This film "Phantom" takes everything that's wrong with Broadway and puts it on the big screen in a gaudy splat. As live shows become increasingly more expensive to mount, the tickets become more and more expensive. Understandably, having spent all that dough, audiences expect a spectacle -- not even necessarily a good story, or hummable songs, or character development that makes sense. They're just waiting for the chandelier to fall.
The stakes are lower in the movie theater -- after all, 10 bucks a ticket is a lot less than $100, and a trip to the multiplex doesn't entail trekking to New York, or to the nearest big city to catch a road-company production. But the terms have already been set. A movie version of "The Phantom of the Opera" has to wow 'em at all costs.
"The Phantom of the Opera"
Directed by Joel Schumacher
Starring Emmy Rossum, Gerard Butler, Patrick Wilson
To that end, Schumacher goes all out, making everything extra big and extra fancy. The production design is lavish, in a pissing-cupid kind of way. When the Phantom lures the innocent, wide-eyed Christine (she's done up to look like a Keane painting with breasts) to his damp, candlelit grotto, they walk through winding corridors, trot along on horseback and drift on a gondola to get there (singing, if you could call it that, all the way). Christine is both intrigued and horrified by the Phantom's dark, unspoken but obvious desires, and when she faints, he drapes her limp, peignoir-clad body on a bed shaped like a golden seashell. Later, she awakes and tries to remove his mask, which clings to his face by no visible means. (Perhaps it's stuck on with pus?) Her curiosity angers him, and in a rage, he sends her back to the land of the living. Ooh! Punish me with kisses, why don't you?
All of this may make "Phantom" sound like good, campy fun, but it's far too solemn and overfed (and too slow) for that. Schumacher lays the faux-Gothic romance on with a trowel, and all of the actors seem lost amid the glitz. Miranda Richardson appears as the stern, mousy Madame Giry, the opera company's strict den mom -- she wears her hair in a tight braid and delivers every line in a Cloris Leachman "He vass my boyfrent" accent. Butler is supposed to be menacingly sexy, but he reminds me of nothing so much as the bland, waxy Lotharios you used to see in bad perfume commercials of the '70s. Rossum has just one mood, that of tortured innocence, and she flogs it -- she's exhausting to watch. Wilson can sing, and when he's on-screen you almost feel yourself beginning to breathe again. And the lovely Irish actor Ciarán Hinds appears in a dashing pompadour and mustache that give him an uncanny resemblance to the young Frank Morgan.
But Schumacher is more like a Humvee than a director. He barrels ahead with reckless disregard for his actors' capabilities and limitations -- all he seems to care about are the look of the thing and the scale. "The Phantom of the Opera" lasts about 629 minutes (or maybe it's just 627), and it isn't over until the chandelier falls. If only we weren't left feeling like its crushed, helpless victims, pinned under 1,000 pounds of cheap crystal.
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About the writer
Stephanie Zacharek is a senior writer for Salon Arts & Entertainment.
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