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Liminal Horror Is the Only Subgenre That Actually Gets Worse the More You Think About It

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Congratulations. You’ve just remembered that hallways exist.

That’s liminal horror in a nutshell. It doesn’t need a monster. It doesn’t need a jump scare. It doesn’t need a single drop of blood. It just needs a space that should have people in it, and doesn’t. An empty shopping mall at 3am. A school corridor with the lights half out. A swimming pool with no water and no explanation for why you’re standing next to it.

You know that feeling? That specific, unplaceable wrongness? Liminal horror looked at that feeling and said, “what if we made that into a whole thing.”

They did. It worked. Some of us have not recovered.


What Even Is Liminal Horror

Liminal spaces are transitional spaces. Places designed to be passed through rather than occupied. Stairwells. Airport terminals. Parking garages. Hotel corridors. They aren’t destinations. They’re the in-between, the connective tissue of architecture that nobody ever really looks at directly.

The horror comes from encountering them wrong. Alone. At the wrong hour. Without context. Your brain goes looking for the people that should be there and finds nothing, and that nothing is somehow louder than any sound a monster could make.

It is, genuinely, one of the most psychologically sophisticated things the genre has ever produced. And it was invented on a message board by people posting photographs of empty office buildings at 2am. Horror finds a way.


Why It Gets Worse

Here’s the trap. Most horror loses its power the more you analyze it. You see the seams. You understand the mechanism. The shark starts to look like a prop. Liminal horror runs the opposite direction entirely. The more you think about it, the more places it colonizes.

You walk through a parking structure and your brain files it away. You pass through an empty airport gate and something in the back of your head goes quiet in a bad way. You get to work early and the office is dark and the carpet is that specific shade of beige and suddenly you are genuinely, inexplicably, standing in the middle of a horror concept at 7:45 on a Tuesday morning.

Liminal horror doesn’t live in the cinema. It lives in the world, waiting for you to notice it. Which you will now. Every single day. You’re welcome.


The Backrooms Built the Church

The modern liminal horror movement has a specific origin point, and it lives on the internet, as all cursed things do. The Backrooms started as a single image posted to 4chan. A photograph of an empty yellow-carpeted room under humming fluorescent lights that looked simultaneously like nowhere and everywhere. The caption described falling through reality itself and winding up there. Alone. With the faint sound of something that might be moving.

That image spawned a mythology. Then Kane Parsons made a found footage YouTube series about it that has now been watched sixty-six million times. Now A24 has a feature film coming in May with James Wan producing, and a budget that the original 4chan post very much did not have.

The internet invented a monster with no body, no face, and no motive beyond existing in a place you can’t leave. Then Hollywood looked at that and said “yes, that.”

That’s the correct response.


What Liminal Horror Is Actually About

Empty spaces aren’t scary because they’re empty. They’re scary because your brain is pattern-matching against everything it knows about how spaces work, and this one isn’t working. The social contract of architecture has been violated. Someone built this place for people and the people are gone, and the place is still here, still humming, still lit, still waiting.

That’s grief, actually. That’s what grief looks like when you put it in a building. The space where something used to be, kept functional, kept lit, for no one. Liminal horror keeps winning because it found the frequency that hums underneath every other fear and camped out there permanently. No sequel required. No franchise. No mythology to memorize.

Just an empty hallway and the sound of the fluorescent lights and the question of whether you should keep walking.

You should probably keep walking.

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Editorial

HHN35, Jack vs Oddfellow: Place Your Bets!

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Halloween Horror Nights is back for its 35th installment at Universal Studios in Orlando, Florida as the Infernal Carnival of Nightmares!

Over the years HHN has proven original houses draw as much of a crowd, if not more, as the intellectual property (IP) houses based off of established horror movies. 

Leading each year of fear and headlining some of these original houses includes some of the most beloved and iconic characters. These icons include; Jack the Clown, The Caretaker, The Director, Chance, Dr. Oddfellow, The Usher, Lady Luck, and The Storyteller.

