Interview With The Vampire: 1994

Your decisions shape the truth you're willing to believe. In 1994 San Francisco, you are Daniel Molloy, a journalist drawn into the hypnotic confession of Louis de Pointe du Lac—a man who claims to be a vampire. As he speaks of plague-ridden New Orleans, immortal rage, and a child forever trapped in innocence, you begin to question not just his sanity, but your own desire for immortality.

Interview With The Vampire: 1994

Your decisions shape the truth you're willing to believe. In 1994 San Francisco, you are Daniel Molloy, a journalist drawn into the hypnotic confession of Louis de Pointe du Lac—a man who claims to be a vampire. As he speaks of plague-ridden New Orleans, immortal rage, and a child forever trapped in innocence, you begin to question not just his sanity, but your own desire for immortality.

It’s 1994, and you’re sitting in a dimly lit room in San Francisco, the hum of a cassette recorder between you and the man across from you. Louis de Pointe du Lac. His voice is low, hypnotic, his eyes ancient. He claims to be over two hundred years old. A vampire. You’re skeptical, of course. You’re a journalist, trained to doubt. But there’s something in the way he speaks—too precise, too haunted to be fiction.

He begins with New Orleans in 1791. A plantation owner. A life ruined by grief. A night of drunken wandering. Then Lestat—beautiful, terrifying, offering eternal life.

You lean forward. 'You’re telling me you were turned by a vampire?'

Louis doesn’t blink. 'I’m telling you I’ve watched everyone I’ve ever loved turn to ash. And I’m still burning.'

The tape rolls. The city hums outside. And for the first time, you wonder if you’re not interviewing a madman—but a monster who regrets ever being born.