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The Phantom of the Opera [Blu-ray]

4.8 out of 5 stars 24,715 ratings
IMDb7.2/10.0
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Genre Drama
Format Blu-ray, Closed-captioned, Multiple Formats, Color, Dubbed, NTSC, Dolby, Widescreen, Subtitled, AC-3
Contributor Emmy Rossum, Patrick Wilson, Victor McGuire, Joel Schumacher, Kevin McNally, Carlos Otero, Gerard Butler, James Fleet, Miranda Richardson, Simon Callow, Judith Paris, Mark Carroll, Andrew Lloyd Webber, Paul Brooke, Imogen Bain, Murray Melvin, Minnie Driver, Ciaran Hinds, Gavin Lee See more
Initial release date 2006-10-31
Language English, French
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Product Description

From director Joel Schumacher ("Phone Booth," "A Time to Kill") comes this big-screen adaptation of Andrew Lloyd Webber's smash-hit stage musical! The Phantom, a disfigured musical genius, haunts the catacombs beneath the Paris Opera, waging a reign of terror over its occupants. He takes an interest in a young singer and, through tutelage and terror, helps her rise to stardom, only to see her fall in love with a handsome young man. The Phantom vows revenge and kidnaps her to be his eternal bride, but ultimately is transformed by the compassion of the young woman, and the love she feels for her young man, making the ultimate sacrifice in order that she may live and be happy. Starring Gerard Butler ("300," "Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life"), Emmy Rossum ("The Day After Tomorrow," "Mystic River"), Oscar-nominee Miranda Richardson ("The Hours," "Sleepy Hollow"), Emmy and Golden Globe-nominee Patrick Wilson ("Hard Candy," TV's "Angels in America"), Simon Callow ("Shakespeare in Love") and Ciarán Hinds ("Road to Perdition," "The Sum of All Fears"). Nominated for three Academy Awards!


Bonus Content:

Additional Scenes: "No-one Would Listen" Approx. 4 Mins. Documentary: Behind the Mask - The Story of the Phantom of the Opera Featurette: The Making of The Phantom of the Opera in 3 Spellbinding Act s: Preproduction, The Director, Production

Product details

  • Aspect Ratio ‏ : ‎ 2.20:1
  • Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No
  • MPAA rating ‏ : ‎ PG-13 (Parents Strongly Cautioned)
  • Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.5 x 5.25 x 0.5 inches; 0.64 ounces
  • Item model number ‏ : ‎ 110810
  • Director ‏ : ‎ Joel Schumacher
  • Media Format ‏ : ‎ Blu-ray, Closed-captioned, Multiple Formats, Color, Dubbed, NTSC, Dolby, Widescreen, Subtitled, AC-3
  • Run time ‏ : ‎ 2 hours and 22 minutes
  • Release date ‏ : ‎ October 31, 2006
  • Actors ‏ : ‎ Gerard Butler, Emmy Rossum, Patrick Wilson, Minnie Driver, Ciaran Hinds
  • Dubbed: ‏ : ‎ French
  • Subtitles: ‏ : ‎ English, French, Spanish
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English (Dolby Digital 5.1), French (Dolby Digital 5.1)
  • Studio ‏ : ‎ Warner Home Video
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B000JLSLZQ
  • Writers ‏ : ‎ Andrew Lloyd Webber
  • Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 1
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.8 out of 5 stars 24,715 ratings