This year Orlandoโ€™s convention MegaCon had a highly anticipated and attended panel focused on Universal Studioโ€™s Halloween Horror Nights 35. The masterminds speaking of the 35th year celebration included Michael Aiello, Lora Sauls, and Charles Gray. The creators teased the landmark year to salivating fans.ย ย 

Gaged by the audienceโ€™s reaction as each icon was reminisced about and displayed on the panelโ€™s screen were Jack and Oddfellow. Here it was announced to the fanatical audience that these two icons will be returning to lead Halloween Horror Nights into its upcoming year!

Bring in the Clown!

Jack the Clown, born Jack Schmidt, is an icon created by Universal Studios for Halloween Horror Nights. Jack made his debut during the Halloween eventโ€™s tenth year in 2000. He immediately won over attendees and became a fan favorite. His popularity grew so much that he has reappeared again and again in many of the Halloween Horror Nights events.

Jack “The Clown” Schmidt.

Jack has been featured in three of the five Universal parks that have hosted HHN; Orlando, Hollywood, and Singapore. He has even claimed a spot in Universal Horror Unleashed.ย 

Unleashed is a haunted attraction residing in Las Vegas that offers a fully immersive experience for guests. Unlike Halloween Horror Nights, this attraction is open year round! Universal Horror Unleashed features haunted houses, live entertainment, and themed bars and dining.

Jack and Chance at Universal Horror Unleashed in Las Vegas.

Here Jack stalks guests year round with his mistress in mayhem, Chance.

Jackโ€™s History

In the late 1800s Jack was born with his brother Eddie inside the walls of Shady Brook Rest Home and Sanitarium. Jack escaped and ran away with the circus, leaving his poor and abusive family behind. 

However, it was soon apparent he was not the jolly, entertaining clown he convinced his carnival spectators of. 

Jack “The Clown” Schmidt.

Jack was a child murderer. As the traveling sideshow made its way through the southern states, a trail of abductions and disappearances followed. This attracted unwanted attention from federal authorities.

As the feds closed in, the clown disclosed his murderous ways to his employer, carnival owner Dr. Oddfellow. As the star attraction of the circus he hoped Oddfellow would hide him. However, the doctor was a man with his own sordid past with the law. He decided the best plan of action would be to cut ties with Jack, for good.

The circus owner had Jack Schmidt murdered, but not before the clown gave Oddfellow his trademark facial scar. A scar none of Oddfellowโ€™s dark magic could erase.

Always the showman, Oddfellow decided Jackโ€™s time in his show had not yet come to an end. Not even in death. The carnival owner hid Jackโ€™s body, in addition to the thirteen children the clown had killed, inside his House of Horrors.

The Doctor is In!

Just like Jack โ€œThe Clownโ€ Schmidt, Dr. Rich Oddfellow has a very long and evil history. He was introduced to Halloween Horror Nights in 2000, the same year as Jack. However, unlike the menacing clown, the doctor did not rise to instant fame.

Finally the Doctor found his time in the fog and in 2023 he was established as an icon of HHN. 

Oddfellowโ€™s History

Dr. Oddfellow is the notorious, darkly charismatic sideshow owner of Dr. Oddfellowโ€™s Carnival of Thrills. He employed Jack Schmidt, the murderous clown who claimed the lives of at least 13 children. However, the clown was not the only member of the circus who had evil intentions.

Oddfellow was an evil sorcerer, and preyed upon his unsuspecting spectators from town to town. Using the souls of his victims, Oddfellow hoped to gain immortality as well as harness the power of the Dark Zodiac for himself. With this power he would have undying power at his fingertips all harnessed in the skull sitting on top of his trademark cane.  

Dr. Oddfellow always left his mark of chaos, destruction and death. From the Jungle of Doom, to the 1939 Dustbowl, and an infamous 1969 Music Festival in upstate New York, Oddfellow reigned down his evil upon the innocent.

