Phantom of the Opera

The screen's classic of terror!

6.2
19431h 29m

Following a tragic accident that leaves him disfigured, crazed composer Erique Claudin transformed into a masked phantom who schemes to make beautiful young soprano Christine Dubois the star of the opera and wreak revenge on those who stole his music.

Production

Logo for Universal Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Phantom of the Opera (1943) - Theatrical Trailer

Phantom of the Opera (1943) - Theatrical Trailer

Cast

Photo of Nelson Eddy

Nelson Eddy

Anatole Garron

Photo of Susanna Foster

Susanna Foster

Christine Dubois

Photo of Claude Rains

Claude Rains

Erique Claudin

Photo of Edgar Barrier

Edgar Barrier

Raoul D'Aubert

Photo of Leo Carrillo

Leo Carrillo

Signor Ferretti

Photo of Jane Farrar

Jane Farrar

Biancarolli

Photo of Fritz Feld

Fritz Feld

Lecours

Photo of Frank Puglia

Frank Puglia

Villeneuve

Photo of Steven Geray

Steven Geray

Vereheres

Photo of Fritz Leiber

Fritz Leiber

Franz Liszt

Photo of Elvira Curci

Elvira Curci

Biancarolli's Maid

Photo of Rosina Galli

Rosina Galli

Christine's Maid

Photo of Paul Marion

Paul Marion

Desjardines

Photo of Stanley Blystone

Stanley Blystone

Officer (uncredited)

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Reviews

J

John Chard

5/10

Well it's one of the most beautiful Universal Horror movies out there.

Phantom of the Opera is directed by Arthur Lubin and features a collective of writers adapting from Gaston Leroux's novel. It stars Nelson Eddy, Claude Rains, Edgar Barrier, Susanna Foster, Leo Carrillo and Jane Farrar. Music is by Edward Ward and cinematography by W. Howard Greene.

The Leroux source material has been adapted a number of times. This version sees Universal update their own 1925 silent version that starred Lon Chaney, and give it a Technicolor make over whilst practically making it a musical picture. Even making it a light comedy in parts! It is undeniably a gorgeous picture, both visually and aurally, for the sets and operatic tunes alone this could never be called a dull movie. But we want horror, it's an horrific tale of murder, disfigurement, disloyalty and unbridled passions, we don't want to be watching a Phantom of the Opera movie where at any moment you expect the cast to start singing "ding dong the witch is dead". Cast are mostly fine as regards the tone of the piece, though Rains barely gets his teeth into the role of the Phantom and comes off more like Zorro or the Lone Ranger. While Lubin and his crew give the whole production a professional polish.

But is this horror? No, never, and that's a shame given it's from the torch bearers for classic horror of the 30s and 40s. 5/10

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