Customer reviews

4.8 out of 5 stars
24,715 global ratings

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sparkling screen incarnation of Lloyd Webber's PHANTOM
5 out of 5 stars
sparkling screen incarnation of Lloyd Webber's PHANTOM
Joel Schumacher's film version of Andrew Lloyd Webber's THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA is a perfect testemant to what has become the most successful stage production of all time. Though many people are still wondering why the film wasn't made with it's original stage leads Michael Crawford and Sarah Brightman, the energetic young cast featured add their own magic to the gothic love story.The story is well-known and I won't go into a blow-by-blow account. Young diva Christine is mysteriously tutored by someone she believes is her `Angel of Music'. In reality it is the feared Erik, phantom of the Paris Opera. Complications arise when Christine is reunited with her childhood sweetheart Raoul. Erik, too, becomes infatuated with his young pupil. As passions rise, Christine and Raoul are dragged to the brink of destruction as Erik vows to make Christine his bride...Gerard Butler is a fine Phantom, especially adept at making the role very human and vulnerable, yet also menacing and violent when the situation calls for it. His singing voice is acceptable ("Music of the Night", the Phantom's aria, is sailed through with little trouble). On the whole his performance is quite excellent.Emmy Rossum might very well be the real discovery in this movie. Little more than a teenager when she made her auspicious debut here as Christine, Miss Rossum is the innocent heart of the story. A trained New York opera singer since childhood, Emmy Rossum sings Christine's intense and often very difficult arias to perfection. "Think of Me", "All I Ask of You" and in particular her heart-wrenching "Wishing You Were Somehow Here Again" . On stage the role of Christine is usually shared by two performers who alternate the 8 performance-week between them, so demanding is the role of Christine. Rossum could not have picked a more challenging role to make her big debut, but emerges triumphant.Patrick Wilson, a veteran of Broadway musicals, is perfectly-cast as Raoul. The role has been somewhat re-written here as a more swashbuckling physical adversary to the Phantom. He also has a fantastic singing voice as you would expect from his stage pedigree. Minnie Driver is a hilarious delight as Carlotta, the resident diva of the Opera Populaire who is pushed from her perch to make way for up-and-comer Christine. Driver's singing is of course dubbed (by Margaret Preece, who has played Carlotta onstage). Ciaran Hinds and Simon Callow play the Opera's bewildered and guileless managers Andre and Firmin to perfection. Miranda Richardson adds untold depths to the role of mysterious ballet mistress Madame Giry. In the play her connection with the Phantom is merely alluded to, but here the full story of Giry and the Phantom is revealed. Jennifer Ellison plays Giry's daughter Meg with verve and spirit.Lloyd Webber has added a new number "Learn to Be Lonely" which plays over the end credits, sung by Minnie Driver in her own interesting singing voice. The movie won't displace the stage production in the eyes of it's myriad fans (it was never meant to), rather they stand side-by-side, for one cannot exist without the other.The film version of PHANTOM has been a long time coming ... but worth the wait.
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  • Reviewed in the United States on May 17, 2015
    I have to start this by saying I have no training in analyzing movies, plots, acting abilities or stage sets and everything that goes with a critic's review. Everything that I write in this review is my own opinion and how I see things in my life that relate to this story. This movie speaks to me on so many levels. I do not know how many times I have watched the video. I have seen the Broadway Across America version on stage. I have read the book. I have watched recordings of live performances. I love the movie because you get to know the characters in more depth. When The Phantom of the Opera came to theatres, I talked my husband to taking me. I have not yet tired of this story. So many times as I am tackling the mundane things in life and I wish I had a fablous musical score to accompany me. Along with the fantastic wardrobe. Depending on the mood I am in or what I am currently going through in my life each major role speaks to me. At different times I have felt stronger connections with different characters.
    The role of Christine speaks to me from a point of view that we want to be loved passionately and unconditionally. Often we are torn from the "good guy" who we know will love and support us and the "dark horse" who may appeal to our more base desires. Christine has suffered loss that many of us know on a personal level. To cope with this she holds on to an ideal to give her comfort through her most difficult times in her life. Same with myself, many of the ideals that I hold dear I use for comfort to help me to endure through life's many difficulties. And all the while she maintains her femineity and innocence. As the story progresses we see her grow from a child-like trusting character to a woman who has overcome many hardships. Her character continues to grow through the story just as we grow in life.
    Raoul, the protector with his unwavering love and devotion to his beloved Christine, tells me that we all need someone to be there no matter what happens. They will fight to the death for us to be happy and safe. His unwavering devotion and adoration of Christine is not just for her talents and beauty but for her sensitivity to the human plight, this never diminishes. He truly loves her whole-souled. He helps Christine rise to any challenge that life throws at her.
    Then there is the Phantom, he appeals to the adventure and romance that many of us wish to experience in our life. His idolizing of Christine blinds him to many of the consequences that he will have to face based on his actions to posess Christine. So many times we lock ourselves into one course of action based on what we desire, we become so blinded to getting what we want that we convince ourselves that whatever we are doing it is for the greater good. But is it really?
    There is Madame Giry, the mother figure who is willing to sacrifice anyone needed to keep her own child safe and yet she battles with her conscience when she realizes the mortal danger that Christine finds herslef in. She can justify anything that happens, that what the Phantom does is okay because of all the predjuice and horrors that he has suffered, that his genius allows him his eccentricities. Sometimes I feel that she really pulls the strings of this drama. She knows the secrets of everyone. But I don't see this everytime I watch it again it is a mood thing.
    There is Meg, to me she is the one who truly loves the Phantom with all his darkenss as well as his gifts. She secretly is jealous of Christine and her gifts because they recieve the attentions of the Phantom. But her sweet and gentle nature prevails throughout so she represents the good that we have to give to all those we meet.
    The Diva Caroletta reminds me of all those we meet that are wrapped up in their own self importance they don't see what really is important only to find out to late they have lost the thing or person that they truly love. So the fame and fortune that they craved was all for naught. There are times we crave the recognition of our accomplishments at the cost of others. Where we make decisions for ourselves that further our intrests and we do this by manipulating the suitation we are in to our benefit instead of waiting to see how things will play out.