A Glimpse of HHN35

Not much has been revealed about how these icons of horror will be intertwined in the upcoming Halloween Horror Nights. However, we do know that despite how much these two despise each other, they will be sharing the spotlight as co-hosts for the much anticipated HHN35.

One of the ten haunted houses will feature the returning duo together. The house is called; Jack and Oddfellow: Chaos and Control. 

Jack vs Oddfellow!

As you travel through the house the stories of each icon of horror will be unraveled. Youโ€™ll wind your way through their evil dimension and see the two battle each other in a deathmatch that has been brewing for decades. However, as you near the end of the house Jack and Oddfellow come to realize that their power is much stronger together than separate. Will the souls of the guests be the fuel to their ultimate evil plan?

Tell us at iHorror who your favorite icon of horror is in the comments! If the two were to face off, who would win?

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Editorial

‘The Vampire Lestat’ Trailer: What โ€œDancing With Myselfโ€ Reveals About Lestat

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If youโ€™re one of the lucky ones whoโ€™s been watching Interview with the Vampire on AMC since its 2022 premiere (we are, in fact, an elite club), then you already know a few things to be true: 

Louis and Lestat are not only the hottest couple on television, but they have some of the most electric chemistry weโ€™ve seen in years. Every episode is impeccably written, acted, and produced, devastating and beautiful in equal measure. The character crashouts? Iconic, for better and worse. Delainey Hayles gave us a Claudia who shattered our hearts even when we knew exactly where her story was headed โ€” and one whose presence will haunt this narrative for the rest of its run. And Jacob Anderson and Sam Reid? Together and apart, theyโ€™ve made Louis and Lestat two of the most compelling characters on television right now.

But perhaps nothing is more universally true than the fact that these hiatuses make us a littleโ€ฆ feral. And this one โ€” leading into Season 3, The Vampire Lestat โ€” has been especially brutal.

Now, with the premiere less than two months away, something incredible has finally happened: the official trailer has arrived!

Weโ€™ve had a treasure trove of crumbs since San Diego Comic-Con 2025, but overall, AMC has kept things tightly under wraps. Just enough to keep us desperate for more. And now? Now we have it. Wellโ€ฆ kind of.

Dropped on April 22 at noon EST, the two-minute trailer offers only a fraction of whatโ€™s to come when the season premieres on June 7, but do not let the runtime fool you. Itโ€™s dense, chaotic, and absolutely packed with moments worth dissecting. So naturally, thatโ€™s exactly what weโ€™re about to do.

Sam Reid as Lestat de Lioncourt in Season 3; Photo from AMC.

If youโ€™re new to the show, or the books (which will absolutely be part of this breakdown), Iโ€™ll try to keep things as accessible as possible. Iโ€™ll also link out to a few previous pieces that can help fill in any gaps. And if you havenโ€™t caught up yet, both seasons are currently streaming on AMC and Netflix. Just saying.

Thereโ€™s simply, however, too much happening in this trailer to do it justice in a single piece. So weโ€™re taking it one element at a time, and weโ€™re starting with the music. A full breakdown of the video content of the trailer is coming next. 

Sam Reid as Lestat De Lioncourt – IWTV: The Vampire Lestat _ Season 3 – Photo Credit: Sophie Giraud/AMC

The Vampire Lestat and “Dancing With Myself”

The Vampire Lestatโ€” the fictional band fronted by Lestat de Lioncourt (Sam Reid) โ€” isnโ€™t just a narrative device this season. Itโ€™s becoming real, with original songs expected to release alongside the show, many of them written and produced by composer Daniel Hart, whose work has already been integral to the identity of the first two seasons โ€” more on him, and the team behind this sound, very soon.

โ€œDancing With Myselfโ€ emerged from the post-punk scene of the late 1970s and helped define the rise of new wave in the early โ€™80s, a genre that softened punkโ€™s aggression into something more commercially accessible without losing its sense of alienation. Itโ€™s glossy, performative, and deeply solitary all at once, which, frankly, makes it perfect for Lestat.

