Peter Lowe’s inability to accept his monstrosity suffuses his performance with a dual nature - he is a man becoming a monster who is also conscious of leaving his humanity behind. The monstrousness of Count Orlok is performed as an undisputed fact of his life. Peter Lowe differs from Murnau’s monster in that he reflects on his own transformation. To see what the monster sees, one must, on some level, understand his struggle. Vampire’s Kiss explores how horror shifts when our perspective lies with the monster. Count Orlok is not characterized any further to the viewer than that which is terrifying. Murnau’s vampire creates an overbearing sense of dread within the film. Murnau’s film Nosferatu (1922), which plays on a television within Vampire’s Kiss, the vampire, Count Orlok, is repulsive in deed as well as flesh. There are hints in Vampire’s Kiss that reach out to the viewer to perhaps say, ‘This is a performance, you are watching a performance. The camera follows Peter out of his apartment and pauses on two mimes, completely alone on the street in the middle of the night, enacting a scene of domestic violence. These moments make the viewer consider ‘how does my perception of this film change if this scene were perfectly in keeping with the nature of this film?’ One such scene happens halfway through Vampire’s Kiss. Sometimes there are scenes that occur within a film that seem completely out of place. By casting off and refusing to comment on the former passion for the bat, the performing vampire abandons any feeling in the past to satisfy and enact his latest whim. Anyone hanging onto the threads of foreshadowing or plot events must leave these troubles aside and indulge as our vampire embraces the drama of each second. Peter responds by saying that he doesn’t even remember the encounter that, earlier in the film, seemed to hold such a strong grip on his psyche. She begs Peter to tell her more about the sexual attraction he felt toward a bat that flew into his apartment. Glaser, his psychiatrist, she indulges in the facts of Peter’s life like a fanatic. The film is interested in something beyond a basic vampire plot. This is not a horror movie it is an exercise in the limits of performance. Cage, like a geyser, performs to create a spectacle free of any and all subtlety. Vampire’s Kiss cultivates a viewer that is as insatiable and present-minded as Peter Lowe who, when even “a little drunk and horny,” goes scream-laughing off into the streets of New York at midnight. Peter Lowe and the film itself exist only to satisfy the cravings and exorcise the pains of each moment. With his character becoming a repulsive force to nearly everyone he encounters, Cage reaches the limits of all that is socially and physically unattractive.Ĭage’s performance is reactive exclusively to whatever whim moved him in the moment. He represents a man stretched to unknown extremes. Lowe, in his vampiric transformation, is made into an actor of transgression. Few of his films are as divisive as Vampire’s Kiss, in which he plays book publisher Peter Lowe, who believes he is turning into a vampire. No matter your opinion, his career is spoken of hyperbolically. One strength of Cage’s acting career is evidenced in the constant debate of whether he is funny, terrible, profound or insane. What purpose would there be for Nicolas Cage to eat a cockroach other than to induce a bodily sensation in his audience? This is but one of his many strange attempts to convey the dreadful existence of a young vampire. Horrific glimpses of animal slaughter reveal the cruelty man can unleash upon creatures lower on the food-chain, and authentic autopsy footage indulges our morbid curiosities about our final stop on the way to the grave.From Nicolas Cage eating a real cockroach to his famously aggressive delivery of the alphabet, there are few moments in Vampire’s Kiss that do not kidnap your whole attention Gross as our guide, we bear witness to death in its many forms - even visiting a debauched death cult that mixes the ecstasy of sex with the sweet release of that final moment. From airplane crashes to railway disasters, some of us meet a spectacular end while others fall prey to hungry wildlife predators, an assassin's bullet, or - as in the case of some condemned prisoners - get strapped into the electric chair and blasted into the afterlife with over 2000 volts of pure electricity. There's simply no escape from the encroaching darkness, and in this film we're offered a firsthand glimpse at the many ways that life can end. Everybody dies - it's the fate we all face from the moment we're born. Francis Gross (Michael Carr) leads viewers on a guided exploration of that fateful moment when the spark of life is brutally snuffed out. Experience the ultimate in cinematic shock and horror as Dr.
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