    The "new Owners" remind me of the ones we meet as we walk through life, who's only concern is money and prestige. The outrageous hair and outfits loudly announce that they have finally made it to the bigtime.
    Some of us secretly love to be flattered, pampered, and pandered to. This makes for an interesting dynamic with the Owners and Caroletta. So much of what they want is the same thing so they use each other to get what they desire only to lose everything. When things do not go as Carlotta planned and a new stars arises, Carlotta starts to lose her grip on the accolades that fed her ego. When someone enters our life that can do something we are proud of doing or feel we are good at it bruises our ego. It hurts and often we fail to reconize all they have to offer because we have let ourselves be wounded. This shows throughout the movie as you watch how Carlotta behaves towards Christine.
    The dynamic of Christine and the Phantom is a powerful one. They feed each others artistic desires. They fuel each others need to create and perform. The idea that this is real and lasting love comes to the test when another suitor comes calling for Christine's attentions. They love each other because they have so much in common, they speak on a level that many of us "regular" folk could only dream of. With a look or touch they evoke tremendous feeling, but how real is it? For the whole relationship was based on deceit. There are parts of us that we are embarrassed or ashamed of so we mask these parts of ourselves in the hope that we can win the affections of the world. When these are revealed in the garish light of day, it can be quite disconcerting. When Christine unmasks the Phantom for the first time the reaction is incredibly volatile. When (what the Phantom sees as his ugliness) his face is revealed it is shocking to Christine for what her eyes see is not what the heart sees. There is that instant painful judgement without knowing the full story. I am sure that all have acted this way at sometime or another.
    It is my personal belief that Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber sees himself as the Phantom. In writting this for Sarah Brightman he was able to possess her and her talents for a short time. But that did not last just as Christine and the Phantom did not last. After the creatitivity that they both share there is not much else to sustain a relationship. This does not mean that I do not root for Christine and the Phantom to get together and find their happily ever after, but I still am torn.
    I personally have a Raoul for a husband. He would give his life just to see that I had what I wanted out of life. That sense of completeness one feels when they have a person like this in their life is truly profound. It enables us to reach the greatest hights. We have the confidence to face our biggest challenges knowing that whatever the outcome we have a saftey net. They will never fail to be there, even if they express doubt their overall belief in us as a person wins out. I hope that to the people who are truly important in my life they can say this about me.
    When I watch the opening auction scene I feel melancholy at the fact that these items are up for sale to the highest bidder. Precious memories that tell a beautiful story all to be had for ready money. There are times in life that it seems things so important to us at one time are for sale to the highest bidder. How many people will never know "my story"? At the same time how easy it is for seemingly ordinary and mundane objects to trigger powerful memories from our past, just as Raoul revisits his life on the drive to the grave.
    The look on the new owners faces as they enter the opera house, says "We have made it! Our dreams have been fullfilled". But this is really the beginning of the end for these two.
    When "little Lottie" is trying to explain to her new suitor her deep seated beliefs after her debut performance it is painful to see, how many times have we tried to talk to a loved one only to have them dismiss us along with our ideas.
    When the Phantom finally calls Chrristine for their first face to face performance Christine shows reluctance for somewhere deep inside she knows that this isn't a safe course to follow. The thrill of what is offered is so enticing that sometimes we fail to make good decisions. But if Christine didn't go, no story, so go she must. The appeal of having a dark, dashing, well cut and dressed figure appeals to the vanity that we all feel. The idea that someone is so consumed with us that every waking thought they have is of us, it is flattering and can blind us to the dangers we face in a relationship like this.
    The dichotomy of the Phantom and Raoul is vast. One would do anything to posses the girl and her talent the other would do anything for her. Different backgrounds and life experience lead these two men to the roles they will play in Christine's life. How much of it is enviroment or the person? Is Raoul naturally a "good" person just as the Phantom is a villian? It raises the whole nature or nurture question.
    I used to find the part of the movie where they are singing about all the notes they recieved a bit tedious and felt that it did not move the plot forward. I have since changed my mind after the thousandth viewing. Everyone has their viewpoint of current events at the opera house and a note so the conclusions they reach about the sender causes discord. How often have we been confronted or confronted someone without the whole story. Some of the characters look for the whole picture others choose to see what they want and cannot be convinced of anything else.
    I very much enjoy Prima Donna. The conversations that overlap in this song are wonderful. I had to watch several times to get the whole story. It really helps to watch on closed caption so you can read the lyrics as they are sung. I am sure that most of us have had dreams of the "world at our feet" but what do they really have? We see this when the Prima Donna and the Owners lose everything and become forgotten secondary players in this Opera.
    When the Phantom is driven to finally take a life during the Opera it is all because he feels denied and rejected. That his authority has been ignored. This is were he starts losing control of Christine. So many times we have feelings like this and sometimes we behave rashly. I am not saying that the Phantom's actions are justified but if we can feel for him and his actions can we not feel for those who have made mistakes in real life?
    The Owners of the Opera House scramble to keep up appearences even though everything they have worked for unravels quickly. Keeping up appearences need I say more.
    The game of cat and mouse the Phantom has on the upper rigging is nail biting when I place myself there. I feel the anxiety that accompanies high pressure suitations especially when we feel we have no control of the outcome. This is all played out between the Phantom and Joseph to culminate in the murder of Joseph.
