The Bechdel Cast - The Phantom of the Opera with Lindsay Ellis
Episode Date: November 30, 2017Jamie and Caitlin emerge from their candlelit swamp apartment to teach singing lessons, wiggle a chandelier, and discuss The Phantom of the Opera (2004) with special guest Lindsay Ellis!(This episode ...contains spoilers)For Bechdel bonuses, sign up for our Patreon at patreon.com/bechdelcast. Follow @thelindsayellis on Twitter! While you're there, you should also follow @BechdelCast, @caitlindurante and @hamburgerphone Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who on October 16th 2017 was assassinated.
Crooks Everywhere unearthed the plot to murder a one-woman WikiLeaks.
She exposed the culture of crime and corruption that were turning her beloved country into a mafia state.
Listen to Crooks Everywhere on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
To listen to new episodes one week early and 100% ad-free, subscribe to the iHeart True Crime Plus channel, available exclusively on Apple Podcasts.
Kay hasn't heard from her sister in seven years.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
What was that?
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
Can Kay trust her sister?
Or is history repeating itself?
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller
from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm. Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app, They're just dreams. swaps of different meds, but by culture and society. By looking closely at the conditions that cause mental distress,
I find out why so many of us are struggling to feel sane,
what we can do about it, and why we should care.
Oh, look at you giving me therapy, girl.
Listen to Basket Case every Tuesday on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
On the Bechdelcast, the questions asked, if movies have women in them,
are all their discussions just boyfriends and husbands, or do they have individualism?
The patriarchy's effin' vast, start changing it with the Bechdelcast.
Hello, welcome to the Bechdelcast. My name's Jamie.
My name's Caitlin. You're doing your sexy radio voice.
I'm a ghost that hides in the walls and tries to raise you.
I'm a sex ghost with a face mask.
And I'm a hot young ingenue who's good at singing.
Ingenue code for prey.
Yeah.
Oh, I'm so excited.
So, okay, this is the Bechdel cast where we talk about the portrayal of women in
movie inspired by the Bechdel test, which requires that two women in a movie have names, they talk
to each other and their conversation has to be something about something other than a man.
Grow up, never happens.
Never, never once in the history of cinema. This is an episode I feel like we've been
talking about doing for at least six months yeah well because once every two to three
episodes you find a way to mention it because i love to shoehorn in shoehorn schumacher schumacher
mention this is our second episode of a joel schumacher movie yes um i think only the second
we did flatliners and that No, and we did Batman.
No, that was a Tim Burton Batman.
Okay.
Well, lots of Schumacher undertones in this podcast.
I love a mediocre man.
That's why I will always be like, you know what?
If it's a Joel Schumacher joint, sure, he deserves another chance.
Absolutely he doesn't, but he's like 5 million years old.
He's going to be making movies until he dies, and we just have to get used to it i love how mediocre joel schumacher is he is just emblematic of just infinite chances for kind of no reason i agree that he's mediocre and i hate him for that reason
so we have i oh man i i on that right i mean I generally mediocre men are not okay. For some reason, Joel Schumacher,
he just he at least tries to take creative risks that just have historically never once worked.
But he keeps doing it and he keeps getting opportunities to do it. And it's just like
so many female directors with talent are going to, you know, die in obscurity. But Joel Schumacher
is going to make five million movies and they're all going to be fine. Except this one is actually really spectacularly bad.
Oh, I thought you were going to end it spectacular and I was going to be upset.
That's it. I've seen this movie at least 20 times.
Oh, God.
Well, we'll get into it. It's the Phantom of the Opera episode.
The Joel Schumacher film, uh christmas movie season was maybe like
my favorite christmas movie season growing up because phantom of the opera came out horny for
that right a series of unfortunate events starring jim carrey was the first movie i ever saw that
made me viscerally angry and i really hated and so that was fun. Also National Treasure, which I loved.
A hot season.
A real hot season.
Well, who can argue with that?
Hey, let's introduce our guest.
Yeah.
She is a writer.
She's a video essayist. She has this whole series of wonderful video essays.
Including an amazing one on this movie.
We're big fans.
Wow, we were so almost synced up there.
We did it.
It's early, but it's 10 a.m.
It's happening.
What are we doing?
I got those little things from 7-Eleven.
They put them next to the creamers,
but it's actually like caffeine shots.
I've got a couple if anyone needs them.
Me.
And that voice you're hearing is our guest
who we started intro and then forgot to do it
the rest of the way.
Lindsay Ellis.
Thank you, guys.
Thank you so much.
You happen to be doing a podcast on my favorite crack.
So I'm so here for this.
Oh, we're so excited to have you.
So Phantom of the Opera, you have a history with this franchise.
I feel like I've done three 30-plus minute videos.
We've seen them all.
Don't worry, we've watched them.
I don't front with my Phantom, but it's probably my oldest fandom.
There's something about Phantom, most things you kind of outgrow,
but Phantom, the stank never leaves you, so you just kind of got to own it.
So when did you see this 2004 Joel Schumacher Phantom? Well, I first, when I was like, you know,
a sad 15, 16 year old, I mean, I actually wasn't that sad. Like Phantom drew me out of an even
sadder phase of my life, which is when I was like into new metal and Limp Bizkit and really angry
and sad all the time. And then I discovered musical theater. So there's a logical progression
for you. And I was like like really obsessively into it and
that's actually how i met like uh several of my like current business partners nice was through
phantom of the opera fandom in 2001 like my current co-writer angelina i met on fanfiction.net
same with elisa hansen who now does vampire reviews on youtube and antonella and sarah who
used to do a nostalgiaalgia Chick with me,
not so much anymore because we live in different cities.
But by the time the movie came out,
I wouldn't say I was over it, but it was like,
it was sort of like our joke old thing.
We were excited at first, but then we saw that Schumacher was attached to it.
And then like Antonio Banderas, who wanted it so badly.
