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‘The Walking Dead’s’ Rick and Michonne Lose Film But Gain Mini-Series

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Rick

Rick and Michonne have both left The Walking Dead at varying moments in the series. Rick was mysteriously rescued from ravaging walkers by strangers in a helicopter. It wasn’t until later that Michonne decided to leave to find Rick after she discovered some of his belongings. Personally, this part of the story never tracked for me since that had them both leaving Judith behind. I don’t think that moves makes sense for either one of their characters. However, that’s the way it happened.

Originally, a Rick Grimes movie(s) was planned to reveal what happened to Rick during that time. But, it seems that is no longer in the plans. It appears that now the plan is to create a spin-off mini-series that will feature both Rick and Michonne. Both Andrew Lincoln and Danai Gurira turned up to Comic-Con to share the big news with a ton of TWD fans.

“Michonne and this ‘TWD’ family has meant so much to me, and to continue the journey of these beloved characters, alongside Scott and Andy, both creatively and in front of the camera, and bringing ‘Walking Dead’ fans something truly special is just glorious. I can’t wait to pick up the katana again.” Gurira said.

At the moment there is still no name for the miniseries. But we will be sure to keep you up to date on all details as soon as we get them in.

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The Vampire Lestat Is Playing a Real Concert in NYC — And Yes, It’s Exactly as Wild as It Sounds

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In what might be the most Lestat-move imaginable, Lestat de Lioncourt is stepping fully into the real world — and no, I’m not kidding. He’ll be joining us mere mortals with a one-night-only concert on June 2, 2026, at the Beacon Theatre in New York City. Just one performance, because anything less would be completely out of character for the king of the vampire world.  

This is, to be quite frank, a huge deal. For longtime fans of Interview with the Vampire and The Vampire Lestat — and even for newer audiences just discovering the chaos of Anne Rice’s vampiric world — a real, live Lestat concert has been something of a collective dream. And now, somehow, it’s a reality.

To catch everyone up, AMC Networks premiered Interview with the Vampire in the fall of 2022, starring Jacob Anderson and Sam Reid as Louis de Pointe du Lac and Lestat de Lioncourt, respectively. The series adapts Anne Rice’s iconic 1976 novel, which was later brought into the cultural mainstream with the 1994 film starring Brad Pitt and Tom Cruise

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

Since its debut, the series has only grown in acclaim. Season two, which aired in May 2024, further cemented its reputation, with both seasons landing near-perfect scores and averaging an astonishing 99% on Rotten Tomatoes. It’s the kind of reception most shows can only dream of.

Now, in 2026, the story continues on. The third season, now officially titled The Vampire Lestat, is set to premiere on June 7, and if early signs are anything to go by, it’s already shaping up to be something massive. The official trailer, released on April 22, is already closing in on six million views on YouTube, a number that feels less surprising the more you watch it.

For those unfamiliar with this era of the story, the premise is as unhinged as it is perfect: after the events of Interview with the Vampire (yes, within the universe itself), Lestat responds by… becoming a world-famous rockstar.

Naturally. Logically. Understandably. 

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

AMC has fully embraced this direction, leaning into the meta of it in a way that’s both playful and deeply intentional. Promotional materials have taken on a mockumentary style, blurring the line between actor and character, fiction and reality. Even more impressively, The Vampire Lestat exists as an actual musical act, with official artist pages and released singles — including “Long Face,” “All Fall Down,” and a cover of Billy Idol’s “Dancing With Myself” — all attributed simply to The Vampire Lestat

Sam Reid, notably, is nowhere to be found in the credits, which is why, if you’ve come across any of my music-focused articles on this, you’ll notice I’ve committed to the bit and started writing about the band as though it’s entirely real. Because, at this point, it kind of is. 

It’s an incredibly clever, almost nostalgic approach that calls back to the old Anne Rice days, back when you could call a phone number and leave messages for Lestat himself, or later, watch Rice answer fan questions on Facebook entirely in his character. It created this strange, delightful space where he felt like someone you could actually reach.

Now, however, that idea is being taken even further.

Just five days before the premiere of The Vampire Lestat, AMC is bringing the concept into the physical world with something unprecedented: a real concert. One night and one night only. 

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

And for longtime readers, there’s an added layer of significance here. In the original 1985 novel The Vampire Lestat, Lestat only ever holds one concert during his rockstar era. Everything else exists through recordings, music videos, and a harrowing reputation, but that single performance, held in San Francisco on Halloween night in 1985, becomes something else entirely. 

And if you want to know exactly why it’s such a big deal… Well, you’re either going to have to wait and see how the series adapts it, or read it for yourself ahead of time. Trust me, no matter what you do, it’ll be worth it.

So it feels only fitting that there is just one concert; one night where the fourth wall finally gives way, and The Vampire Lestat becomes musically, spectacularly, and dangerously real. 

Lestat de Lioncourt is finally stepping off the page, and I, for one, fully intend to be there to see it.

