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Phantom of the Paradise

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Phantom of the Paradise
Theatrical release poster
by John Alvin.
Directed byBrian De Palma
Written byBrian De Palma
Produced byEdward R. Pressman
Starring
Narrated byRod Serling
CinematographyLarry Pizer
Edited byPaul Hirsch
Music byPaul Williams
Production
company
Harbor Productions
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release date
  • October 31, 1974 (1974-10-31)
Running time
91 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1.3 million

Phantom of the Paradise is a 1974 American musical rock opera horror comedy film written and directed by Brian De Palma, and scored by and starring Paul Williams. In the film, a disfigured composer writes his music for a woman he loves so that she will sing it. However, a record producer betrays him and steals his music to open his rock palace, The Paradise. Betrayed, the composer dons a new appearance and exacts revenge on the producer. It co-stars William Finley and Jessica Harper.

The story is a loosely adapted mixture of several classic European works: Gaston Leroux's novel The Phantom of the Opera, Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray, and Faust by Goethe/Christopher Marlowe. [2]

The film was a box office failure and received negative reviews; however it earned praise for its music, receiving Academy Award and Golden Globe nominations. Over the years, the film has received much more positive reviews and has become a cult film.

Plot

It is 1974. Music composer/singer Winslow Leach is heard by satanic record producer Swan as Winslow plays an original composition following a set run through by the 1950s-style nostalgia band The Juicy Fruits, which Swan produces. Swan believes Winslow's music perfect to open "The Paradise"—Swan's highly anticipated new concert hall—and has his right-hand man Arnold Philbin steal it under the guise of producing Winslow.

One month later, Winslow goes to Swan's Death Records to follow up about his music but is thrown out. He sneaks into Swan's private mansion and observes several women rehearsing his music for an audition. One is Phoenix, an aspiring singer whom Winslow deems "perfect" for his music. Winslow realizes Swan's plan to open the Paradise with his music after he is thrown out again. In response, he disguises himself as a woman to sneak in and try to speak to Swan. Swan has Winslow beaten up and framed for drug dealing. Winslow is given a life sentence in Sing Sing Prison and his teeth are extracted and replaced with metal ones (part of an experimental prisoner program to decrease infection amongst inmates, funded by the Swan Foundation).

Six months later, Winslow hears that The Juicy Fruits have made an anticipated hit record of his music with Swan's backing. After a breakdown, he escapes prison in a delivery box and breaks into the Death Records building. A guard startles Winslow as he is destroying the records and presses, causing him to slip and fall face first into a record press, which crushes and burns the right half of his face and destroys his vocal cords. He barely manages to escape the studio, falling into the East River as the police arrive.

A disoriented, and now deformed, Winslow sneaks into the Paradise costume department and dons a long, black cape and a silver, owl-like mask, becoming the Phantom of the Paradise. He terrorizes Swan and his musicians and nearly kills The Beach Bums (formerly The Juicy Fruits, who have traded doo-wop for surf music). The Phantom confronts Swan who recognizes him as Winslow and offers the composer a chance to have his music produced "his" way. In a specially built recording studio, Swan provides the Phantom with an electronic voice-box, enabling him to speak and sing. Swan asks Winslow to rewrite his cantata with Phoenix in mind for the lead. Although Winslow agrees and signs a contract in blood, Swan breaks the deal by telling Philbin that he resents Phoenix's "perfection" for the role. The Phantom completes Faust, but Swan replaces Phoenix with a pill-popping male glam rock Prima donna named "Beef" in the lead of Winslow's Faust and moves Phoenix to the role of backup singer.

Swan steals the completed cantata and seals the Phantom inside the recording studio with a brick wall. Winslow escapes and confronts Beef (a comic allusion to the shower scene in Psycho) and threatens to kill him if he performs. Beef tries to flee, but is forced by Philbin to stay and play with the band The Undeads (the former Juicy Fruits and Beach Bums), a glam/Goth act who all resemble Cesare the Somnambulist from The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari. As Beef performs, the Phantom, hidden in the rafters, strikes and electrocutes Beef with a stage prop. Horrified, Philbin orders Phoenix onstage and Phoenix is an immediate sensation.

