PHENOMENALITY: *uncanny*
MYTHICITY: *fair*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *drama*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTION: *psychological*
This 1990 telefilm, scripted by
Arthur Kopit from his own theatrical adaptation of the public domain Phantom,
originally played in two parts on television.
Unlike many film-adaptations, Kopit’s script mines quite a bit of detail
from the Leroux novel. Like the contemporaneous
Andrew Lloyd Webber Broadway version, Kopit’s story places strong emphasis on
the book’s “eternal triangle,” between the female singer, her appropriate young
swain and her tutor, even though the tutor is no longer older, nor suggests
anything relating to the singer’s father.
At the same time, though this
Phantom isn’t softened in the same way one sees in the 1943 and 1962
adaptations, Kopit goes even further to eliminate elements of danger and horror
in the script. This time the struggle is
between two young men for one young woman, though the shadow of an older man
does intrude to some extent.
The film, directed by Tony
Richardson, fulfills the stereotype of television direction: everything’s shot
from flat, uninventive angles and there’s no sense of style devoted to even the
most artistic elements. This is a shame
because Kopit and Richardson had a chance to bring a strong faerie-tale
atmosphere to the project. Their Phantom,
in contrast to the ones seen in 1943 and 1962, has dwelled beneath the Paris
opera-house long enough to build a substantial legend, though Kopit goes even
further than Leroux by claiming that this Phantom was raised in the catacombs.
No attempt is made to project any
mystery into the Phantom’s presence. The
film begins with a change in managers at the opera-house, as did the book. In the book, however, the changeover was the
result of a sale from one owner to another.
Here, long-time manager Carriere (Burt Lancaster) is dismissed from his
position, and the supercilious new manager has acquired this post in order to
accommodate the diva-aspirations of his wife Carlotta. Carriere warns the new manager of the
presence of the Phantom. The new manager does not believe, but gets flustered when
things fall off the walls without explanation.
The moment Carriere is alone, however, the Phantom (Charles Dance,
attired in a cloak and a mask reminiscent of Harlequin) appears, and the two of
them become distressingly chatty.
Plainly Kopit expects his audience to know that Eric, aka the Phantom,
lives beneath the opera-house, and wants to get that out of the way, as well as
quickly establishing Eric’s motivations for keeping people away from his
subterranean domain.
What will he do to keep that
privacy?At one point, it’s strongly implied that Eric kills a man sent to
explore the building’s lower regions.
Yet aside from that incident, and the de rigeur “dropping of the
chandelier,” Kopit tries, like Anthony Hinds in the ’62 PHANTOM, to keep Eric’s
hands as unstained as possible. Most of the Phantom’s actions are rather
prankish, as if, despite his fine attire and mellow voice, he’s still a big kid
at heart.
As Carriere exits, Christine (Teri
Polo) arrives at the opera, at the behest of a character who is essentially the
same as the book’s “Raoul,” though Kopit renames him after his brother, making
him “Count Phillippe deChagny.” In a
flashback-sequence Kopit touches on the book’s idea that Christine and her
intended became acquainted as children.
Even Christine’s father, so important to the book, makes a rare
cinematic appearance in this 1990 story.
In adulthood Phillippe meets Christine without recognizing her, though
she knows him. When Phillippe hears her
exquisite voice, he sends her to Carriere for lessons, not aware of the
manager’s dismissal. Christine gets no
sympathy from Carlotta, who, like some evil stepmother, refuses to hear
Christine sing and puts the girl to work in the costume department. The young woman is equally disturbed to learn
that Phillippe may be in the habit of sending many girls for “lessons” that
lead to seduction.
Later, when Phillippe shows up, he
makes clear that his intentions were sincere.