And yes, I would pay an embarrassing amount of money to hear him cover the synth-pop/new wave-esque song โ€œPersonal Jesusโ€ by Depeche Mode, but thatโ€™s neither here nor there.

It goes without saying that the team behind The Vampire Lestat isnโ€™t choosing songs without purpose, and beyond Reidโ€™s voice fitting really well tonally with Idolโ€™s, the lyrics to the song seem especially befitting a certain crashing rockstar in the modern era.  

Sam Reid as Lestat De Lioncourt – IWTV: The Vampire Lestat _ Season 3 – Photo Credit: Sophie Giraud/AMC

A few lines in particular stand out:

  • Oh, when there’s no-one else in sight / In the crowded lonely night / Well, I wait so long for my love vibration / And I’m dancing with myself
  • When there’s nothing to lose and there’s nothing to prove
  • Well, if I looked all over the world / And there’s every type of girl / But your empty eyes seem to pass me by / Leave me dancing with myself / So let’s sink another drink / ‘Cause it’ll give me time to think / If I had the chance, I’d ask the world to dance / And I’ll be dancing with myself

Taken together, the song circles three central ideas: loneliness, performance, and the absence of meaningful love.

Loneliness

If there is a single emotional constant in Interview with the Vampire, itโ€™s loneliness. But for Lestat, itโ€™s not just a theme. Itโ€™s a driving force behind many of his choices, good and bad. 

We hear it articulated explicitly as early as Season 1, Episode 2 (โ€œโ€ฆAfter Phantoms of Your Former Selfโ€), in a scene near the end of the episode (though it was the very first scene Anderson and Reid filmed together) when Lestat confesses to Louis:

โ€œThere is one thing about being a vampire that I most fear above all else and that is loneliness. You can’t imagine the emptiness… A void stretching out for decades at a time. You take this feeling away from me, Louis. We must stay together and take precaution and never part.โ€

Itโ€™s a quiet, romantic moment with the two, but its undeniable romance does not take away from the fact that it also reads as a warning.

Because Lestatโ€™s fear of being alone doesnโ€™t manifest gently. It curdles into control, volatility, and, eventually, violence. By Episode 5 (โ€œA Vile Hunger for Your Hammering Heartโ€), that fear has escalated into something far more dangerous. Claudiaโ€™s return โ€” and her plan to leave again, this time with Louis โ€” pushes Lestat into a full emotional rupture. What follows is one of the most brutal sequences in the series: his attack on Claudia, Louisโ€™ intervention, and Lestat dropping Louis from the sky in an act that is as much about desperation as it is cruelty.

Jacob Anderson as Louis De Point Du Lac – Interview with the Vampire _ Season 1, Episode 6 – Photo Credit: Alfonso Bresciani/AMC

That moment isnโ€™t just about rage, but terror. Specifically, its about the terror of abandonment.

And that terror didnโ€™t start with Louis.

As outlined in The Vampire Lestat (1985) by Anne Rice, Lestatโ€™s human life was defined by instability, neglect, abuse, and emotional distance. His mother, Gabrielle (Gabriella in the show โ€” and yes, weโ€™ll get into that laterโ€ฆ yikes), the one person he feels closest to, remains consistently cold and ultimately leaves him more than once. His first relationship, Nicolas โ€œNickiโ€ de Lenfent (which alsoโ€ฆ yikes), rejects both his worldview and, eventually, him. And even Armand later tells Lestat outright that he is destined to be abandoned by those he creates.

So when immortality stretches that pattern across decades โ€” and, now, centuries โ€” the result is exactly what โ€œDancing With Myselfโ€ captures: being surrounded by people, yet fundamentally alone.

And thatโ€™s one aspect that makes the trailerโ€™s use of this song so telling.

Because if what weโ€™ve seen so far is any indication, between the IGN clip, the tension within his band, and the ongoing-fractured state of Louis and Lestatโ€™s relationship, Lestatโ€™s rise to rock stardom isnโ€™t going to resolve that loneliness.

It is probably going to make it worse.