And they were already making this terrible creative
decision in the form of Emmy Rossum and Gerard Butler and we were just like oh wow this is going
to be like just as bad as we think it will be and I just remember what was really funny was like
seeing it did you see in theaters yeah I saw it in theaters with my mother in Asheville North
Carolina we were both like wow how did they mess that up so bad? You know, the show that's like, it's cheesy, but it works.
How did this happen?
Jamie, what's your history?
Oh, man.
I also got into fandom, I mean, freakishly young,
because my mom is obsessed with Phantom of the Opera.
My mom also, as you know, completely unhinged.
That's a theme with Phantom fans.
We're being real.
Exactly.
We relate to that Phantom a little too much.
And there's too much of me that I see in that.
But I have a very specific memory of when I was really young.
I mean, probably five years old.
And this directly connects to two of your videos.
So I got those Hunchback of Notre Dame puppets that they sold
at Burger King
yes
so I got all of those
because my mom ran a daycare
out of our house
and so there would be
some time every day
where I'd be like
I want to be like by myself
because I live here
so my mom would let me have
time alone in a room
and she would give me
the three puppets
Esmeralda, Quasimodo, and Phoebus
and she would turn on
the original London cast
of the Phantom of the Opera and I would pretend they were Quasimodo, and Phoebus, and she would turn on the original London cast of
The Phantom of the Opera, and I would pretend they were Christine, the Phantom, and Raoul.
And that was when I was like five. So I was into Phantom super early. Some of my earliest
memories are listening to The Phantom of the Opera and playing with puppets by myself.
So very into it. And then Goth Teen Jamie, my middle school choir was going to a production of phantom of the
opera at the boston opera house i remember i like had all these fishnets and like very like
phantom of the opera super fan clothes on underneath normal clothes and then i got to
school and i was like i'm the biggest fan of phantom of the opera and i had like a skirt
from trip with like chains on it and like fishnets
and then I love this movie.
I'm like
very into it. I've seen
Phantom of the Opera on stage probably
five times.
I think I've actually got you beat.
Yeah? I've probably seen it at least
15 times.
It doesn't get old though.
I lived in New York.
It was just sort of like,
yeah, I got the rush tickets.
Here's 25 bucks, you know.
Although, like, I'm so happy
they're finally replacing bad Phantom.
James Barber.
Yay, finally.
You should never have hired him.
He was not good.
Worse than Gerard Butler?
No.
No, not possible.
For a Broadway Phantom,
it was just like, you know,
on top of being like a pedophile,
he's just not a good phantom.
Yeah.
And I mean that in the literal sense.
He actually went to trial for it.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Oh, man.
I didn't know that.
Speaking of mediocre men getting second chances.
Yeah, he was accused and went to trial for, I think, one.
But then there were two more accusers.
All were under the age of 15.
Jesus Christ.
And so eventually he had a plea deal.
And so he was never actually served any time.
But then he was like, after his probation was up in 2012 or 8.
I don't know.
It was somewhere in the Obama years.
Broadway was like, welcome back, brother.
And he's been doing pretty well.
Oh, God.
Why?
Why do we let criminals do things?
Well, I mean,
that is kind of a smooth transition
right into,
there's a lot of preying on a minor
in this movie.
Oh, yeah.
That's true.
A lot of it.
So I had never seen the movie
until a couple days ago.
I thought I had,
but turns out I hadn't,
and I didn't know what the story was.
This is my first introduction.
So you hadn't seen the show? Hadn't seen story i've never this is my first introduction the show
hadn't seen the show not familiar i'd never read the book not but you don't like musicals generally
i don't like musicals but yeah i just i have this was my first experience with phantom of the opera
and boy did this movie sour my experience no no it's good you've got a lot of pain okay just
just to illustrate a point of how much people love this.
Okay, so it has 32% on Rotten Tomatoes.
Critically, no one liked it.
Everyone said, get the electric guitar riff out of there.
Right.
Audience score, 84%.
People love Phantom of the Opera, and they won't hear now.
People will.
I guess because when I did the video about it,
I tended to focus mostly on the technical filmmaking.
For that reason, I think I didn't get a lot of pushback from fans.
But I definitely remember in 2005, I was in college at the time, and that was when Phantom of the Opera fandom got a shot in the arm from this new movie.
And there was this new wave of people who just loved the movie.
And then there was the old guard that was just like gatekeeping.
So there was like a war.
I remember it well.
But yeah, those people, they live.
They do.
Should I do the recap?
Yeah.
Okay.
Phantom of the Opera is about a young woman named Christine.
She is a chorus girl in this opera house.
Also in the opera house is a spooky
phantom man.
Is he a ghost? Is he real? We don't know.
But everyone's scared of him.
And everyone's like, ah!
That's literally what everyone's like.
Yeah, there's a literal ah
in the first five minutes of the movie.
Oh, there's a really
obnoxious setup to this movie. Oh, there's a really, yeah, there's a really obnoxious setup to this movie.
Oh, the framing device.
It's so long.
And they keep going back to it.
Patrick Wilson's age makeup is...
That's Patrick Wilson in old makeup?
I'm pretty sure, yeah.
That's age makeup.
Oh, God, why?
Yeah, it's not that bad, but...
I mean, the makeup's not bad.
The makeup's not bad.
I mean, I was realistic.
I thought that was just an old man.
But why wouldn't they have just cast an old man?
Anyway.
I do love that Patrick Wilson puts on old man voice.
He sounds really like,
A collector's season.
It's like, okay, we get it, you're old.
I mostly fast forwarded through those parts.
But those are the worst parts.
You missed nothing.
They're so extraneous.
They don't need to be there.
They add nothing.
No, they sure don't.
They do add product placement.
Or it's like,
there's Swarovski.
Oh, okay.
I think there was another one.
It was like another brand
that existed in the 18...
Okay, so the show
takes place in the 1870s,
which doesn't make sense
because that was during
the Franco-Prussian War
and the opera was under siege and not an opera.
But the show is like 1871.
It's like, okay, so the movie, I think they bump it back to like 1888 or a time that made sense when the novel took place.
