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Le fantôme de l'opéra

Original title: The Phantom of the Opera
  • TV Mini Series
  • 1990–
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Charles Dance in Le fantôme de l'opéra (1990)
DramaMusicMysteryRomanceThriller

Christine Daeé, a talented young singer, after being discovered by the well-known playboy comte (earl) Philippe de Chagny, is sent by her new patron to the Paris Opera to receive classical t... Read allChristine Daeé, a talented young singer, after being discovered by the well-known playboy comte (earl) Philippe de Chagny, is sent by her new patron to the Paris Opera to receive classical training.Christine Daeé, a talented young singer, after being discovered by the well-known playboy comte (earl) Philippe de Chagny, is sent by her new patron to the Paris Opera to receive classical training.

  • Stars
    • Teri Polo
    • Charles Dance
    • Burt Lancaster
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Teri Polo
      • Charles Dance
      • Burt Lancaster
    • 34User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 2 Primetime Emmys
      • 2 wins & 5 nominations total

    Episodes2

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season1990

    Photos35

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    Top cast22

    Edit
    Teri Polo
    Teri Polo
    • Christine Daeé
    • 1990
    Charles Dance
    Charles Dance
    • The Phantom (Erik)
    • 1990
    Burt Lancaster
    Burt Lancaster
    • Gérard Carrière
    • 1990
    Adam Storke
    Adam Storke
    • Count Philippe de Chagny
    • 1990
    Ian Richardson
    Ian Richardson
    • Alain Choleti
    • 1990
    Andréa Ferréol
    Andréa Ferréol
    • Carlotta
    • 1990
    Jean-Pierre Cassel
    Jean-Pierre Cassel
    • Inspector Ledoux
    • 1990
    Jean Rougerie
    Jean Rougerie
    • Jean-Claude
    • 1990
    André Chaumeau
    • Joseph Buguet
    • 1990
    Marie-Thérèse Orain
    • Madame Giry
    • 1990
    Marie-Christine Robert
    • Flora
    • 1990
    Marie Lenoir
    • Florence
    • 1990
    Anne Roumanoff
    Anne Roumanoff
    • Fleur
    • 1990
    Jean Dupouy
    • Alfredo (singer 'Faust')
    • 1990
    Jacques Mars
    • Oroyeso (singer 'Mephisto')
    • 1990
    Anne Julia Goddet
    • Singer
    • 1990
    Frankie Pain
    Frankie Pain
    • Singer
    • 1990
    Frédéric Darié
    • Singer
    • 1990
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews34

    7.41.8K
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    Featured reviews

    10grlphantom

    A great romance story

    The Phantom of the Opera in this movie is not the classic Leroux or Webber version that many people envision. However, the story told is a good one. If you have some free time and you are ready for a good romance novel with a little bit of action, then pick up this movie. Charles Dance creates a sentimental Phantom of the Opera, but he shows a more powerful side by the end of the movie. Definitely a love story!!

    If you are a Phantom phan, or know anything about POTO, then it may help you to know that this is the movie version of the Yeston/Kopit musical. It doesn't have the songs, but it follows the same basic plot line.
    8SoutheastUK

    An interesting and entertaining version of a classic

    Aside from the original musical, this is probably the pick of the crop out of the cinematic versions of the story.

    Charles Dance does an outstanding job, making good use of the script and direction, both of which are well above average. Other performances were pretty excellent too. The music is engaging and well worth adding to any non teenage-dirtbag collection!

    This could easily have been a disaster, but instead turned out to be surprisingly - and pleasantly - good with interesting variations on a theme. Good, clean entertainment that the whole family can enjoy without the usual Hollywood crass to spoilt it! All in all, a big thumbs up to all concerned.
    10karalynnn

    Probably one of my favorite TV movies.

    Beautiful Adaptation of the Phantom of the Opera. This is NOT the musical Broadway version. The only music here is the Italian operas the opera house is performing. This version based on a stage version of the book, by noted playwright Arthur Kopit, is beautiful and well performed. I love this movie because of its character development and lack of individuals breaking into song for absolutely no reason, what so ever. The use of the Phantom's various masks to convey his mood is a very unique approach, in this film. The climatic duet between Christine and Eric and a beautiful scene with Burt Lancaster and Charles Dance (Carriere and Eric) are both very moving.

    A beautiful, and tragic love story.
    adrian2umortal

    Yestin and Koppit Version makes for good television.