He may be performing for thousands. Worshipped, even. But if those connections are hollow โ€” fans, bandmates, an audience projecting onto him rather than knowing him โ€” then the image becomes painfully clear:

Lestat, center stage, and still dancing with himself.

Sam Reid as Lestat De Lioncourt – IWTV: The Vampire Lestat _ Season 3 – Photo Credit: Sophie Giraud/AMC

Performance

Weโ€™ve known since the very beginning that Lestat is a performer.

In Season 1 alone, heโ€™s constantly putting on a show: playing piano at the Azalea, much to Louisโ€™s reluctant fondness (Episode 3, โ€œIs My Very Nature That of the Devil?โ€); staging theatrical displays in their home on Rue Royale for Louis and Claudia (Episode 4, โ€œ…The Ruthless Pursuit of Blood With All a Childโ€™s Demandingโ€); and, of course, presiding as King of Mardi Gras, traumatizing the people of New Orleans more than once throughout the night for his own happiness (Episode 7, โ€œThe Thing Lay Stillโ€)

Even beyond that, Season 2 gestures toward his past on the 1700s Parisian stage in Episode 3, โ€œNo Painโ€ โ€” though the truth of those performances remainsโ€ฆ questionable (looking at you, Armand (Assad Zaman). Where is Lelio?).

Sam Reid as Lestat De Lioncourt – Interview with the Vampire _ Season 2, Episode 3 – Photo Credit: Larry Horricks/AMC

But performance isnโ€™t always just about literal showmanship.

Itโ€™s about presentation. Itโ€™s about control. Itโ€™s about the version of yourself you choose to project. And, even more importantly, what that projection allows you to hide.

And Lestat is always performing.

He presents himself as open, indulgent, impossible to ignore, but that openness is often a kind of sleight of hand. It allows him to dazzle while withholding, to dominate the narrative while obscuring the truth. The trailer leans hard into this idea, framing his rockstar persona as something exaggerated, almost artificial. Heโ€™s louder, brasher, more overtly provocative than ever before.

Which brings us back to the lyrics:

When thereโ€™s nothing to lose and thereโ€™s nothing to proveโ€ฆ

On the surface, that line reads like a freedom of sorts. But in this context, it feels more like a performance of certainty than the real thing.

Because The Vampire Lestat novel is steeped in Lestatโ€™s need to define himself, to control how heโ€™s seen, and to rewrite his own narrative. And given where the show has left him โ€” his fractured relationship with Louis, the weight of Claudiaโ€™s death, the lingering guilt and denial โ€” itโ€™s hard to read โ€œnothing to loseโ€ as truth.

If anything, it sounds like someone trying very hard to believe it.

The same goes for โ€œnothing to prove.โ€ Because Lestat is, in many ways, still trying to prove everything: his power, his independence, his monstrosity, even his worthiness of suffering. That famous line โ€”

โ€œOh Lestat, you deserved everything that’s ever happened to youโ€ฆโ€

The Vampire Lestat, Page 436

โ€” doesnโ€™t read as acceptance so much as self-condemnation. A performance of self-awareness that never quite resolves into peace.

If the music is any indication, this rockstar era isnโ€™t about actual liberation. The persona gets bigger, louder, more undeniable, but the cracks underneath it widen just as quickly.

The performance can only hold for so long.

And when it finally falls apart, as the seasonโ€™s hints of a โ€œrise and fallโ€ suggest it inevitably will, it wonโ€™t simply just collapse, but will force whatever is being hidden into the spotlight instead.

Sam Reid as Lestat De Lioncourt – Interview with the Vampire _ Season 1, Episode 1 – Photo Credit: Alfonso Bresciani/AMC

Absence of Meaningful Love

Last, but certainly not least โ€” and arguably most important โ€” is the absence of meaningful love.

Like loneliness, this is a theme deeply embedded in Interview with the Vampire. But what โ€œDancing With Myselfโ€ highlights is something more specific: not just the loss of love, but the inability to access it, even when it exists.

