Monday, June 1, 2026

HAPPY DINOSAUR DAY 2026 (6/1)

 

LESTAT: ADVENT OF AN ADAPTATION

Anne Rice's The Vampire Chronicles: The Vampire Lestat has at long last gained an official, film adaptation, as a miniseries within the span of Interview with the Vampire: Season 3 (and perhaps such will bleed into a possible Season 4). 

For the immediate future, actor Sam Reid's Lestat de Lioncourt will make a prime impression prancing about on stage. That works for me. In Rice's sequel, Lestat is a top-tier rock star, which once made me think that David Bowie, Billy Idol or Sting would have been ideal for such casting. (Maybe somewhere in the realms of alternate reality, they've each filled that bill.)  

Be that as it may, The Vampire Lestat was always bloody ripe for the big screen, but for whatever misguided reason, the novel was bypassed for Michael Rymer's Queen of the Damned, which was all well and good, as it held occasional nods to the second novel, except that Lestat would have made an obvious, sure-fire hit (with or without Tom Cruise reprising his role from Neil Jordan's 1994 hit); so why, oh, why was the opportunity missed?

Do the hows and whys matter anymore? It's a new day, a new age, and the alterations that flavored AMC's Interview redux ensure that the Lestat adaptation won't adhere to the book. Well, it's got to do so to some degree, but with AMC's Interview dismissing Louis de Point du Lac's consistent, guilt-ridden angst, the Rice brand (at least for this television revision) is derailed. This Lestat can't (and won't) be her Lestat

The Interview series has given me much to ruminate. Some of it I've liked; some of it has unhinged me. Either way, I was always there to view and analyze the tweaked narrative. Why would Season 3 be any different? Then again, series these days do tend to surprise. In other words, one never knows until one gives the content a try. 

The Vampire Lestat springs from its interpretive casket June 7. 

WISE WORDS:

I SAW THE MUMMY: BRIDE OF THE DEAD

Mockbuster maestro The Asulum has dispatched its reply to Lee Cronin's The Mummy

The Mummy: Bride of the Dead (aka The Mummy or The Bride of the Dead) is written/directed by Maurice (Owning Mahowny) Chauvet and does, in fact, reflect Cronin's blend of Universal mythology meets The Exorcist, wrapped within an Evil Dead context, but against expectation, these evident inspirations are downplayed in the studio's cash-in offering. In this respect, it creates a haunted-mansion milieu, thanks to its baroque locale and titular, wandering spirit. 

The effective and nuanced John "NEVERDIE" Jacobs, who acts as producer and exudes a Clive Owen-ish aura for his portrayal, plays Robert Corwin, an Egyptologist living in Mexico City. His grandfather disinterred and sold ancient goods through shady measures, and through such, Corwin has inherited a blue amulet/talisman shaped in the form of a woman (an authentic artifact from the Middle Kingdom, 2100-1800 BC, according to the credits). The piece harbors the spirit of Ara, a pharaoh's concubine, portrayed by the exotic and eerie Aproorva Mittra. Corwin learns that Ara was slaughtered by Michael Gallagher's Arnold Vosloo-ish priest four-thousand years prior, but now itches for resurrection through a fresh body. 

That body belongs to his daughter, Isabel, played by Sheba Jade, who's also effective in her role, enacting convincing, transformational hints whenever Ara nudges her.  

Tech-billionaire Charlotte Grove, portrayed by the smooth-talking, Demi Moore-structured Lisa Zane, wishes to tap the amulet's power to retrieve her comatose husband (Kevin McCorkle) from the netherworld. Grove's zeal places Isabel in further peril, as well as her mother, Elizabeth, played by Sienna Goines. Corwin, meanwhile, forms a surreal, symbiotic link with the vengeful concubine. (Their interlocking scenes are juxtaposed with aesthetic care, which, in less capable hands, may have proven jarring as opposed to the dreamlike and poetic manner in which they maifiest.) 

The story moves with an air of quiet desperation, with many scenes staged in steely blues and wide stretches, due to photography director Andrew Parke, art director Cheri Moon and production designer Alyssa Katz. The combined ambiance bleeds into Cronenberg and Herzog territory, though for the most part, this Mummy marches in step with Mike Newell's The Awakening (one of several film adaptations based on Bram Stoker's The Jewel of the Seven Stars), in addition to John McTiernan's evocative, spirit-bound Nomads, though in Bride of the Dead's case, the story forecasts an apocalyptic reign overseen by evil gods (how Lovecraftian). 

Coproducer/editor Sean Musaeus' score adds much to the tale's exoticism, accentuating old-world mysticism, creaky, 1920s decadence and modern menace. The audio diversity emphasizes the sequences, which juggle the extremes with forlorn elegance as the fable slinks toward a weird, looping climax. 

Chauvet's movie is in no way a breakthrough. However, for a presumed knockoff, it stands as a quality entry in the mummy-curse genre. For horror fans, that makes it worth seeking, and I believe, at least among the mature, Monster Kid sect, its results should strike a nice, throwback chord. ð“€€

FOR THE FUN OF IT:

 

HALEY HEAVYMETAL'S BIRTHDAY BASH UPDATE

 

Per Haley (Neon Fear) HeavyMetal, the Porky's meets Evil Dead inspired Birthday Bash is nearing completion. One scene requires a reshoot, but that should be completed soon, with final touches on the film following.

To bolster the production's quality, Birthday Bash is a star-studded affair, headlined by Eric Roberts, Brinke Stevens and Ari Lehman (young Jason Voorhees from Friday the 13th 1980)! Not too shabby!

I appreciate Haley keeping backers abreast of the production's progression. Too often on such endeavors, funders receive nothing but silence after making their investments. However, in Haley's case, those involved always get the sincere scoop. 

I can't wait to experience Birthday Bash. I'll be sure to let Bizarrechats readers know when this ambitious labor of love is ready to view!

SOMETHING TO CONSIDER (WISE WORDS): MACKLER ON FORGIVENESS

 

Daniel Mackler, revered psychotherapist, writer, filmmaker and musician, hits the proverbial nail on the head with his take on forgiveness

😠

(or if anyone does, be annoyed, be angry, cut the chain)

😡

Forgiveness allows villains a path to extend their cruelty: a means to continue to hurt you and others time and again. 

For years, I allowed an indolent, condescending, contradictory, "woe is me," hateful, drama-queen lush from Upstate NY belittle me. By not pushing back (by shrugging off his insistent derision), I encouraged him to ramp up his disdain, which then gave him the idea to bully others. He did this to conceal his insecurities and flaws, of which there were many (chosen unemployment being on the top of the list). I should have struck back and/or cut ties as soon as the browbeating began. It was my duty to do so (the right thing to do), but still I played the conciliating (forgiving) fool. To this day, I regret my feeble forbearance. I told myself I was being kind, when in truth, I was encouraging unacceptable behavior. 

💥

View Mackler's video. To me, it brims of brilliance and logic. Perhaps you'll agree.