Swan seduces Phoenix in her dressing room after the show with promises of stardom. As she leaves, she is spirited away by the Phantom to the roof. The Phantom tells Phoenix his true identity and implores her to leave the Paradise so Swan won't destroy her. But Phoenix does not recognize or believe him and flees. At Swan's mansion, the Phantom observes Swan and Phoenix in a tight embrace. Heartbroken, he stabs himself through the heart with a bowie knife. However, Swan tells the Phantom that he cannot die until Swan himself has died. The Phantom attempts to stab Swan, but Swan is unharmed. Looking down at Winslow, Swan hisses in an almost reptilian voice, "I'm under contract, too."

Rolling Stone announces the wedding between Swan and Phoenix during Faust's finale. The Phantom learns that Swan made a pact with the Devil in 1953: Swan will remain youthful forever unless the videotaped recording of his contract is destroyed, and photos age and fester in his place. The tape reveals footage of Winslow signing his contract with Swan and a new one Swan made with Phoenix. On a live TV camera, the Phantom realizes Swan is planning to have Phoenix assassinated during the ceremony. He destroys all the recordings and heads off to the wedding.

During the wedding, the Phantom stops the assassin from hitting Phoenix, who instead shoots and kills Philbin. The Phantom swings onto the stage and rips off Swan's mask, exposing him as a monster on live television. A crazed Swan attempts to choke Phoenix but the Phantom intervenes and stabs him repeatedly. In doing so, the Phantom's own stab wound reopens and he starts bleeding. As he is dying, Swan is carried around by the audience, who join in stabbing him. The dying Winslow removes his mask to reveal his own face and holds out a hand to Phoenix. Swan dies, allowing Winslow to die of his own wound. As Winslow collapses, Phoenix finally recognizes him as the kind man she met at Swan's Mansion and embraces him in death.

Cast

Musical numbers

The film's soundtrack album features all songs excluding "Never Thought I'd Get to Meet the Devil" and "Faust" (1st Reprise). All words and music are by Paul Williams.

  1. "Goodbye, Eddie, Goodbye" – The Juicy Fruits
  2. "Faust" – Winslow
  3. "Never Thought I'd Get to Meet the Devil" – Winslow
  4. "Faust" (1st Reprise) – Winslow, Phoenix
  5. "Upholstery" – The Beach Bums
  6. "Special to Me" – Phoenix
  7. "Faust" (2nd Reprise) – The Phantom
  8. "The Phantom's Theme (Beauty and the Beast)" – The Phantom
  9. "Somebody Super Like You" (Beef construction song) – The Undead
  10. "Life at Last" – Beef
  11. "Old Souls" – Phoenix
  12. "The Hell of It" (plays over end credits) – Swan

Production

The record press in which William Finley's character was disfigured was a real pressing plant (an injection-molding press at Pressman Toys). He was worried about whether the machine would be safe, and the crew assured that it was. The press was fitted with foam pads (which resemble the casting molds in the press), and there were chocks put in the center to stop it from closing completely. Unfortunately, the machine was powerful enough to crush the chocks and it gradually kept closing. Finley was pulled out in time to avoid injury.

The "electronic room" in which Winslow composes his cantata (and where Swan restores his voice) is in fact the real-life recording studio The Record Plant. The walls covered with knobs are in reality an oversize custom-built electronic synthesizer dubbed TONTO, which still exists to this day.

The "Paradise" concert scenes were filmed at the Majestic Theater in Dallas, Texas. The "extras" in the audience had responded to an open cattle call for locals interested in being in the film.

Sissy Spacek was the film's set dresser, assisting her then-boyfriend-now-husband Jack Fisk, the film's production designer. She would later star in De Palma's Carrie in 1976.

A novelization of the film was written by Bjarne Rostaing. Apparently based on an early draft of the screenplay, the novel excludes the supernatural angle of the film.

Swan Song controversy

As originally filmed, the name of Swan's media conglomerate "Swan Song Enterprises" had to be deleted from the film prior to release due to the existence of Led Zeppelin's label of the same name in real life. Although most references were removed, the name "Swan Song" remains visible in several scenes.[3]

Release

Phantom of the Paradise opened in the United States on October 31, 1974 and soon flopped.[4] The film's only successful major market during its theatrical release was Winnipeg, Manitoba[5] where it opened on Boxing Day 1974 and played continuously in local cinemas over four months and over one year non-continuously until 1976.[6] The soundtrack album sold 20,000 copies in Winnipeg alone and was certified Gold in Canada.[5] It played occasionally in Winnipeg theatres in the 1990s and at the Winnipeg IMAX theatre in 2000 and always "drew a dedicated audience".[6]

The song "The Hell of It" was performed by Williams in 1977 on the Brady Bunch Variety Hour, season 1, episode 9.