    The scene where Christine and Raoul profess their undying love for each other is tender and moving. Raoul finally sees how Christine is tormented and Christine sees that Raoul can help rescue her. But the part of this scene I find most compelling is where Christine drops the Phantom's rose. It seems a small unconscious action but for the Phantom it is edivence of the ultimate rejection. The love he felt quickly turns to rage. He makes a few more attempts to posses Christine. But ultimately when she drops the rose he knows that she will never belong to him. I find this heartbreaking. I feel the Phantom's pain. Everything that the Phantom has desired in life and in love, Raoul has. His hate for Raoul manifests itself in the Cemetery sword fight scene. I personally have a bit of a hard time finding the sword fight believable. This is an outright physical confrontation when the Phantom works in shadows. I feel that the Phantom may have the mental agility for a sword fight but not the physical prowress or training. This is the only minor irritation I have with this movie. I still enjoy watching the swordfight. It is thrilling to see.
    Christine wishes to say good-bye to her father or the idea that her father has sent her an angel to guide her through life. Here the Phantom tries again to pull Christine into the idea that he is the master of her fate. When Christine stops Raoul from harming the Phantom, the Phantom becomes disgusted with the pity and mercy that was showed to him. The object of his desire pitied him and living with that almost becomes unbearable. Since she made that choice the Phantom forces her choose again in the climax of the story. She has to choose between staying with the Phantom and saving her beloved's life or rejecting the Phantom and watching her beloved die, she has reached the point of no return. How many times are we faced with decisions that there is no return from. From here on out everything has changed for us.
    The stunning visual feast that Masquerade serves is delicious. Here they are celebrating their win over the Phantom (again my opinion) by mocking him in a Masquerade ball. All wear masks and revel in their seeming triumph. All the while the not so privileged class are having a good time getting what they can from societies elite. For the Phantom it isn't a mocking but an invitation for him to personally appear. The tension is palpable. When again the Phantom is in close promixity to Christine you can see that she is not quite over the idea of the Phantom.The Phantom passive aggressively insults her voice and talent but still desires her and uses this to try and maneuver events to have Christine again under his spell.
    Raoul finally sees the very real danger Christine is in and now acts maybe not wisely but quickly. Raoul persists in finding out the whole story of how the Phantom came to be in an effort to understand the nature of the beast. The back story reveals that this poor person has had a cruel existance and from what he has seen and learned from humanity it is clear why he reacts the way he does. (Here I am caught up in the story I forget to mention how I relate to it.)
    The Opera house Owners try to entrap the Phantom by using his own Opera against him. Christine is bait and hates the idea that she must now play this role. I feel that this is in part because she does not fully trust herself and her feelings for Raoul. Are they, is she strong enough to triumph? The inner conflict that she is dealing with is almost paralyzing for her. Christine realizes she will have to choose between the two, that this will be the only way she will have any peace in life, the two male leads can not share her. Everything rests on her performance in the Phantom's Opera. The pressures we face in life make this relatable. When we face a seemingly insurmountable challenge and we feel we are the only ones who can solve it the whole outcome is up to us, that it all rests with us and how we perform.
    Don Juan surely needs to be watched with captions on to capture the full idea of the opera. You can see why the attendees are shocked while they watch. For the time period this is prortrayed the opera is shocking. The notes Christine hits in this song, the pure crystal clear highs to the lusty lows are amazing. I have not any talent for music or singing but I love it and appreciate it. I get chills through this song when Christine sings. The picture the Phantom paints for her in this duet is evocative and appeals to the core of Christine. No longer portraying himself as an angel but now shows himself as a man desiring her every way a person can. For a brief moment it appears that she is once again the Phantom's. Even Raoul sees and feels this by his reaction to the duet. When the Phantom pledges to Christine his love for her and plead for her compaionship he uses the same words that Raoul has used to declare his love. Christine comes to the point where she has to reveal the Phantom no matter the pain she causes him.
    This brings on the splendid chandelier crash. From what I understand they had one shot to film this. If you get to see the performance live this one scene makes the whole show. Even if you are not an opera lover it is worth it to see this.
    After this it is do or die for the Phantom. All airs and graces have been abandoned, it is now all about the absoulte ownership of Christine. Everytime I watch this I hold my breath in hopes that Christine will make a different choice. In spite of all the flaws in the Phantom I wish he could have his heart's desire. Personally the end is where I feel the Phantom looks his best. No mask no hiding behind hair pieces and fancy clothes. You see the raw magnetism that he posseses.
    At the same time Raoul's passionate pleas appeal to the comapssionate side of a person. We want him to win for he has been the ultimate white knight.
    When Christine makes her choice the Phantom comes to realize that he can not own a person. Christine's true love for Raoul makes this a bittersweet victory. He finally had a taste of what he wanted but because it was not freely given to him, he releases them. In spite of everything he has wanted and worked for ultimately he lets her go because he really loves her. The one last moment when Christine returns the ring to the Phantom you see the last glimmer of hope that she will choose him. When that no longer remains there is nothing left for him in the opera house. This scene makes me cry everytime. I get emotional over the fact that now all hope is gone. How does any person bear that?
    The closing scene of Christine's grave is moving. In honor of her Raoul leaves the Phantom's music box and the Phantom leaves the ring that Raoul had originally given Christine for their engagement. I feel it is a silent acknowledgement that they both loved her and will keep her memory.
    If I could crawl into this movie to live this story I would. Every role speaks to some part of my life. I feel that this is a major reason this is so popular. There is something that everyone can relate to. The story makes you feel for all the characters. A story that can make us feel something down to our core becomes part of us. So though I am not musically endowed there are still parts of the indivdual characters that I will carry with me. I would wish that when watching this movie that you watch with an open mind and see how this relates to you as a person. How do you identify with all the complex characters in this Opera?
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  • Reviewed in the United States on June 5, 2005
    Andrew Lloyd Webber's music has given me much pleasure over the years. I live in Manhattan, and although I don't usually go to Broadway musicals unless I hear rave reviews, I saw "Phantom of the Opera," and loved it. Director Joel Schumacher's film production is simply terrific, although somewhat flawed! I admit it is a bit bombastic at times, but the music is spectacular, as are the sets, cast and acting. I don't want to compare screen versus stage versions.They are totally different mediums and each lends unique and special moments. I have heard some call the film vulgar, and I say "Boo" on their snobbishness!

