Beneath the Paris Opera, below the cellars, tombs, and
torture chambers dwells the mysterious ‘Phantom of the Opera’: a musical master
with an ear, and eye, for true talent. When he first hears the beautiful
Christine sing, he is captivated and, through a series of events, forwards her
career and turns her into a star. All he desires in return is for her to come
at his call and give him her love. But when that moment comes and she discovers
the horror of his true self, she flees and spurns him. Shattered and betrayed,
the Phantom vows to have Christine and if he can’t, no one else will.
Based on
the novel by Gaston Leroux, this 1925 silent classic remains the tale’s closest
adaptation and, despite its loose plot and one or two scenes where things go a
bit awry (a short technicolour sequence at one point, the camera going out of
focus at another), this movie still retains its awe-power, namely through the
stunning performances that give it shape. I could not help but my find myself
at the very end of it in a state of wonderment and, of course, you’ve got to
admire the film just for that.
Beneath the Paris Opera, below the cellars,
tombs, and torture chambers dwells the mysterious ‘Phantom of the Opera’: a
musical master with an ear, and eye, for true talent. When he first hears the
beautiful Christine sing, he is captivated and, through a series of events,
forwards her career and turns her into a star. All he desires in return is for
her to come at his call and give him her love. But when that moment comes and
she discovers the horror of his true self, she flees and spurns him. Shattered
and betrayed, the Phantom vows to have Christine and if he can’t, no one else
will.
The story is relatively mild, apparently very close to the book (which I
must admit I have a copy of, but have not read), so what really gives this
movie its staying power is the brilliant performances, namely those of Lon
Chaney and Mary Philbin.
As the Phantom, Lon Chaney delivers this delicious
melodramatic performance that is drenched, absolutely drenched, in drama, love,
torment, and a nice dash of darkly funny insanity. There is a sadistic glee
that comes across his face on more than one occasion and when he’s not
grandiosely spouting for his love for Christine, or nearly moving his audiences
to tears with his heartrending cries of woe and betrayal (which you can almost
hear), he actually brings a bit of humour into the mix.
Mary Philbin as
Christine begins the movie a bit doe-eyed and ditsy, but soon comes into her
own that, by the time she wrenches the Phantom’s mask off (which is so scary
even the camera goes out of focus in terror), there’s a real sense of a
character there and not some mere vessel of attraction. What I really liked was
how her performance was actually really quite genuine. Now keep in mind this is
a silent film where facial expressions and gestures have all got to go to 11,
Mary’s performance keeps at a level 9 or 10, a great balance that doesn’t make
you want to burst out laughing or roll your eyes until they cross. I really
liked that.
Starring Norman Kerry, Arthur Edmund Carewe, Gibson Gowland, John
St. Polis, and Snitz Edwards, The Phantom
of the Opera is an enchanting piece of cinema that will have you under its
curse just like its heroine. Filled with romance, love, amazing sets, drama,
horror, action, and a few smatterings of dark comedy, it’s a silent that really
stands up. I was in awe by the end.
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