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Phantom of the Opera [VHS]
 
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Phantom of the Opera [VHS]

Nelson Eddy , Susanna Foster , Arthur Lubin    Parental Guidance   VHS Tape
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Actors: Nelson Eddy, Susanna Foster, Claude Rains, Edgar Barrier, Leo Carrillo
  • Directors: Arthur Lubin
  • Language English
  • Classification: PG
  • Studio: Universal
  • VHS Release Date: 7 May 2001
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00004R6HK
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 6,017 in Video (See Top 100 in Video)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

This 1943 version of the horror story is more Technicolor musical than scare piece. Claude Rains plays the unfortunate, masked anti-hero, but he doesn't get the room to showcase a promising and sympathetic performance. Susanna Foster and Nelson Eddy, on the other hand, get plenty of screen time to warble. Well worth a visit just for the look of the film, which won an Oscar for cinematography. --Tom Keogh

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
20 of 21 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
Gaston Leroux's penny-dreadful novel was hardly the stuff of great literature, but it did manage to tap into the public consciousness with its gas-light-gothic tale of a beautiful singer menaced by a horrific yet seductive serial killer lurking in the forgotten basement labyrinths of the Paris Opera. Lon Chaney's silent classic kept the basic elements of the novel intact--and proved one of the great box office hits of its day, a fact that prompted Universal Studios to contemplate a remake throughout most of the 1930s. Although several proposals were considered (including one intended to feature Deanna Durbin, who despised the idea and derailed the project with a flat refusal), it wasn't until 1943 that a remake reached the screen. And when it did, it was an eye-popping Technicolor extravaganza, all talking, all singing, and dancing. The Phantom had gone Hollywood musical.

In many respects this version of PHANTOM anticipates the popular Andrew Lloyd Webber stage musical, for whereas the Chaney version presented the Phantom as a truly sinister entity, this adaptation presents the character as one more sinned against than sinning--an idea that would color almost every later adaptation, and Webber's most particularly so. But it also shifts the focus of the story away from the title character, who is here really more of a supporting character than anything else. The focus here is on Paris Opera star Christine Dae, here played by Susanna Foster. In this version Christine is not only adored by the Phantom; she is also romantically pursued by two suitors who put aside their differences to protect her.

Directed by Universal workhorse Arthur Lubin, this version is truly eye-popping in the way that only a 1940s Technicolor spectacular could be: the color is intensely brilliant, and Lubin makes the most of it by focusing most of his camera-time on the stage of the Paris Opera itself and splashing one operatic performance after another throughout the film. But in terms of actual story interest, the film is only so-so. Susanna Foster had a great singing voice, but she did not have an equally memorable screen presence, and while the supporting cast (which includes Nelson Eddy, Edgar Barrier, Leo Carrillo, and Jane Farrar) is solid enough they lack excitement. And the pace of the film often seems a bit slow, sometimes to the point of clunkiness.

The saving grace of the film--in addition to the aforementioned photography, which won an Oscar--is Claude Rains. A great artist, Rains did not make the mistake of copying Chaney, and although the script robs the Phantom of his most fearsome aspects, Rains fills the role with subtle menace that is wonderful to behold, completely transcending the film's slow pace, the lackluster script, and "sanitized for your protection" tone so typical of Universal Studios in the 1940s.

Like most "Universal Horror" DVD packages, this one is superior. The centerpiece of the bonus material is a very nice documentary, "The Opera Ghost: A Phantom Unmasked," which details the origins of the novel and the numerous film adaptations of it--and which is actually quite a bit more interesting than the 1943 film itself. There is also a nice, if somewhat perfunctory, audio commentary track by historian Scott McQueen, trailers, stills, and the like. But when everything is said and done, it's the film that counts. And unless you're a diehard Phantom fan you're likely to be unimpressed.

--GFT (Amazon Reviewer)--

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:VHS Tape
rather a letdown considering this was made by the leading studio in "horror" films, this version concentrates too much on the music rather the title character.

claude rains easily outshines everyone in the entire cast as the disfigured masetro; why he wasn't given top-star billing for this film i do not know. his being cast as the phantom is inspirational but he is also my second favourite actor to play the part after lon chaney.

it is the romance between nelson eddy and suzanne foster that takes centre stage which verges on becoming tiresome.

i have to admit that the costume worn by claude rains, is the best one ever used as far as i'm concerned. his lurking around corners and casting shadows is quite creepy indeed.

the makeup, alas, is one of the worst that i've ever seen; certainly no match for the work of art designed and applied by lon chaney in the 1925 version. this 40s attempt doesn't even cover all of claude rains's face. a pity. the unmasking scene lacks any real dramatic impact as a result.

the scene in which rains changes from a peaceful but stressed person to a raving lunatic when his music is stolen, is acted with the kind of conviction that i have rarely witnessed in all the films i've seen(and i seen a lot of them over the years).

for those who like musicals, this film will be right up your street. otherwise, have patience and enjoy another splendid performance from claude rains.
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Format:VHS Tape
Are you phantom fans ready for a night at the opera?Yes!
From all the versions I saw this is my favourite.no doubt,gentlmen and ladies.It is beacause starting form the very begining with film's wonderful opera house set and stage.The music and opera sequences are wonderful and memorial in every way.Claude Rains is the best phantom with his elegant voice and charismatic performance through the film.There a few moments that the phantom really frightening.All in all,this technicolor horror,romance,thriller and fantasy movie is worth watching.
And there is also a wonderful end,a thrilling one.much more then lon chaney's 1925 version's end.
Phantom fans-what are you waiting for?
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Well it's one of the most beautiful Universal Horror movies out...
Phantom of the Opera is directed by Arthur Lubin and features a collective of writers adapting from Gaston Leroux's novel. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Spike Owen
Nostalgic experience
I first saw this film in the late 1940's and it remained in my mind as excellent viewing, supported with beautiful music. Read more
Published on 23 May 2010 by Charles Cane
an overlooked classic
THIS VERSION OF PHANTOM IS ONE OF THE OVERLOOKED CLASSICS OF THE 1940'S
IN STUNNUING TECHNICOLOR AND WITH A GREAT PERFORMANCE BY CLAUDE RAINS,
HOWEVER AS OFTEN MENTIONED,... Read more
Published on 10 April 2009 by B. Gilbert
A sad, menacing, sympathetic performance by Claude Raines, plus nice...
The 1943 version of Phantom of the Opera has always had, for me, an endearing quality of good-hearted wholesomeness, even with face-destroying acid, deranged obsession, and love so... Read more
Published on 2 Aug 2008 by C. O. DeRiemer
very loosely based on the novel
If you are in any way a fan of the novel 'The Phantom of the Opera' and think, by seeing this, the magic of the novel will appear before your very eyes on the big screen, think... Read more
Published on 24 Sep 2007 by Civ Star Lou
best phantom movie version ever.Perfect!
Are you ready for a night at the opera,phantom fans?
For me,this is the best phantom movie version ever.Starting from it's begining,with it's beautiful set and stage. Read more
Published on 24 Oct 2003 by Matan Ben Ishay
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