The Phantom of the Opera (1962 film)

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The Phantom of the Opera

The Phantom of the Opera movie poster
Directed by Terence Fisher
Produced by Anthony Hinds
Basil Keys
Written by Novel:
Gaston Leroux
Screenplay:
Anthony Hinds
Starring Herbert Lom
Heather Sears
Edward de Souza
Michael Gough
Music by Edwin Astley
Distributed by Hammer Film Productions
Release date(s) June 25, 1962
Running time 84 min.
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Budget Unknown
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

The Phantom of the Opera was a lavish 1962 film produced by Hammer Film Productions and directed by Terence Fisher. It stars Herbert Lom, Heather Sears, Edward de Souza and Michael Gough. The screenplay was written by Anthony Hinds. The original music score was composed by Edwin Astley. The movie is marketed with the tagline "He hid behind a face that was not his - until her beauty stripped away his curtain of evil... his mask of horror!"

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

In this version of the story, set in Victorian London, Professor L. Petrie (played by Lom) is the Phantom, a penniless unpublished composer who is stolen from and wronged by the dastardly Lord Ambrose D'Arcy (Michael Gough) who claims Petrie's opera as his own work. Petrie is then disfigured by nitric acid in an attempt to destroy printing plates and disappears. Christine Charles (Heather Sears) is a young opera singer being secretly trained by Petrie and her charming and brave but ineffectual beau, Harry Hunter (Edward de Souza), is the producer of the opera. There is also an evil dwarf assistant to the Phantom who does most of the "dirty work" and hides Petrie in the sewer beneath the opera house. After avenging himself on D'Arcy, the Phantom makes Christine a star in his lavish opera based on Joan of Arc. At the film's conclusion, the Phantom is crushed to death by the falling chandelier as he attempts to save Christine.

  • The romantic lead (Harry Hunter) was written for Cary Grant, who had expressed his interest in doing a Hammer horror film. At the time it was common for American actors to be imported as guest stars in British films. He was not, as is often supposed, slated to play the Phantom himself. (This is the version reported by producer Anthony Hinds in Wayne Kinsey's Hammer Films: The Bray Studio Years)
Herbert Lom as Professor Petrie, AKA the Phantom of the Opera, and Heather Sears as Christine Charles
Herbert Lom as Professor Petrie, AKA the Phantom of the Opera, and Heather Sears as Christine Charles
  • Scotland Yard police inspectors (played by Liam Redmond and John Maddison) looking for the Phantom were part of additional footage filmed for the American TV showing. Hammer had nothing to do with it. Kiss of the Vampire (retitled Kiss of Evil) and The Evil of Frankenstein also had American-shot footage added to their television showings as well. This was a common practice when it was thought that parts of the film were too "intense". These scenes were edited out and more acceptable scenes replaced them or extended the running time.

Kinsey, Wayne A., Hammer Films: The Bray Studio Years, (Reynolds & Hearn, 2002)

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