So I guess that's one thing the movie fixed.
Thank you.
Not much else.
Weird that Andrew Lloyd Webber was like, let's let's kick it back another 15
years for whatever reason well i guess maybe it was like the dresses were cooler in the 1870s
than in the 1880s it's true it's true though i didn't like those bustles
but also this movie does not abide by any manner of like i mean there's some that's more realistic
but there's sometimes there's like the time that where Christine is wearing like a slip with like a slit.
Oh, yeah.
You're just like, oh, totally.
My corset on the outside of my nightgown.
I'm just like, oh, let's just.
And also I'm a singer, but I'm in the ballet.
Right.
But you're not going to see me do much of either.
Like, yeah.
She.
Okay.
Okay.
Sorry.
There's a spooky ghost.
Carlotta.
She's like the prima donna, diva, like the star of all the operas.
The only person who knows what movie she's in.
Oh, Minnie Driver is great.
Minnie Driver kills it.
She's great.
Different things happen where she's like, I'm not going to sing.
Or she's, you know, refusing to perform.
So they're like, how about this Christine girl?
She can sing.
But they're like, how can christine girl she can sing but they're like how how can she sing can she sing i mean that's about what i sounded like when i was 17 so okay
i'm ready to be the prima donna of the premiere french opera oh is that how old she is in the
in the movie she had when she's aged down in the movie and i think that emmy Emmy Rossum was 16 when this was being filmed she was underage
yikes
because she kisses
two old men
in this movie
she kisses two men
far older than her
yeah
so she's like
yeah I can sing
because it turns out
she's been taking
singing lessons
from a
a wall
a wall
an angel of music
who she thinks is her dead father's spirit teaching her how to sing this
just like drenched in electro complex yes yes she thinks the ghost is her daddy no she thinks that
the ghost is an angel sent by her dad because so it's basically as bad but like because as he's as
he lay dying she's like i'm gonna send you an angel honey don't
worry so like the phantom somehow or other finds out about this and he's like oh right how does he
know about that and know about maybe he was no i don't know maybe he was watching her dad die
maybe he was in the walls maybe he died in her dressing room.
He tends to do that.
Her dressing room that she has by herself alone.
As chorus girl.
Which is, yeah, I mean, when, okay,
that was another part where I was like,
okay, is she supposed to be in Carlotta's dressing room?
But it looks like it's all her stuff.
And the Phantom wouldn't have rigged Carlotta's dressing room so it looks like it's all her stuff and the Phantom wouldn't have rigged
Carlotta's dressing room
so that he could
just appear
wherever.
In like a two-way mirror
that like slides open
and has a...
Okay, but that like
rules.
To be fair,
that rules
and it's a very
exciting stage moment
and it's...
I'm just like,
in the book
it was her dressing room.
It was, yeah.
Why is she such
a big dressing room?
She's a star.
She's a teen orphan.
They don't get nice dressing rooms.
I love those in France.
Come see Teen Orphan.
She can't sing, but she is a teen and an orphan.
Good enough?
Okay, we'll put her corset on the outside of her clothes.
Anyway, we're about 15 minutes in.
We have not got much further.
So she thinks this angel of music is singing to her and teaching her how to sing.
Turns out this phantom who is real approaches her and she's like, oh, wait, you're a man, but you're still my angel of music.
And they have a whole song about it.
She has no reaction to learning that he's a man her
eye shadow does get darker though oh yeah sorry it gets very very very smoky it does get yeah by
the time she's in the gutter she is in full smoke yeah like i said the further down she goes the
smokier it gets and it looks so like it looks like when I was 13 and trying on mom's
makeup for the first time.
It was like,
darker!
Yeah.
There's a lot of
long shots of Emmy Rossum
just like looking like
she's basically
falling asleep.
Like mouth kind of a gog.
Yeah.
And it's like,
oh, that's what love is.
Just entranced
by your angelic voice,
Gerard Butler.
So I didn't realize that like this movie does a very bad job i think of setting up that he's supposed to be this like seductive and she's
like oh i like that i love you like i did not realize that they were having like a love story
like it didn't it's almost like jill shumacher's really not good at things right it's almost yeah like they just like on top of that gerard butler's doing an exceptionally bad job
of being seductive and amy rossum is like 16 and has never gone outside so she doesn't know how to
look like seduced i guess which is already gross why did they cast a 16 year old ah and hathaway
really wanted the part too really and hathaway can sing, and was the correct age in 2005.
I think she would have done well.
Anne Hathaway and Antonio Banderas.
That would have been tight.
Poor Emma Roth.
And this didn't really launch anyone's career in the way that I think the movie intended to.
Patrick Wilson's...
Patrick Wilson's didn't get hurt.
Right. He wasn't actively harmed by it. I would think perhaps that Emmy Rossum was maybe
damaged by this movie. I think so, too. She was like maybe on the rise and then
kind of stalled. She was in The Day After Tomorrow and then kind of went away until
Beautiful Creatures, which, yes, I saw. Yeah? I didn't see it.
Yeah, she was like the oh sexy older sister
and she does that look does not work on her well and then now she's like relegated to tv and seems
to be doing well but it's i feel for her this way because imagine like having the rest of your life
affected by a mistake that didn't seem like a mistake when you were 16. Sure. Basically it's her teen pregnancy.
So where were... So he's
like seducing her and she's
kind of into it, question mark?
I don't really know. But
he shows her this like wax
sculpture he made of her
in a wedding dress.
And she also has no
reaction to that. She's just like, oh,
she passes out.
Because women be fainting.
I mean, that is scary.
She's so creeped out.
But then after that, when she wakes up,
to me, she does not have an appropriate
reaction to a creepy man
whose face is half hot and half
under a mask making
a sculpture of her.
And then she's just like,
yeah, okay, you're my friend now or something.
Well, not to jump to anyone's defense,
but she does think that he is like an angel.
Yeah, I think the moment she rips off the mask
is when she's like, oh, you're ugly.
I guess you're not an angel.
Angels can only be hot.