    I saw this 2 parter on NBC back when Andrew Lloyd Webber was sitting on top of the musical world with his Phantom of the Opera. This is a decent musical story version of the Leroux tale. The year before in 1989 Golan and Globus hired up Robert Englund a.k.a. Freddie Krueger to do a slasher movie version of the story which was a total off the original storyline of the Phantom of the Opera. That movie in all honesty, sucks ! When Yestin and Koppit released this mini series they returned Erik to Paris, France and to his beloved Opera House and once again he is deeply in love with engenue chorus girl and understudy to La Carlotta, Christine Daae, who's beauty and angelic voice reminds him of his dead mother, a nice back story line added to the original storyline with one more family member added in for the first time, the Phantom's friend and father played by venerable veteran actor Burt Lancaster. The soundtrack to this movie is available on RCA C.D. and Tapes under the simple name Phantom. It is the original theatrical stage production that this mini series was based on by Yestin and Koppit.
    8Nynaeve

    Underrated

    This version of "The Phantom of the Opera" (which was obviously written for the stage and carries that atmosphere throughout the movie) seems to have been made for those who savor a lush, epic feel- the music, framed around the operatic bits which are central to the story, is gliding and hypnotic (the "Angels Pure" finale may well have been badly dubbed, but I was too entranced to notice) and the sets are appropriately opulant and surrealistic (my favorites being, of course, the catacombs, as well as the scene at the Bistro). And it's rare that I see a movie that has succeeds so well in making almost every single actor, usually under candlelight or a faint bluish glow, look as ethereally beautiful as their surroundings. These two factors alone make the movie worth watching and, when it's all said and done, was probably what was most strongly impressed on me at the end of the four hours. It's very deliberately paced, forcing the viewer to drink in all of the movie slowly and, I think, reshaping the traditional way this story has been told--this movie is character-driven, not action driven, a way of storytelling that appeals to me. When the action finally does happen, we get a clear understanding of why.

    The characters, though, weren't necessarily the most believable bunch I've ever seen, a fact that owes some to the writing, which gives them poetic but improbable dialogue, and the woe-is-me soliloquies, particularly on the part of Erik, start to wear. But of course, I can't complain too much--"Phantom" is played as either as a horror story or a melodrama, (or both), and thanks to the (overdone?) effort to make the viewer sympathise with the tragic antihero Phantom, it's not much of a horror story. The acting, too, is a little over-the-top...though a lot of that is probably intentional (and fun to watch!). I wished Christine was a stronger, less wishy-washy character (of course she really isn't shown as anything but, no matter which version, including the Lloyd-Webber "Phantom") and I wished that Phillipe was more of a presence, more of a deserving rival to the gloomy phantomized Erik. I also thought that the fact that Christine not simply sounded like, but also LOOKED like Erik's mother (prompting him to fall in love with her, the old Oedipean twist), shot down one of the main themes of the movie, voiced in Erik's complaint that Phillipe came to the opera for the wrong reason: the love of faces rather than the love of music. Much better if they would have used a different actress in the flashback scenes with Gerard (Burt Lancaster) and Belladora (?), the mother. Still, there are scenes which seem to shrug off the need for realistic dialogue or flawless acting in the beauty of their execution. Some of my favorite parts, the flashbacks, are more-or-less mimed, and to me, the movie is most effective either when the characters are singing or when scene is taking place without much dialogue. The movie is fantasy-oriented, after all, not gritty realism, and after a while you DO grow attached to the characters. All-in-all, the movie is best enjoyed in a dark room and a thick blanket, with a mentality open to fantasy and escapism and cynicism pushed off to the side.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This film is the first production ever to be filmed within the famed Paris Opera House (in France called the Académie Nationale de Musique or Palais Garnier); the backstage area, Grand Staircase, dressing rooms, and the cellars were all shot on location at the Palais Garnier. The only scenes shot elsewhere were those at the "lagoon" (a film set), as well as in the theatre boxes and the auditorium (located in another theatre).
    • Goofs
      When Carlotta sings, her words don't match her lips.
    • Quotes

      Erik The Phantom of the Opera: [reaches for his ears] My God! The place really is haunted; what is that?

      Gerard Carriere: Well, without looking, I would say with confidence it must be Carlotta.

      Erik The Phantom of the Opera: Who?

      Gerard Carriere: The new star.

      Erik The Phantom of the Opera: She can't sing!

      Gerard Carriere: [chuckles] Well, obviously she doesn't know that.

      Erik The Phantom of the Opera: Well, someone should tell her.

      Gerard Carriere: She's married to the new manager.

      Erik The Phantom of the Opera: Good God. This means she's probably going to sing all the time. What kind of horror are you leaving me in?

      Gerard Carriere: Erik, what are we going to do about all of this?

      Erik The Phantom of the Opera: I know what to do about it. I'll kill them both.

      Gerard Carriere: Oh, come on, now!

      Erik The Phantom of the Opera: I'm teasing; probably the only one I need to kill is her.

      Gerard Carriere: Erik!

      Erik The Phantom of the Opera: What has happened to your sense of humour?

      Gerard Carriere: My humour?

      Erik The Phantom of the Opera: You're right. I'm sorry. I'm just not used to killing people; it threw me off a bit.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Behind the Mask: The Story of 'The Phantom of the Opera' (2005)
    • Soundtracks
      Faust
      Written by Charles Gounod

      Performed by the National Hungarian Orchestra

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 22, 1990 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • France
      • Italy
      • Germany
    • Official sites
      • distributor's official site for individuals
      • Distributor's official site for professionals
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • The Phantom of the Opera
    • Filming locations
      • Paris, France(Paris Opera House/Caves of Mello)
    • Production companies
      • Hexatel
      • Saban/Scherick Productions
      • Saban International N.V.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 24 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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