Because if there were ever a moment that demanded to be witnessed firsthand in the life of an Anne Rice fan, it’s this one. A single night where Lestat exists not just in story, or on screen, but in our world — and if that’s the case, it would be a shame not to meet him there.

More information is sure to follow, but keep an eye here at iHorror for updates on the concert, the music, and the upcoming premiere of The Vampire Lestat on June 7.

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The History of Deals with the Devil: From Faust to The Witch

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Every culture on earth has invented a version of the same story. Someone makes a deal with darkness, gets exactly what they asked for, and loses everything that made them want it in the first place. This is either the oldest cautionary tale in human history or the universe’s way of saying that wanting things too much is the problem. Possibly both.

The template is so reliable it has survived more reinventions than most genres, showing up in ancient folklore, theater from the sixteenth century, Mississippi Delta blues, and a 1997 Al Pacino film where the devil runs a Manhattan law firm, which is honestly the most plausible setting the story has ever found.

Doctor Faustus and the Original Paperwork

Constantine

The deal with the devil as Western storytelling knows it starts with the German legend of Johann Georg Faust, a real historical figure from the early 1500s whose reputation for dark arts grew considerably after his death. By the time Christopher Marlowe adapted him into Doctor Faustus around 1592, Faust had already become shorthand for a man who traded his eternal soul for power and forbidden knowledge.

Marlowe’s Faustus gets twenty-four years of demonic assistance, summons Helen of Troy, and spends the entire back half of the play desperately not thinking about what comes next. He traded his immortal soul for the intellectual equivalent of a Wikipedia subscription.

Goethe’s Faust, published in two parts in 1808 and 1832, complicated the template. Goethe’s version ends with Faust being saved, which is either deeply reassuring or a massive loop in the contract depending on how you read it. The devil, Mephistopheles, loses on a technicality. Lawyers have been insufferable about this ever since.

The word “Faustian” entered the language as shorthand for any bargain where you get what you want at a cost that turns out to be everything. It is used now to describe political compromises, corporate mergers, and at least three separate think pieces per year about social media.

The Crossroads

The Crossroads

On the other side of the Atlantic, the deal with the devil found a different address. American blues mythology, particularly the tradition of the Mississippi Delta, attached the story to a specific location. The crossroads, where two roads meet at midnight, and where a man could wait for the devil to appear and tune his guitar.

The musician most associated with this mythology is Robert Johnson, who recorded twenty-nine songs in 1936 and 1937, including “Cross Road Blues” and “Me and the Devil Blues,” and died in 1938 at twenty-seven under circumstances that remain unclear. He was a remarkable guitarist who appeared to have improved dramatically in a very short period of time. The crossroads story about him developed and calcified after his death, told and retold until it became inseparable from his music. Robert Johnson himself never claimed any of it.

The person who actually did claim it was a different man entirely. Tommy Johnson, a Delta blues musician with no relation to Robert, reportedly told people on multiple occasions that he had met the devil at a crossroads at midnight, handed over his guitar, and gotten his talent in return. Tommy Johnson is considerably less famous than Robert Johnson, which is maybe the devil’s way of making a point about contract terms.

The crossroads mythology fed directly into O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000), where the Coen Brothers dropped it into the middle of a Depression-era Odyssey adaptation because if you are already rewriting Homer you might as well rewrite American folklore while you are in there. It lives in every story about fame that arrives too fast, talent that appears from nowhere, and deaths at twenty-seven. The 27 Club has been run through the Robert Johnson mythology so many times that the connection has become its own piece of pop culture, self-sustaining and impossible to dislodge.

The Devil Grows Up

Supernatural, Devil

The devil of medieval Christianity and the devil of the crossroads deal mythology are related but not identical. The biblical Satan is primarily an adversary, an accuser, a figure whose role in early scripture is closer to a prosecuting attorney than a red-skinned tempter in a top hat.

The smooth-talking deal maker who shows up at crossroads and in horror films is a mash up of all of this. The biblical adversary, the folk devil, and a few centuries of storytelling that collectively decided the most interesting version of evil was one that made you an offer. The modern devil does not attack. He negotiates. And he always has better real estate.

Hollywood Signs the Contract

CW Lucifer

Hollywood has been making devil movies for as long as Hollywood has existed, and the quality varies in ways that suggest not all of those productions made favorable deals.

Angel Heart (1987) is the best film about a deal with the devil that never once uses the phrase. Mickey Rourke plays a private detective hired by a man named Louis Cyphre (Robert De Niro) to find a missing person, and the movie spends ninety minutes letting you work out what Louis Cyphre is an anagram of while everything gets worse. De Niro arrives in a cream suit eating hard-boiled eggs and the film is essentially already over.

The Devil’s Advocate (1997) casts Al Pacino as the literal devil running a Manhattan law firm and hiring Keanu Reeves as his star attorney. This works completely. New York in the nineties, of course the devil ran a law firm. The casting of Pacino is either inspired or the only possible answer to the question of which living actor could play Satan and make it seem like he was doing you a favor.