I mean, it's just kind of confusing
because when you, both in the show and in the movie from that point on you don't see her again
until the opera right and and then she runs to the roof like i'm really scared raul and he's like
don't worry honey it's not it's not real so i guess like at that point where she kind of turns
on him but it's all really implicit and there's like it yeah this story is so clunky the more you
look at it bad but she okay so she meets him she's like he's an angel he made a wax statue of me that
we have to assume he has sex with there's no way there's not a cavernous hole in that wax statue. So anyways, she wakes up and she's like, well, that happened.
But then he does start to behave more and more threatening after that.
Not that her reaction at any point in this story totally makes sense.
But if I'm remembering correctly, she gets out and that's when he starts being like,
you have to recast the show.
And then he like causes the
fucking chandelier thing and he causes it to wiggle yeah yeah it doesn't fall yet that's
a funny thing about the chandelier freaking people out it has like has no consequence
it just kind of happens as far as we know no one's hurt well he does so oh right i'm thinking
i'm sorry i'm thinking of the show the show, it falls at the end of Act
1. Whenever he goes, like,
you will curse the day you did not do all
the phantom masks of you, and then he cuts
the chandelier as a threat. And then in the movie,
he just cuts it because he feels like it.
He's like, oh, I forgot to
do this.
We have to justify the framing device.
Right, yeah, exactly.
But before that, he kills a guy yeah
from the rafters and then everyone's like oh this is a ghost to be reckoned with by the time people
are dying i'm like okay it makes sense for her to be scared now yeah but then she still sort of is
and then sort of isn't throughout the rest of the movie to the point where at the end i mean
this is kind of the genius of the lloyd weber
version because this was the first version where they really play up the oh she's kind of into it
and i think that's also why i know that's why this is the most successful version because like in the
book he's just kind of like a creepy guy and she's never into it like she pities him like in the
frodo pitying golem kind of way but, the second she sees him and she's like, oh.
And then he's like, sorry.
Because he for real looks like shit.
Yeah.
Well, he's wearing the mask, but he's just like, hey, I'm not an angel.
I'm a 50-year-old man who's in love with you.
Come to my basement.
And she's like, he's going to kill and eat me.
I have to just placate him and do whatever he says.
And so she does this for like two weeks
where she's like,
no, you're great.
You're awesome.
I think you're really nice looking.
The things that women have to do
for men to not get murdered.
So then he lets her,
like after two weeks,
she convinces him
and he's like,
okay, fine,
I'll let you go back
into the opera.
And then she tells Raul everything like, oh my God, there's this creepy guy and he's going to kill me.
And then he overhears it.
And that's when he snaps and loses it.
That makes more sense.
Yeah.
That does not happen in this movie.
No, it does not.
In this movie, she's kind of into it.
Toxic romance baby.
Yeah, there's like moments where he's like wrapping his arms around her and she's all like, oh, I'm in a shampoo commercial.
There is a part, and this was my favorite part i remember when i was seeing the movie when i was
12 i was like during point of no return which is an insane number in the movie just looks like that
song though i like most of the songs but you should see like like i say like watch the royal
albert hall version be like wow this is even better when people can sing.
There aren't random tango dancers there.
I love the tango.
But there's a point in this version of it where Emmy Rossum looks like she's
straight up going to pass out again because she's so turned on.
She's about to handle it.
Where they're like,
you know,
the peak of that song,
it looks like her eyes are, like, fluttering.
It's like, she's sick.
Someone give her water. Also her, like,
straps of her dress keep falling off her
shoulders, and she's like, I'm getting more
and more naked as I get so horny
with this song. And then he,
I skipped half of the movie, but who cares?
It doesn't make any sense, and it's fucking terrible.
The story, nothing makes any who cares? It doesn't make any sense and it's fucking terrible. The story...
Nothing makes any sense.
It really doesn't.
It's amazing how that doesn't bother you when it's on stage.
I think there's just a lot more suspension of disbelief inherent in the medium of theater.
Totally.
So I think it's just like the bizarre plot holes just kind of wash over you in the stage version where in the movie version and they're just spectacularly glaring because everything is literal.
There's no sort of, you know, magical realism going on.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it really emphasizes how much this story makes no fucking sense.
And it's just, I mean, it's adapted really not well at all.
Like there's just there's things that could have been done in this adaptation
that would have made it transition
a little smoother,
but it just didn't.
And then there was like weird moments
where people are speaking dialogue
that should be sung,
but they're speaking rhyming dialogue.
We're just like,
why aren't you?
There's like,
you're my bride.
We don't need to hide.
That part of Masquerade
drives me crazy
where Patrick Wilson and Emmy Ross are just talking to each other in verse.
But the music is still going.
Right. Stop it. I was like, why can't you just... Patrick Wilson can actually sing.
Yeah. He was on Broadway.
He's a mini driver, ironically, the only person who was dubbed.
Right, yeah.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
All right, so the basic story is that there's a guy who's a creep and he is gaslighting Christine and she also is like in love with and being gaslit by Raul. Everyone the end, he is murdering people and making these insane demands.
And then he drops a chandelier on everyone, but no one is hurt and it's fine.
So there are no stakes or consequences.
But the opera is burned down.
I guess it's like, they're like, well, this needs a consequence.
I guess it burns the opera down and now there's no opera.
And then he takes
christine into his like basement level apartment and uh i had an apartment like that
and then raul goes to save her of course and the phantom's like you either have to be with me to
save raul's life or i'll kill you both or who knows what his dreams are and it's so fun like I love
the way that scene is shot like he just sneaks up behind Raul or like just walks up to him with a
noose he's like here buddy hold still he just like loops it over his head and then like fastens him
to a grate but it's just like okay so it's aose, which is a thing you hang people with. But he's like tied to a grate.
So is he just going to strangle him with the noose manually?
He can't be hung.
He's tied to a grate.
Your video essay was the first time that was ever.
I was like, oh, yeah, there's no.
He's probably fine.
There's no trap here.