By that time, Christine has received another tutor (and eventually, a
suitor). The Phantom hears her sing and
wants to nurture her talent. He eschews
the talking-through-walls approach that reaped few rewards for Claude Rains and
Herbert Lom, and approaches Christine directly, explaining his mask as simply a
means of remaining anonymous. She
accepts the offer of lessons. Not least
because he’s young, charming and well-spoken, Christine falls somewhat in love
with her mysterious masked teacher. Thus
Kopit sows the seeds for the competition of the two male leads, though to be
sure, this Christine is far more fully realized than most.
The Phantom avenges Christine’s
wrongs by persecuting Carlotta, sabotaging her performances so that she becomes
a laughing-stock. Then, acting on the
Phantom’s guidance, Christine shows off her talent at a party—a demonstration
that becomes an amusing singing “duel” with Carlotta, a duel the older woman
loses. The manager signs Christine up,
but Carlotta contrives to ruin the ingenue’s debut.
After taking a measure of revenge
upon Carlotta (dumping a bunch of rats on her), the Phantom decides to forget
about promoting Christine’s career. He
spirits her down to his subterranean lair.
Though Christine has had one romantic encounter with Phillippe by this
time, she begins to fall in love with her masked benefactor as well. At this point Carriere—well acquainted with
the lair, since he’s the one who concealed Eric’s presence there for
years—shows up.
In a long flashback he explains to
Christine that he’s actually Eric’s father.
Reversing Leroux’s idea that Eric’s father and mother couldn’t even look
at him, his mother—also a blonde opera-singer like this Christine—tried to take
poison when she thought Carriere couldn’t marry her. The poison may have had something to do with
Eric’s deformed status at birth, but the film’s unclear on this possibility. Eric’s mother doesn’t see his ugliness,
though Carriere does, and after the mother perishes naturally, Carriere
half-wishes Eric would just die. When
the child lives, Carriere dutifully allows him to live beneath the
opera-house. Ironically, even in
seclusion Eric becomes a master musician; it’s he, Carriere confesses, who
truly made the opera-house successful.
Kopit continues the romance-angle
with Christine and Eric, at one point even having the fearsome Phantom don a
straw boater!! Kopit also takes a different approach to the famous “unmasking
scene:” this time, rather than having a willful girl remove the mask of her
demon lover, Christine talks Eric into removing it himself. Fascinated with his history and his
suffering, she thinks that love will give her the strength to stomach the sight
of any deformity.
She’s wrong, for she faints dead
away at the sight of Eric’s face (which the viewing audience never sees at any
point). The Phantom goes berserk,
smashing things and putting Christine in a cage. Despite feeling immense guilt for her
trespass, she escapes to the upper world and to Phillippe. During a climactic performance, Christine
begins singing a duet with the Phantom as he lurks in his special box,
confusing but nonetheless thrilling the audience. The police aren’t amused, though. Led by Inspector Ledoux (note the name), they
chase Eric to the rooftops. The Phantom
gets the satisfaction of winning an old-fashioned sword-duel with his rival
Phillippe, but spares him for Christine’s sake.
In the end, he begs his father for a quick death rather than capture,
and Carriere ends the film by shooting his son.
Despite some of the scripting
missteps, this is a solid enough romantic melodrama. The decision not to show
the Phantom’s face suggests a desire to allow viewers to retain the fantasy of
Eric as “beauty” rather than “beast,” but at least he scores some romantic
points with the woman of his dreams, a bounty the Phantom never received from
creator Leroux.
I mentioned that the “shadow of an
older man” fell over the triangular romance.
This is of course Carriere, who becomes a “daylight alter ego” to the
reclusive Phantom, in that he lives his life for Eric and becomes defined by
Eric’s talents. It’s surely no
coincidence that Eric’s first and only great love bears a strong resemblance to
his mother. That said, Carriere has no
interest in Christine, though in one scene he seems to find her voice
“familiar,” which might suggest that he too sees Eric’s mother in
Christine. This does put a different
complexion on Carriere’s “mercy killing” of Eric, though as Freudian metaphors
go, this one appears to be not much more than a toss-off.
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