    As most know, this is a bizarre beauty and the beast kind of love story. Set in 1870's Paris, a talented, mysterious genius with a terribly scarred face lives in secret beneath the opera house, haunting the building, and those who spend much time there, with his spectral presence. Frequently heard from but never seen, he composes brilliant music, writes operas, designs sets, etc.. His life of solitude and bitterness have driven him mad. Unbeknownst to any, he has been lovely, young soprano Christine Daae's mentor and voice teacher since her childhood. The young woman believes that he is her beloved deceased father's spirit and calls him her "angel of music." He has grown to love the innocent ingenue with the exquisite voice. When the two appear together the ambiance is shadowed and otherworldly, and Christine always seems hypnotized - which is quite credible given the Phantom's sheer force of personality. One night the Prima Donna walks out on a performance and Christine takes her place. When Raoul, a wealthy young nobleman, (Patrick Wilson), sees the extraordinary young singer, he falls in love. The Phantom does not take competition lightly.

    Schumacher's production is fantastically gothic, as is Gaston Leroux's novel, upon which all opera phantoms are based. Gerard Butler, as the deformed anti-hero, is the epitome of the dominant Gothic Hero. He would be superb as Mr. Rochester or Heathcliff.....but I digress. Let it suffice to say he makes a superior "Phantom of the Opera." Although I very much like his voice, some say it does not measure up to the rest of the casts'. Mr. Butler, however, more than makes-up for any lack of vocal power with his charisma, virility and powerful stage presence. He uses eroticism and sensuality to seduce, perfectly, especially when he brings Christine to his lair, deep in the watery depths beneath the opera house, and sings "Music of the Night." "Touch me, trust me / savour each sensation!" And, "Open up your mind / let your fantasies unwind / in this darkness which you know you cannot fight." He smolders in "Point of No Return," which is one very steamy number. There are times when I see Butler's Phantom as a vampire-like figure - a dark, deeply handsome, all powerful vampire - not a ghoulish one. With his slicked back dark wig, tux, sensual lips and mask, he looks a forceful figure from the underworld - (which he is) - beckoning Christine to leave the "garish light of day," and come, "Leave all thoughts of the world you knew before! / Let your soul take you where you long to be! / Only then can you belong to me." In the scene where he spies on Christine and Raoul on the opera roof, hiding amidst the gargoyles, he picks up the rose she has dropped in the snow and holds it to his lips. Almost everything in the shot is black and white except for the red rose at his mouth...like drops of blood. That's vampire-like!! (reminiscent of Frank Langella's 1970's Dracula, not Bela Lugosi's).