Maybe he's about to pull out a gun and shoot him.
But the rope makes no sense. But he he's pulling yanking at the rope like that will eventually be
i don't know why they did it like because like in the show it's like a magical realism thing like
yeah throws the rope on him and then the rope magically kind of lifts so he's actually being
like you know yeah that's so much a phantom of like let's just throw something into fog people
i hate how this movie doesn't commit to the magical realism it's just like
you either do it or don't like I talked about like in the show
because they had like the Jean Cocteau arms
in the movie which is like this sort of like
oh I'm being seduced and
being brought into this magical mysterious world
and they're like lifting this thing
from Jean Cocteau's Beauty and the Beast which are the
these arms stick jutting out of the wall
and holding candles and then they
never do anything like that for the rest of the movie.
Right.
It's just straight, literal this.
It's like, commit to stuff like that.
Commit to some stylism so the glaring plot holes don't, you know.
Which is at least, I mean, that's like the least you could ask of Joel Schumacher.
It's like, commit to your bad choices.
Yeah.
But he doesn't do that in this one.
This movie could have been at least consistently fun and bizarre.
Yeah.
But it's just... No, it has to be serious. Very disjointed.
The addition of that weird
sword fighting scene.
Well, the sword fight leads
to one of the talking points I had about
the treatment of women in the movie,
which is that, so
in that sword fight, and we see this
in a ton of movies, where
two men are fighting over a woman.
The men are fighting.
The woman is being fought for.
So it's like women are often rendered just so passive in situations like the same thing with like a woman having to be saved.
Like she has to wait around to be saved by a man.
This isn't a huge component of this movie, but I think it was worth mentioning that there was just like.
Well, it's one of two major scenes where Christine is completely sidelined
as two men fight
slash sing slash argue about
her because it's that sword fighting scene where she's
just totally like literally
watching like
I can think of that like that Quinn
from Daria being like don't fight
over me
That was a great quote
And then in the climactic scene too too, where Gerard Butler's like, I'm going to make your boyfriend hurt.
And he's like, it's okay.
And Christine's just standing there like, oh, what do I do?
Well, she has a little more agency in that scene because she then kisses the Phantom.
I would argue that is such a crazy.
Like, I get, I don't know.
She's sidelined for the majority of that scene. And then it's like yeah how do i get out of here maybe if i give him a
little kissy he'll let us go which you couldn't bank on working but it does it works for the show
it does it works a lot better in the movie it's just like i just feel like rolls like tied to
that gray in christ pose just looking on with confusion.
Like, what is this supposed to accomplish?
Why is anyone here?
Well, the kiss that she gives to the phantom to, like, placate him ignores the fact that, like, she's just doing this out of desperation.
Because she's like, my life's in danger.
Raul's life's in danger.
I've been gaslit by every fucking person in this entire movie throughout the whole fucking story.
I gotta kiss this guy
to like make him
not murder people.
But the movie frames it
as this like
big romantic love.
The music swells.
The camera spins
over the player
and it's just like
this is not romantic.
Like what are you doing movie?
There's a cinema talk.
John Mathisen
is swirling around
this swamp
filming an underage woman kissing gerard butler just bleak in every respect but like yeah the
point i want to make about so often in movies this one included we see a woman taking a very
passive role in whatever's happening just sitting idly by watching as two men fight or a man has to
save her or whatever and it just sends a message that
women can't do things i guess and then we as a society are like oh women can't do things because
i've never seen them do things in in media so i don't trust them to be able to do anything i think
more than anything it's just like christine's character is like oh you just have to take a lot
of shit like she takes shit for this entire okay so if
we're talking about i don't know i relate to christine in this regard uh but like so her as
a character she's set up as she misses her father her father was the main figure in her life and
then we're presented with two father-like figures who are fuckboys that she has to choose between
where it's like does she choose the dangerous ghost father committing murders?
Or is she going to choose the useless guy who like walked right into a trap?
And but also is like pretty consistently like you're making this up.
It's fine.
Just stay with me.
And is visibly older than her as well.
So it's like they're supposed to be the same age.
So let's.
Oh, right.
Because they were childhood sweethearts.
Are they supposed to?
Because they are the same age.
Unless like he was 17 and she was seven, which honestly in like 19th century France, that was probably a thing.
No, I mean, he's he's in the show.
At least he's supposed to be a year or two older than she is.
But he has so many like successes. But he's only supposed to be 18. Well, I least, he's supposed to be a year or two older than she is. But he has so many successes, but he's only supposed to be 18?
Well, I mean, Christine's 19 in the show, so he's supposed to be like 21.
Okay.
Again, I don't know why they aged Christine down.
That does nothing for this movie.
No, it just makes it creepier.
Yeah.
Well, he's rich, but I'm guessing he's an heir.
He's a Navy officer, which is why he like at the
masquerade he has his like naval uniform on yeah so he's like a he's a vicon so he like
viconted his way to the top of the navy hierarchy so he's like a sailor hot so christine's like a
girl with daddy issues who's presented with two daddies and she has to pick one of them there
has two daddies i mean i would actually one of them. Christine has two daddies.
I mean, I would actually argue that
I don't see Raul as a father figure.
Really?
I think that in this movie
he's pretty consistently,
I mean, at very least,
I mean, he's patronizing.
Yeah.
But I don't think
she sees her father in him.
Okay.
In this or any of the versions.
Or at least that's kind of how I took it
and that's why I guess in some ways
he's less appealing to her
because she kind of wants her dad back.
And so she has made this association in her mind
with the Phantom and her father.
But there is a level of security that comes with being super rich.
Yeah.
He got her scarf back.
I mean, that's nice.
He did something.
Speaking of that
love triangle, I
couldn't help but notice that
no time is spent developing the
romance between Christine and
Raul. They're like, oh, we knew each other as
kids and now we're adults and we haven't seen each other
for years. Guess what? We're in love.