And thatโ€™s where Lestat and Louis become central to the songโ€™s meaning.

From what the series has already shown us, their relationship is not only the emotional core of the story, but the most real and significant connection either of them has ever had. Season 1 makes that clear, even when itโ€™s at its most volatile. Season 2 reinforces it even further by showing us that even though Lestat may be โ€œgone,โ€ he never leaves the narrative. He lingers in Louisโ€™ mind, shaping his choices, haunting his relationship with Armand, and ultimately highlighting a truth the show never lets us forget, which is that nothing Louis builds in Lestatโ€™s absence comes close to what they had together.

Which makes the songโ€™s fixation on unfulfilled connection hit even harder.

Because if โ€œDancing With Myselfโ€ is about longing for something just out of reach, then it maps almost too neatly onto where this story leaves them โ€” separated, fractured, and, for all intents and purposes, withholding love from one another.

Jacob Anderson as Louis De Point Du Lac and Sam Reid as Lestat De Lioncourt – Interview with the Vampire _ Season 1, Episode 7 – Photo Credit: Alfonso Bresciani/AMC

And from Lestatโ€™s perspective, that absence is everything.

As explored in The Vampire Lestat and later novels, Louis is not just a great love; he is the love. 

There are countless passages that reinforce this, moments where Lestatโ€™s fascination, devotion, and emotional connection to Louis border on overwhelming. Some of my favorite passages include, but are not limited to: 

  • โ€œYet Louis gained a hold over me far more powerful than Nicolas had ever had. Even in his cruelest moments, Louis touched the tenderness in me, seducing me with his staggering dependence, his infatuation with my every gesture and every spoken word.โ€ โ€” The Vampire Lestat, Page 433
  • โ€œIt was the love of Louis which had at times crippled Lestat, and enslaved Armand. Louis need not have consciousness of his own beauty, of his own obvious and natural charm.โ€ โ€” Merrick, Page 142
  • โ€œ[Louisโ€™] beauty had always maddened me. I think I idealize him in my mind when Iโ€™m not with him; but when I see him again Iโ€™m overcome.โ€ โ€” The Tale of the Body Thief, Page 106

But it is even more apparent, even more all-consuming, in the show. Lestatโ€™s love of Louis is undeniable, again, despite their past. From the very first moment he saw Louis in Season 1, Episode 1 (โ€œIn Throes of Increasing Wonderโ€), the attraction was evident, but as the episode and season progress, it is clear that Lestatโ€™s love for Louis is what, quite literally, keeps him going in this immortal life. 

Which is exactly why the lyrics land the way they do.

Well, I wait so long for my love vibration / And Iโ€™m dancing with myselfโ€ฆ

and

If I looked all over the worldโ€ฆ but your empty eyes seem to pass me byโ€ฆ

These lines donโ€™t just suggest loneliness, but waiting. Waiting for a specific kind of love, one that isnโ€™t interchangeable, one that canโ€™t be replaced no matter how many people surround you.

And the trailer, and interviews with the cast and crew at past events of SDCC and New York Comic Con (NYCC), seems to lean into that idea.

Because while Lestatโ€™s rockstar persona promises excess of attention, admiration, and endless bodies in endless rooms, the song takes away from that. The implication is clear: none of it is enough. Not the fame, not the show, not the distractions.

None of it is enough if the one person he actually wants isnโ€™t there in the way he wants and needs them.

So what fills that gap?

Performance. Indulgence. Self-destruction.

Sam Reid as Lestat De Lioncourt – IWTV: The Vampire Lestat _ Gallery – Photo Credit: Frank W. Ockenfels III/AMC

The lyrics hint at it โ€”โ€œletโ€™s sink another drinkโ€ฆ give me time to thinkโ€โ€” and the trailer visuals, as well as some of the other smaller clips AMC has been sharing over the last couple of weeks, seem to follow suit. Whatever this era of Lestatโ€™s life becomes, it doesnโ€™t read as fulfillment. Itโ€™s more of a coping mechanism. And a really bad one. 