Crossroads (1986) sends Ralph Macchio into the Mississippi Delta to hunt down a lost Robert Johnson song and ends with a guitar duel between Macchio and Steve Vai, who plays the devil’s champion. The film climaxes with a Juilliard-trained classical guitarist defeating a blues devil deal using a Bach-influenced technique, in the Mississippi Delta, in front of a crowd that does not find this strange. Nobody in the film finds this strange.

Drag Me to Hell (2009) is Sam Raimi’s argument that you do not need to want power or knowledge or fame to end up on the wrong side of a supernatural contract. Christine Brown wanted a promotion. She denied a mortgage extension to an elderly woman. The punishment is an eternity of damnation. The moral is that the universe does not proportion its consequences to the scale of the ambition, which is either a theological horror show or a description of most Tuesdays.

And then there is The Witch (2015), where Robert Eggers quietly made the deal the ending rather than the premise. Thomasin does not go looking for the devil. The devil comes to her farm in 1630s New England, destroys her family, and waits. The offer, when it comes, is delivered by a goat named Black Phillip. “Wouldst thou like to live deliciously.” The audience agreed that yes, they probably would.

The Terms

contract

What the deal with the devil has always been about, underneath the sulfur and the crossroads and the cream suits, is the terror of wanting something badly enough to pay any price for it. Faust wanted knowledge. Tommy Johnson wanted to play guitar better than anyone alive. Thomasin wanted to be free. The horror is not the devil. The horror is that the offer sounds reasonable and the terms are always printed small.

Every generation rewrites the story because every generation needs to. The template survives because the wanting does not stop.

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Shudder’s May Is the Best Month They’ve Had in a While.

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Shudder dropped their May 2026 programming slate and it is heavier than most months. The lead is The Terror: Devil in Silver, the long-awaited third installment of AMC’s horror anthology, premiering May 7 with new episodes weekly through June 11. Next up, Tales from the Crypt, all seven seasons, begins streaming May 1 after years off the market. Four new exclusive films fill out the rest of the month.

The Terror: Devil in Silver

The Terror: Devil in Silver

The first two seasons of The Terror stand as some of the best horror television of the past decade. Season one sent the crew of HMS Terror on a doomed Arctic voyage in 1845. Season two, Infamy, placed its story inside a Japanese American internment camp during World War II. Neither shared a cast nor a plot with the other. Both were exceptional. Season three takes Victor LaValle’s novel and builds it into a six-episode limited series. Dan Stevens plays Pepper, a working-class moving man who lands in a psychiatric hospital through bad luck and a worse temper. What he finds inside is not treatment.

Karyn Kusama, who directed the Yellowjackets pilot and earned an Emmy nomination for it, directs the opening two episodes and serves as co-executive producer. LaValle and Chris Cantwell co-wrote the scripts. Ridley Scott executive produces. The ensemble behind Stevens includes Judith Light, CCH Pounder, Aasif Mandvi, Stephen Root, and Marin Ireland. This is the kind of combination that earns attention before a single frame has aired.

New episodes premiere weekly after May 7.

Tales from the Crypt

Tales from the Crypt ran on HBO from 1989 to 1996. Seven seasons. Ninety-three episodes. Each one a self-contained story hosted by the Crypt Keeper, a wisecracking animated corpse voiced by John Kassir, who closes every episode with a pun only he finds funny.

The show pulled from EC Comics and assembled talent at a level that looks almost unreasonable in retrospect: Brad Pitt, Demi Moore, Christopher Reeve, Catherine O’Hara, and Steve Buscemi in front of the camera. Robert Zemeckis, Tobe Hooper, and William Friedkin behind it. Tom Hanks, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and Michael J. Fox also directed episodes.

The series has been effectively unavailable to stream for years, tied up in rights complications. It is now on Shudder. Season one drops May 1. Subsequent seasons premiere weekly on Fridays, with the final season 7 arriving June 12. Watch parties run every Friday at 9pm ET. There is no good reason to wait on this one.

The Exclusives

Whistle arrives May 8 and is the exclusive to prioritize. Directed by Corin Hardy, who made The Nun, and starring Dafne Keen, Sophie Nélisse, Percy Hynes White, and Nick Frost, it follows high school students who find an ancient Aztec Death Whistle and discover that blowing it summons their future deaths to hunt them down. Totally normal thing to happen.

Heresy lands May 1 and is worth knowing about before it arrives. Director Didier Konings is making his feature debut after years as a concept artist on Stranger Things, Ghostbusters: Afterlife, and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness.

Smothered arrives May 29 as a Shudder Original. It is Indonesian, and it is produced by Joko Anwar, the director behind Satan’s Slaves and Impetigore. That name means something to anyone who has been paying attention to international horror over the past decade. The film follows a micro-painting artist who loses part of his memory in an accident and returns home to find a woman claiming to be his mother.

This Is Not a Test streams May 22. Directed by Adam MacDonald and adapted from Courtney Summers’ 2012 novel, it stars Olivia Holt as a student sheltering in a high school during a zombie outbreak.

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