They have that big swell of a
romance number, which
takes place right after the murder oh on the roof i love
i love that scene because it's like bouquet gets murdered he gets hung she runs up to the roof and
she's like oh god oh god oh god i'm freaked out i know who did it he's gonna kill me oh god and
ralph's like don't worry honey it's fine and then like the clarinets of romance start playing and they have that big all I ask of you number
they just forgot about
the killing
someone was just murdered
that works in the musical
it works on stage
it just doesn't work here
well especially because he's just like
creeping around like the phantom
is just like the whole scene
hiding behind statues and it's just
like we don't need to like this was another like point that i made in the video was like we don't
need to know he's here right why do you keep cutting to him what is the emotion you're going
for is it tension are we supposed to feel bad for him either way it doesn't work because this is
supposed to be like their big romance and obviously that you know doesn't stick because
like you you're like when do they connect?
Well, it's there.
But you don't realize it.
Because the Phantom's creeping around, pouting at the camera.
And then in the musical, that's not what it is at all.
You don't see him just leering, tiptoeing around the stage.
Like, who cares?
It's there in the Lon Chaney movie. I always think of the Lon Chaney movie. Really? Because that's a reflection of the stage. Like, who cares? It's there in the Lon Chaney movie.
I always think of the Lon Chaney movie.
Really?
Because that's a reflection of the book.
And it's kind of funny in the book
because there's this one line
where she's like telling Raul
about how ugly he is
and then you hear this wail
like in the distance.
I'm like, ah!
I look like shit!
I'm ugly!
She lied to me and said I was okay.
Because I kidnapped her.
Just because I kidnapped her and told her she could never leave.
Damn it.
So to the romance between Raul and Christine, this happens a lot in movies where no time is spent developing why these characters would like each other or love each other, which I think is a symptom of female characters just not being well developed enough where they would just have a personality when we would understand why the male lead.
But they're like, oh, well, you know, there's a man in the movie and he's got to have a hot lady to be with.
So here's this lady character, but we're not going to do anything else to develop her.
And that I think is so true for this movie.
What is Christine's character?
She has no fucking personality.
She's basically just a singing voice, and then she's barely that.
Well, we don't see her make a lot.
Like, most of things happen to her.
Exactly, yeah.
Decisions are made for her.
Right.
And this is, you know, I think, in this version more than any of the others,
which is kind of surprising
because it's like
it being the most recent
one that got big enough
to where there were
no other versions
besides the Dario Argento
version from 1998,
which I do not recommend.
Haven't seen it.
Don't see it.
There's, I mean,
I think you can count
on one hand
kind of the choices
we see her actually actively
making and we don't know that she necessarily has aspirations to be like carla we know she
takes music lessons and that music is important to her we don't know that but she's just forced
out into this role there's no yeah there's no specific goal that she has that we know about
that we know she could we don't know yeah but like that's the thing that we should probably know for any protagonist what their desire is
what their goal is but just kidding we don't have any idea in this movie i think the first choice
that she actively makes in the movie is to kiss him at the end yeah yeah because everything else
is she chooses to go she sneaks out to go to her dad's grave that's one choice we see her yes
but that's funny because like she's like they're like christine you have to be in this show the She sneaks out to go to her dad's grave. That's one choice we see her make.
Well, it's funny because they're like,
Christine, you have to be in this show the Phantom is forcing us to put on.
We had to be in his fan fiction opera.
Which is literally, he's like, I really love Don Giovanni,
but it's not serious enough.
I'm going to make a serious Don Giovanni.
It's called Don Juan Triumphant, and it's going to be about how I'm really sexy and hot
and all the ladies want me.
And Don Juan doesn't go to hell
in this version.
That's literally what it is.
It's his fanfic.
So they're like,
Christine, you have to star
in the Phantom's fanfic.
And she's like, no.
There's a scene where they're
like in the chapel.
And she's like,
she says like,
I'm scared.
Don't make me do this.
And he's like,
you need to do it. He's only killed the one guy. And then he's like, I'm scared. Don't make me do this. And he's like, you need to do it.
He's only killed the one guy.
And then he's like, I'll be there.
He's like, who cares?
But I think that the choices we see her make,
she goes to her dad's grave only to be sidelined pretty much immediately.
But at that point, she's still confused, apparently,
about who the angel of music is, because that song happens again.
Surely she knows by now it's a real thing.
They're going, again, for the magical realism thing that they don't commit to, where he's got some sort of hypnotic power over her.
It doesn't make any sense.
When she looks asleep, it's supposed to be.
Whenever she does the lazy face thing.
It's confusing. Yeah. If I didn't know. The Sarah Brightman thing. It's confusing.
Yeah.
If I didn't know.
The Sarah Brightman face.
It is Sarah Brightman face.
Yeah, just like the look kind of asleep, but kind of turned on.
Yeah, so she is not really an active protagonist at all.
I'm having to suppress my Christine stan stan because I'm like this is absolutely true
in the movie and in the show but I'm just like
but that's not how it was in the book.
It wasn't originally like this Andrew Lloyd
Weber changed it to make it a more
romance novel heroine I guess. I don't know.
I mean that totally makes sense
to make this romance work
if you give Christine a more active
role it would probably fall apart
pretty quickly because the male
protagonists are so flawed.
If you establish
a desire for her where she will
stop at nothing to become
the lead of the opera, like the
new prima donna or whatever, that's
her driving thing. And then this
phantom man comes along who's
promising to help her with that it
would make sense why she would maybe be seduced by him and his promises and all that stuff and
then go along with it but because we have no idea what her specific goal is it's insane that she's
just like oh i'm enchanted and hypnotized by his genius or what like it doesn't make any sense to
me in the show and certainly in the movie i feel like the closest we can get to boiling down a motivation
has to do with her dad or somehow recapturing...
Ugh, boring.
Well, it's just bad writing.
But her motivation seems pretty closely tied to her dad,
which is just lazy.
