aaliyah stand in for serious actors. It’s all of a piece — low art with high hopes. The vampire vehicle Blade succeeded by compensating for its lousy direction with the charisma of Wesley Snipes, and Queen‘s unique chemistry of sound helming and silly performances also works. It’s just unfortunate that these adaptations didn’t come out in the ’80s, when they would have seemed revolutionary.

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