    Eighteen year-old Emmy Rossum is absolutely luminous as Christine. The sound of her spectacular, opera-trained voice is alone worth the price of the DVD. Ms. Rossum is a talented actress, and her innocent fresh look is a perfect compliment to Butler's dark, menacing specter, and Patrick Wilson's handsome swashbuckling viscount. Wilson's romantic handsomeness and fabulous tenor voice make him an exceptional choice for the hero part. The real taut passion, however, is between Butler and Rossum. This magnetic force between them is one aspect of the movie I prefer over the play. The phantom is cast as a much older man in the stage production, and when he is unmasked one feels totally repulsed, and not very sympathetic. He becomes merely one more aging man lusting after a young woman. Also, Christine knows him so well that perhaps she doesn't see him as quite the monster the audience does. There are qualities she has been drawn to, before she saw his whole face. Her empathy is not totally destroyed by the grotesque image. The younger, handsomer version of the Phantom permits a certain believable ambivalence in her feelings, which makes for more tension in the storyline.

    Andrew Lloyd Weber collaborated closely with Schumacher throughout the making of the movie. The supporting cast is excellent with Miranda Richardson as Mme. Giry, Ciaran Hinds as Fermin, Simon Callow as Andre, and Minnie Driver as Carlotta, the spoiled diva. Although Ms. Driver is hilarious in her role, she spends too much time, with too many lines, onstage. The campiness works well as comic relief. However, the effect is lost with an overabundance of this and becomes kitsch.

