Plot
The Phantom, descendent of a line of African heroes, travels to New York to thwart a criminal genius.
Release Year: 1996
Rating: 4.8/10 (13,674 voted)
Director:
Simon Wincer
Stars: Billy Zane, Kristy Swanson, Treat Williams
Storyline The 21st successor to the role of Bengalla's resident superhero must travel to New York to prevent a rich madman from obtaining three magic skulls that would give him the secret to ultimate power.
Writers: Lee Falk, Jeffrey Boam
Cast: Billy Zane
-
The Phantom
/
Kit Walker
Kristy Swanson
-
Diana Palmer
Treat Williams
-
Xander Drax
Catherine Zeta-Jones
-
Sala
(as Catherine Zeta Jones)
James Remar
-
Quill
Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa
-
The Great Kabai Sengh
Bill Smitrovich
-
Uncle Dave Palmer
Casey Siemaszko
-
Morgan
David Proval
-
Charlie Zephro
Joseph Ragno
-
Ray Zephro
Samantha Eggar
-
Lily Palmer
Jon Tenney
-
Jimmy Wells
Patrick McGoohan
-
Phantom's Dad
Robert Coleby
-
Capt. Philip Horton
Al Ruscio
-
Police Commissioner Farley
Taglines:
Slam evil!
Release Date: 7 June 1996
Filming Locations: Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Box Office Details
Budget: $45,000,000
(estimated)
Opening Weekend: $5,072,346
(USA)
(9 June 1996)
Gross: $17,300,889
(USA)
(1 September 1996)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
The title character was originally to be played by Bruce Campbell.
Goofs:
Crew or equipment visible:
Reflected in the trunk lid of the cab.
Quotes: The Great Kabai Sengh:
I know your secret, Phantom. The Phantom:
Take it to your grave, Kabai Sengh.
User Review
Heroism Is Now Fantasy (and that's just unrealistic!)
Rating: 10/10
It's hard to believe that a movie that so hits the mark set by its
original intentions can receive some of the stupid, silly and brainless
reviews seen in these pages. This is a movie based on the original
comic book hero, so yes, we have a character in a costume. If that's a
problem for you because it's "unrealistic", well what would be
realistic for you? Lots of blood, sex with movie-star-hot men or women,
big explosions, exit wounds? Lots of that in your everyday life, I
assume? And yes, a lot of fantastic, unrealistic things happen in this
film, which may also pose a problem for you if your sense of wonder is
limited to things like who is going to win the next Survivor. Yet all
of these fantastic unrealistic things are all directly related to the
concepts of heroism and villainy.
This entire movie is about heroes and villains, right down to the cab
driver. It is not about how Billy Zane looks in purple spandex, or how
hot the female leads are, or how much you hate Treat Williams'
over-the-top performance, or how you think it "rips off" Indiana Jones
(funny, I'm pretty sure Jones was a nod, in part, to the Phantom!). If
these are your only reactions after watching this movie then you have
indeed wasted your time. Fortunately, time like yours isn't very
valuable when you would probably rather waste it spending days playing
the next version of Grand Theft Auto.
The Phantom revisits the concept of heroes. I'm not talking about
people like Vin Diesel, Pamela Anderson, 50 Cent, or this year's
American Idol. Heroes are people who have character, integrity,
morality, and courage; people who stand for, and stand up for, what is
right. With so little of this in the world around us today, I guess
it's not surprising that so many people have a problem with the
concept. These days the hero is the person who can kill the most
opponents (I can't call them "bad guys" here), screw over the most
people, get the most toys, or have sex with the hottest hotties.
Basically, we now equate heroism with personal gain and success.
The Phantom, like all true heroes, does what he does because it is the
right thing to do, not because he stands to gain from it. He is capable
of performing selfless acts that can make a difference for the better,
and on top of that, he does so anonymously! How often do you see that
in today's society? Drax is a villain because he is the villain, not
because we see him slaughtering innocents or committing some other
purely evil crime. We don't need to see Singh's band blow up a ship
full of people with body parts flying in slow motion to understand they
are also villains. It might require a bit of imagination, which also
seems to be in short supply these days, but the idea is that they are
as bad as you can imagine them to be. Once again that sense of wonder
has to come into play. The only thing I'm left wondering is how anyone
who sat down to watch this movie couldn't have known this.
In a nutshell: The Phantom is a comic book character movie wherein the
hero wears a cool purple costume and performs fantastic acts of
heroism, gets the girl of his dreams, and defeats evil by being a
paragon of virtue and valor. It is fun for all ages; the six kids that
sat in front of me at the theatre had a blast, and my mother likes it
too. The character's creator apparently approved of this film despite
its slight deviations from the printed version. And I give this movie
with heart and soul a 10 out of 10.
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