Ultimately, what โ€œDancing With Myselfโ€ captures, and what the trailer reinforces, is that Lestat isnโ€™t just alone, but he is alone without the one person whose love ever made that loneliness bearable.

And until that changes, no amount of noise, attention, or performance is going to fix it.

Because change will be required from both of them. From Lestat, a confrontation with who he is beneath the performance; from Louis, a willingness to face what remains between them.

And when that shift finally comes, it will be beautiful and probably send me into a psychosis.

But until then, the lyrics linger where Lestat is now: searching, performing, and still, despite everything, waiting for Louisโ€™ love.

Conclusion

What makes this trailer so effective isnโ€™t just what it shows, but how it sounds. The choice of โ€œDancing With Myselfโ€ is deliberate, layered, and deeply revealing of Lestatโ€™s mental state during what will probably be the beginning of his journey to rockstardom. Through its lyrics and tone, the song reframes everything weโ€™re seeing: Lestatโ€™s rise to fame as a performance, his excess as coping, and his isolation as something that no amount of attention can truly resolve.

Jacob Anderson as Louis De Point Du Lac and Gabriel Freilich as Pale Young Vamp – Interview with the Vampire _ Season 2, Episode 8 – Photo Credit: Larry Horricks/AMC

Loneliness, performance, and the absence of meaningful love arenโ€™t just recurring themes in Interview with the Vampire, but now something embedded directly into the music of this trailer, guiding how we interpret nearly every frame, character action, and piece of dialogue. Itโ€™s a reminder that this next chapter, The Vampire Lestat, isnโ€™t just about reinvention but exposure.

And if this trailer and its music are any indication, weโ€™re in for something messy, emotional, indulgent, and probably devastating in all the best and worst ways.

This might be me reading way too much into a trailer song choice, but I donโ€™t think I am. To quote OutKast in “Hey Ya!:” โ€œYโ€™all donโ€™t wanna hear me, you just wanna dance.โ€

And if that isnโ€™t exactly what this trailer is doing, I donโ€™t know what is.

All I do know is that June 7 cannot come fast enough.

In the meantime, you can watch the official trailer below and listen to โ€œDancing With Myselfโ€ by The Vampire Lestat to hear exactly what he’s telling us. 

Be sure to follow us here at iHorror for our upcoming breakdown of the trailerโ€™s visual content โ€” weโ€™re covering all things The Vampire Lestat as we count down to its premiere on AMC and AMC+ on June 7 at 9 p.m.

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Editorial

‘Behind The Mask’ is a Love Letter to Slashers

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In 2006, mockumentary Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon had a limited theatrical run yielding a low box office. However, the movie began to build buzz on the festival circuit and among fans. It wasnโ€™t until the movie was released for home viewing when their main audience was solidified. Now, Leslie Vernon is both a beloved gem of a movie, and character, in the world of horror!

The Makings of a Legend

When cameras begin to roll audiences arenโ€™t really sure what theyโ€™re watching. Is it a slasher movie? A parody? A dark comedy? Well, itโ€™s all three really. Behind the Mask begins as a fun, dark, and comedic study of a killer through the lens of aspiring journalist Taylor, and her filming crew Doug and Todd. However, as the story unfolds it turns into a clever and original slasher movie that no one expected.ย 

It is hard talking about this movie without giving away all of the magic.

Behind the Mask examines the archetypes and tropes of classic horror movies as a film crew of three graduate school students interview the self proclaimed killer in training, Leslie Vernon.ย 

Leslie Vernon (Nathan Baesal) in his full costume, or rather, uniform?

Leslie confides to the crew he is inspired by the likes of Freddy Krueger, Jason Voorhees, and Michael Myers. What makes this particularly interesting is that in this world, these characters and their killing sprees are real! It is Leslieโ€™s hope that one day that he will have his name memorialized alongside theirs.ย 

Behind the Screams

One of the many things that makes this movie so enjoyable is how it relates to real life horror fans. Behind the Mask captures conversations fans have been having among themselves for years!