Home media

The film was released on August 4, 2014 on Blu-ray by Shout! Factory under the Scream Factory label. The release features an audio commentary, interviews, alternate takes, the original "Swan Song" footage, and original trailers, tv spots and radio spots.

Awards

The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Original Song Score and Adaptation[7] and a Golden Globe Award for Best Original Score – Motion Picture.[8]

Legacy

A fan-organized festival, dubbed "Phantompalooza", was held in 2005 in Winnipeg, where the fanbase took particularly strong root.[9] That event featured appearances by Gerrit Graham and William Finley, in the same Winnipeg theatre where the film had its original run in 1975. A second "Phantompalooza" was staged April 28, 2006, reuniting many of the surviving cast members and featuring a concert by Paul Williams.

A successful concert production of the show, adapted by Weasel War Productions, premiered March 12th of 2018 at The Secret Loft in New York City.[10]

Musician Sébastien Tellier wrote about his song "Divine" on his album Sexuality: "This is my tribute to the Beach Boys and the Juicy Fruits (from the 1974 musical Phantom of the Paradise). It's about a time of innocence – when having fun was more important than picking up girls. I visualise a bunch of kids having fun on the beach and I'd really love to play with them."[11]

Upon Finley's death in April 2012, Bret Easton Ellis wrote on Twitter: "RIP: Winslow Leach a.k.a. William Finley one of my favorite characters in one of my favorite movies: De Palma's The Phantom of the Paradise."[12]

According to a Guardian interview with Daft Punk, "Hundreds of bands may tout cinematic references, yet few have them as hard-wired as Daft Punk. Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo and Thomas Bangalter met two decades ago this year, at the perfect cinema-going ages of 13 and 12... the one movie which they saw together more than 20 times was Phantom of the Paradise, Brian De Palma's 1974 rock musical, based loosely around Phantom of the Opera (both this and Electroma feature 'a hero with a black leather outfit and a helmet')."[13]

The electrocution scene in Romeo's Distress was created in tribute to Beef's death on stage.

See also

References

  1. ^ "PHANTOM OF THE PARADISE (AA)". British Board of Film Classification. August 9, 1978. Retrieved November 19, 2012.
  2. ^ Szpirglas, Jeff. "Looking back at Brian De Palma's Phantom Of The Paradise". Den of Geek!. Den of Geek.
  3. ^ https://www.swanarchives.org/production_fiasco.asp
  4. ^ Carlson, Doug. "Why Winnipeg?". p. 2. Retrieved August 13, 2012.
  5. ^ a b Carlson, Doug. "Why Winnipeg? The 1975 'Phantom of the Paraidse' Phenomenon" www.phantomoftheparadise.ca. p. 1. Retrieved August 13, 2012.
  6. ^ a b Carlson, Doug. "Why Winnipeg?". p. 4. Retrieved August 13, 2012.
  7. ^ "The 47th Academy Awards (1975) Nominees and Winners" www.oscars.org. "'Phantom of the Paradise' Song Score by Paul Williams; Adaptation Score by Paul Williams and George Aliceson Tipton". Retrieved August 13, 2012.
  8. ^ "The 32nd Annual Golden Globe Awards (1974)". Hollywood Foreign Press Association. Archived from the original on April 30, 2008. Retrieved August 13, 2012. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  9. ^ Carlson, Doug. "Why Winnipeg?". Retrieved April 26, 2012.
  10. ^ https://www.broadwayworld.com/brooklyn/article/Revised-And-Reconstructed-Brian-De-PalmasPHANTOM-OF-THE-PARADISE-Is-In-Concert-At-Underground-Venue-The-Secret-Loft-20180309
  11. ^ "Sebastien Tellier--Sexuality". Recordmakers.com. Archived from the original on June 2, 2013. Retrieved May 5, 2012. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  12. ^ "Bret Easton Ellis --April 19, 2012". Twitter. April 19, 2012. Retrieved May 5, 2012.
  13. ^ "Punk Fiction". The Guardian. 13 July 2007. Retrieved May 5, 2012.