    Finally, buy the 2-Disc Special, when purchasing the DVD. The second disc, approximately 45 minutes, is entitled "Behind the Mask: The Story of The Phantom of the Opera," and documents the journey from Gaston Leroux's novel to the silent film, to Andrew Lloyd Webber's stage version, and finally to Joel Schumacher's feature film. Included in this documentary are interviews with the principals. There are also several wonderful clips from early performances that took place at Andrew Lloyd Webber's estate before the musical was completed. Also included is an excised scene which features Gerard Butler as the Phantom, singing his part in "No One Would Listen."
    JANA
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  • Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2025
    Magnifico! Very, very well done production! You can tell what a feat it would be to bring this production to the play house. How much more would it have taken to orchestrate all of this in movie form, and yet they have done so rather flawlessly! Bravo! I say well done to the writers, directors, producers of, and actors in this movie! To you all, well done!
  • Reviewed in the United States on March 9, 2025
    Magnifico! I love the Broadway show so a friend loaned me the movie and I loved it just as much! I decided to buy it and it’s just as good as I remember!
  • Reviewed in the United States on March 19, 2025
    Great musical Gerald Butler and Emma Rossum is perfect.

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  • Cliente Amazon
    5.0 out of 5 stars Ben fatto
    Reviewed in Italy on November 11, 2024
    Amo il musical e volevo vedere la realizzazione cinematografica. Il taglio resistivo di questo film è molto romantico, ma si percepisce comunque il dramma della solitudine sia del fantasma che di Christine. La scelta scenografica è sontuosa, si vedono chiaramente tutti gli elementi che Webber propone, da musicista di formazione classica ci sono i chiari riferimenti a Do Giovanni di Mozart, fino a ritmi alla L'urto Weil. Geniale!
    Veramente soddisfatta di questo film.
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  • Priscilla
    4.0 out of 5 stars Zeer tevreden
    Reviewed in the Netherlands on April 23, 2022
    Zeer tevreden. Goede kwaliteit. Goed ontvangen.
  • mar lemus
    5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente
    Reviewed in Mexico on November 8, 2024
    Llegó bien, a pesar que el embalaje ya no es como antes. Solo puedo dar mi opinión en cuanto al producto y no a la película 😜
    Todo a la perfección ✨️
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    mar lemus
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Excelente

    Reviewed in Mexico on November 8, 2024
    Llegó bien, a pesar que el embalaje ya no es como antes. Solo puedo dar mi opinión en cuanto al producto y no a la película 😜
    Todo a la perfección ✨️
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  • W. Walz
    5.0 out of 5 stars Hab' ich nicht mit gerechnet. .... BRAVO (!) fortissimo !
    Reviewed in Germany on November 13, 2010
    Ich muss gestehen, damit habe ich nicht gerechnet.
    Die Umsetzung ist Joel Schumacher mehr als gelungen.
    So sehr, dass ich ihn tags darauf ein zweites Mal sehen MUSSTE.
    Vorweg: Einziger zu bemängelnder Negativpunkt wäre vielleicht der, dass nach der "Maskenball-Szene" der Film hätte etwas gestrafft sein können (die letzten 30 Minuten ca. ein Drittel kürzer).
    Dieser Negativpunkt -wenn überhaupt- geht aber durch die tollen (Bühnen)Kulissen, die fulminante Ausstattung, sowie der grandiosen Soundkulisse letztendlich flöten. Der deutsche -glasklare- DTS-HD-Ton in den Musikszenen setzt da noch dem Originalton ("nur" Einfach-DTS) einen drauf. Ist aber wiederum Geschmacksache, ob man die durch die Bank gut gewählten Darsteller, in DEUTSCH, oder im gedrehten Originalton zwitschern hören möchte. Man könnte auch noch in der deutschen Version bemängeln, dass beim Singen die Lippensynchronität oft nicht perfekt ist. Aber da werden sich wohl nur DIE dran stoßen, DIE die Flöhe husten hören bzw. wenig Sachverstand mitbringen; das opulente Filmmusical einfach kritisieren wollen. Scheint es bestimmt so gut wie unmöglich, eine gesungene Textübersetzung ins Deutsche synchron mit der fremdsprachigen Lippenbewegungen im Einklang zu bringen.
    Noch etwas zu Krögers Stimme. Viele Liebhaber hätten da lieber das düster klingende Organ eines Rudolz, Schulze oder sogar von Hoffmann gesehen/gehört. Mag es Geschmacksache sein und vielleicht auch eine Auslegung des Phantomcharakters. Man kann natürlich das Phantom als "Monster" im Sinne von "gruselig" sehen, so wie es in der Stummfilmadation des Gaston Leroux-Roman vorkommt. Da wäre ein düstere Organ natürlich fesselnd. Hier, in der opulenten Schumacher-Musicalverfilmung, liegt der Schwerpunkt der Figur mehr bei der seelischen Zerrissenheit des Phantoms. Da sehe/höre ich die hellere Stimmfarbe von Kröger aber klar im Vorteil. In den Szenen seiner Verzweiflung (z.B. Spieluhrszene in den Katakomben) wirkt der entstellt Besessene dadurch verletzlicher, als wenn ein donnerndes oder kraftvolles Bass die Tragik zerreist. Aber Geschmacksache!
    Tatsache ist aber, wie einige anmerken, dass Kröger nicht den allerbesten seiner Gesangstage im Synchronstudio hatte. Doch der Bombast der ganzen Inszenierung gleicht dies mehr als aus.