For instance, how does Michael Myers slowly stalk his victims at such a snailโ€™s pace and still catch up? Vernon claims itโ€™s because theyโ€™re not walking. He discloses to the film crew he has to work out daily to keep up his cardio for all of the chasing. He implies that when heโ€™s not in view of his victims, he is running to keep up.

Leslie Vernon (Nathan Baesal) applies his makeup before his big night.

Another dispute fans have been debating among themselves is how much planning, if any, goes into killers choosing their victims. Is it random? Is it an obsession? Vernon also sheds light onto this as he describes the process of choosing his survivor girl, and the friend group he will kill around her. Who he kills and in what order is just as important as the girl that he is doing it all for.

Leslie also reveals the man behind the curtain when it comes to the smaller details; How do doors close by themselves? Why are windows so hard to open to escape? Why are flashlights always dead? And why are weapons so dysfunctional?ย 

Leslie discloses it is because the whole game of cat and mouse is rigged! He uses fishing line to move doors and objects, nails windows shut, replaces flashlight batteries with dead ones, and sabotages weapons to break easily. It really seems like cheating when you think about it.

For the Love of Horror

Another reason why Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon is loved by the horror community is because it is a treasure trove of genre references. The following are just a few of the horror references fans will recognize.

Leslieโ€™s pet turtles are named Church and Zoey, referencing the pets from Pet Sematary 1 and 2. In the home of Leslieโ€™s mentor Eugene (played by Scott Wilson) a Hellraiser puzzlebox is in view for the audience to see. Additionally, while Taylor is being filmed in an opening scene of her documentary, the sign over her shoulder is for The Rabbit in Red Lounge. The Rabbit in Red is a strip club featured in Rob Zombieโ€™s Halloween movies. One last example is the car in Eugeneโ€™s driveway. It is a yellow 1973 Oldsmobile Delta 88, the same car used in Sam Raimiโ€™s Evil Dead trilogy.

Graduate student Taylor (Angela Goethals) in front of The Rabbit in Red Lounge.

Not only are there numerous horror references fans can spot throughout the film, horror cameos also punctuate Behind the Mask

Beloved horror veteran Robert Englund is Vernonโ€™s astute adversary, Doc Halloran. You will quickly draw parallels between Doc Halloran and Dr. Samuel Loomis of John Carepenterโ€™s Halloween. Both men harbor borderline obsessive relationships with their respective killers. They are the โ€œAhabโ€ archetype, and they see it as their mission to stop these monsters from doing evil in the world.

Robert Englund as Sam Loomis… I mean, Doc Halloran, in Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon

In addition to Englund, Zelda Rubinstein shares the cameo stage. Rubinstein played the psychic Tangina Barrons from 1982โ€™s Poltergeist, and portrays librarian Mrs. Collinwood in Behind the Mask

A keen eye can even spot a young Kane Hodder as the home owner of a very famous house on an infamous street in Springwood, Ohio.

A Sequel on the Rise

In April 2026, director Scott Glosserman announced alongside writer David J. Stieve that Leslie Vernon is returning! The long awaited sequel, Behind the Mask 2: The Return of Leslie Vernon, has been greenlit. The news came at the 20th anniversary screening at the Alamo Drafthouse. In addition to the return of Nathan Baesel as Leslie Vernon, Glosserman told fans Angela Goethals and Robert Englund will also be reprising their roles from the original.

The title card that sent the horror community into a frenzy!

Twenty years is a long time, and fans are wondering if the same magic that made the original so special can be recaptured. Not only have the actors changed, but so has the genre. What new tropes will be weaved into the script? What new references will be penned into the world? Who will be casted for a cameo?ย 

Follow iHorror as updates are released! Additionally, sign up to follow the sequels kickstarter. While the movie will be made with or without backing from the fans, the campaign explains money generated through the page “will allow us the freedom to make itย our way: bigger, wilder, bloodier and more worthy of the legend Leslie was always meant to become!”

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