In both the book and the show show she's just kind of coasting
like she was studying music dad died well i guess i'll keep studying music you know he paid for it
right but it's like it never it's like does she want to be here do we know and then that brings
me to madame giri who i just thought about this like the most recent time i watched it of like madame jerry is basically
i mean she's in charge of the ballet she's like the lead choreographer of the ballet and she's
the mother to one of the only other female characters who speaks meg jerry who is christine's
best friend madame jerry's basically subbing in as christine's parent But it's so clear. Like, there's a few times in the movie
where we see Madame Giry actively
make sure that Meg stays away from the Phantom.
Madame Giry, we learn,
knows everything about him,
knows about his, like, torture.
Like, kind of grew up with him.
Yeah.
Right.
Which is an addition.
That's a new addition to the movie,
and I don't like it.
Because, you know, it's like,
why does he have a friend?
It's not, like, it doesn't, it really kind of takes's like why does he have a friend? It's not like it doesn't
really kind of take some of the like impetus
for him to like be so desperate and
you know obsessed with Christine
if he just has like this you know emotional
support all these years in the form of Madame
Giry who's been kind of helping him out.
And it reflects poorly on her character too
because it's like oh she knows everything and
is still letting this child
communicate openly with this very dangerous person while keeping her daughter.
And we know she knows he's dangerous
because she's keeping her biological daughter
away from him at all costs.
But then she's like, oh, well, I don't know.
What are you going to do?
You know what?
I'm not going to get in the way.
He had a bad childhood.
Well, just...
It's just sad.
That begs the question.
That was...
Let him have his fun.
That frustrated me this time.
I'm like, man, Madame Giry, you suck.
Yeah.
Well, totally.
And that also begs the question if, I mean, it's established with this flashback that
she rescues him, has him live in his, you know, dungeon apartment or whatever, and then...
So what's dungeon studio?
Wouldn't it make more sense that he was obsessed with Madame Giry and like she was the object of his affection because she showed him.
He likes to chase, man.
She's too emotionally available.
And also, you know, women over 40.
Phantom's not there for women over 40.
Maybe he was there for her for a little while and then he was like, you got too old.
I need a 16 year
old yeah well also just like miranda richardson and gerard butler so if they're supposed to be
the same age then the phantom is yeah i mean he would be like well into his 40s right how old is
he in the book like he's he's in the book he's about 50 okay uh madame jury though there this
was the first time that i was
like oh they're the way that she's portrayed in this movie does not bode well for that character
because it's like oh she's a poor guardian she's very complicit in the fact that murders are taking
place yeah and then the whole keep the hand at the level of i was like i what does that mean i mean
keep your hand at the level of your eye so you're supposed to do this you're supposed to literally keep your hand next to your head
because the punja blaseau his like weapon of choice is like he'll try to noose you but if
your hand is up you can't noose you and you got it you can push because yeah schumacher the punja
blaseau is like it's like i think it's supposed to be more like a whip in the book but they just
make it a literal noose in the show which is like like, I'm going to noose you, buddy.
Like, that's not a very good, you know, offensive weapon.
No, it's like, get a knife.
Okay, in the Phantom's apartment.
Yeah.
Next to his action figures.
Swamp apartment.
Right, his action figures and his wax statue.
Also an addition.
A bizarre addition.
That's unique to this version.
He plays with dolls. He plays with dolls.
He plays with dolls.
He lives in basically the sewer.
Because there's water.
Yeah.
What's the bathroom situation?
No, it's a lake.
Oh, the bathroom situation?
What's the bathroom situation in Phantom's House?
It's all around.
Just go outside and pee in the lake.
Literally, I'm just like, don't wear.
Just pop squat.
Well, there's a part where they're standing in water.
Is there a phantom?
No.
Okay, well, see, the thing is the opera has a like a drainage like that's what that is okay so because
that's not you know it's it's a very you know it's a very large building and so like the foundation
requires there to be like a drainage lake so he builds a house next to this lake in the book it
actually has like running water and electricity because he's just that smart. So like,
well,
in this one,
yeah,
in the movie,
they just kind of make it like a cave.
Yeah.
That is like,
he kind of threw some drop cloths,
you know,
on the cave and some candles. We're going to call it sexy.
Schumacher.
Where does he poop?
Schumacher.
It's like that.
It's like that episode of Brass City that Amy Sedaris is in.
And she's like,
where isn't the bathroom?
It's all around. It's like that episode of Broad City that Amy Sedaris is in, and she's like, where isn't the bathroom? It's all around.
It's everywhere.
Oh, Schumacher.
Have you guys seen Love Never Dies?
No.
No, I haven't.
I've, like, actively avoided it for a long time.
Okay, so there's, like, 20 versions, because it's terrible, and they keep workshopping it.
But in the, like, Madame Giry and Meg have...
Is this a sequel?
Yeah, in the sequel.
They both have like really beefed up parts.
And like Madame Giry is like the red herring bad guy.
Because like she's jealous.
Because like turns out the Phantom has a kid from the one time he and Christine did the do.
Oh my God.
They fucked?
Yeah, they fucked.
They fucked after the musical ended.
She came back,
she's like, hey, let's do it.
And he's like, yeah.
And then they do it.
And then he's like,
oh, I can't handle it and leaves.
And they have this,
like, what a fuck boy.
I followed you around for years,
but I can't.
Love Never Dies
where they sing about
how they fucked this one time
and then they describe it in song.
Why did this never make it to Broadway?
I don't understand.
And then he kind of puts two and two together like, we fucked ten years ago.
You have a ten year old. He's our daddy.
And then Madame Jerry's like, no, he's going to take our inheritance. But then at the end of the
show, turns out Meg is the bad guy. What?
Yeah. And she kidnaps the kid and she's going to shoot him.
Oh my god. It's so funny because Yeah, and she like kidnaps the kid and she's gonna shoot him.
It's so funny because like the Phantom is talking her down.
Like the show ends with the Phantom talking Meg down and then Meg accidentally shoots Christine and Christine dies.
No!
Yes, yes.
And the Phantom's like, no!
Well, I guess I get the kid as a consolation prize, and then it ends.
Love never dies.