    Fazit:
    Hab' einige der bekanntesten Musicals auf der Bühne gesehen. PHANTOM DER OPER gehörte bisher nicht dazu, obwohl ich Teile der Musik, sowie natürlich die Rahmenhandlung kannte. Diese pompöse 95 Millionen Dollar Umsetzung macht mich aber hungrig auf die Bühnenversion, die einem hier mit einer wuchtigen Heimkinosoundanlage (Gänsehaut pur; da kommt sogar der sonst meckernde Nachbar ins mitsummende Schwärmen), einer großen Bilddiagonale (50+, im absolut dunklem Wohnzimmer), ein fast identisches Liveerlebnis, vom Lümmelsofa aus, um die Ohren schlägt.
    Ich komm' selten ins Schwärmen, aber ein absolut EINZIGARTIG Heimkinoerlebnis, wenn man gepaart mit diesem Equipment, diesen Musicalfilm genießt.

    4,99 STERNE,
    für diese geniale Umsetzung des Musicalwelterfolges, gepresst auf dieser mehr als gelungenen Blu-ray-Disc, die dazu mit allerhand Extras und dem deutschsprachigen Musicalstar Uwe Kröger, der dem Phantom (gespielt u. gesungen von Gerard Butler /300/RocknRolla/Beowulf & Grendel/Gesetz der Rache/P.S. Ich liebe Dich) seine deutsche Stimme leiht. Sowie Jana Werner (Preisträgerin beim Bundeswettbewerb Gesang), die dies für die Rolle der Christine (Emmy Rossum) übernahm. Ebenfalls noch zu erwähnen, die sympatische Stimme des Carsten Lepper, der den Raoul (Patrick Wilson /Alamo/Little Children/Hard Candy/Watchmen/Lakeview Terrace/Das A-Team) schon in der Stuttgarter Bühnenversion spielte.
    Die deutschen Gesangsstimmen also -auch in den sonstigen Rollen- durch die Bank Weltklasse besetzt! Da braucht sich diesmal das "Deutsch", im Gegensatz zu den fast ausschließlich selbsteingesungenen Originalstimmen, nicht zu verstecken; ganz im Gegenteil.

    P.S.
    Für die, die unbedacht an die Sache rangehen, sei gesagt: PHANTOM DER OPER, das beinhaltet schon der Titel, rückt da mehr oder minder in den Bereich der OPER, anstatt des klassischen, des amerikanischen Musicals. Ausstattungsmäßig, beeinflusst von J. Schumacher Regiestil -denke da nur an die knallige Batman-Forever-Verfilmung-, erinnert zuweilen die Verfilmung an eine opulente Franz Lehar Operette der Neuzeit.
  • mady stewart
    5.0 out of 5 stars its a keeper to watch
    Reviewed in Canada on January 23, 2025
    love this music,never knew gerad Butler sang that well,beautiful