Viewing posts filed under #iwtv
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    Gay, southern, violently depressed, catholic, divorced twice, potentially schizophrenic, has complex feelings about his identity, terrible taste in men… I fear no protagonist has done it quite like him.

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    I think that moment when Louis kills him he accepts that it needs to happen. He could have fought more, but he doesn't. I think he probably does feel like it's his actual death in that moment, but I think it feels like he deserved it. — Sam Reid

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    But as the script started to come in, I thought the only way this level of vitriol that he has works is if he's in love with Armand. There is this extraordinary psychological term called reaction formation, which is what Iago has for Othello. It's a defense mechanism whereby your impulses are so unacceptable to your ego that they're replaced by this opposite, exaggerated behavior.

    Santiago finds Louis incredibly attractive. Because Armand killed Santiago's maker — who I think he was in love with too — and also finds Louis attractive, the whole thing must be destroyed. It gave such a drive to his hatred. It was just something ruminating in myself that drove him forward in a very aggressive, mad, extreme, way. Ben Daniels [X]

  • So casual, the bit about Armand killing Santiago's maker, who he was also in love with. Santiago could have been someone else's problem, but no, you just had to go around putting people in boxes!

  • Isn't Lestat's fiddler Nicholas in one of Armand's boxes as well?

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