Why am I so attached to Christine?
No, yeah, you're saying all this stuff about Christine, and I'm like, you're not wrong.
I really am.
You're not wrong.
It's hard, though.
It's hard.
Especially in this movie, there's not a lot of ways around it.
I think there's also this sort of, like, there's the discussion between over-representation
of certain harmful tropes, and also certain harmful tropes that there is some truth to, you know, because you look at like the story about this teenage girl that's just being like led by her nose by all these men.
And it's like, while that is absolutely overdone, there's also a lot of truth to that, you know, just like because that's just what happens, especially in entertainment, you know, and because you see this reflected in like the careers of so
many like actresses and me like i think of kesha especially who was just like right molded into
this you know figure that wasn't her and she didn't want to be and she they like you know
created this public persona for her and she had to live it for so many years and the thing about
christine i think that's sort of like why i think we both feel a little protective of her is like
there is some truth to this for sure and um you know that's sort of like it's sort of like
a both thing where it's like yeah it's so lame that she's so passive but on the other hand you
know that's kind of what coming of age is for a lot of women figuring out like oh my god I have
to do something and make a choice because women are not socialized to be active right you know
so i guess
like i think a little more in the stage version not too much not to like act like the stage version
is superior it's really not i mean it is but it's not story-wise christine you know it's just sort
of her coming into her own is sort of like she does it in the only way she knows how which is
to placate the murderer and considering the time period as well.
I totally agree with you.
And then it just becomes the duty of the storyteller and the filmmaker
to frame that correctly and not glorify the wrong parts.
I think that we could sort of maybe draw a comparison to Twilight here as well,
where it's like a young teenager who you know
young women are going to plug themselves into.
I mean, I remember doing that with Phantom of the Opera and Twilight,
and then seeing a very sort of dangerous relationship develop,
but have the movie be like, but this is great.
That's the harmful part.
And that's why Andrew Lloyd Webber's version,
not the movie,
the musical,
is the most successful version
of Phantom
because he was the one
that's like,
let's frame it
as really sexy
and let's make him
really, you know,
as sympathetic
as a murderer can be.
And it's just like,
you know,
when you take a step back
and you're like,
well, it's no wonder
this is the one
that took off,
but...
But that's so bleak.
So bleak.
Yeah, what does that say about humanity and their taste and things so like while i would agree that christine is i mean she's not making any choices
and any 16 year old girl would have more of a personality than she has or at least a lot of
that is on the acting like let's be honest right like and i i know, she was, again, she was too young for the part.
I'm sure there are 16-year-olds out there that could have pulled it off,
but I think also, like, it's kind of a testament to bad directing.
Like, Schumacher is a notoriously bad director,
and part of directing is training.
Because you can see, like, you can see the direction
in the way that she's acting, like, because he's, you know,
telling her, like, you're seduced, you're entranced.
And so this is, like, really, like, you're seduced, you're entranced. And so this is like really like,
so she's just kind of clearly reacting off of these very basic and ungood direction.
And that's why she looks the way she does.
Right.
And because I feel like there's a lot you could do with that blank slate
if we had a better actor.
Right.
It's very frustrating to watch.
I feel for Emmy Rossum in this movie.
I do too.
She's so young.
She's so miscast.
She's really not that good in the movie.
Oh, man.
I was in Chamber Choir, too.
Yes, it could have been
any of us.
I could have been Christine.
I can hit that high E.
Oh, God.
Emmy Rossum playing that part
the way she did
in a way that most
teenage girls can sing
was just like,
devastating for talent shows
for the next several years that I could go to. I'm just like, I can think shows for the next several years.
I'm just like,
I can think of me
like Emmy Rossum.
I was like,
of course you can.
Yeah.
Where they're just like the, Not really. Her hitting the high note on that one always sends like a chill through my body because it's just not good.
No.
I mean, it's funny how many fights I've been in over that.
Like, she's not good.
And they're like, well, she's not supposed to be good.
It's like, ah!
Listen.
What?
Listen.
The voice of an angel over here should not sound like a gravel driveway.
Like, he should.
And the prima donna should sound better than your high school chamber choir diva.
Like, holy, no, no, you don't get to pull that in this movie.
Oh, another thing about Christine and Carlotta is that Carlotta is super jealous of Christine.
And they're sort of like pitted against each other.
I love it when young hot women are super threatening to older women.
I feel like that's a really good thing.
Well, it just perpetuates.
It's just like perpetuating.
I want more of that because I think that's really healthy and creative.
Let's see more of that.
It's good writing.
It's really good.
It's good writing.
Underrepresented in cinema.
It's good writing.
Also, that was, yeah, that was, I mean, that's not an addition that's unique to the Lloyd Webber version.
They've been like, because like she didn't really care about Christine in the book but that that's been there
as early as the Lon Chaney version right where she's very strange a bitter but it's like you're
the best one like you're fine you know she's fine Carlotta and Christine I think is you know a little
bit of a virgin horror trope where no it's more like Carlotta is decadent and conceited,
and how dare she be confident.
And it's funny, because everyone, especially in the movie,
they play up that everybody hates her because she's arrogant.
But it's just like, A, she's prima donna for a reason.
She puts butts in seats.
And B, she doesn't seem to do anything to actively offend people.
But there's that scene where she's like, you know,
the prima donna scene where she's like tromping out,
and everybody's like mooning her and being like good riddance and it's just
like this doesn't make any sense why does everyone hate her she's kind of the reason that people have
a job like they're gosh she's storming out again like why why are they acting like this i mean well
to speak to all the other female characters they they have just as little agency, I would argue, as Christine, because Meg basically does nothing.
Who is Meg?
Who is Meg?
It also bothered me that Christine, whenever they were like, hey, you should play Carlotta's part.
And oh, man, this is what the Phantom wants.
So let's step back here for a second and like maybe address the problem of getting rid of this phantom rather than just appeasing him for no fucking reason.
Yeah.
It was crazy that they didn't have more of a.
But if I was a 16 year old girl, they're like, you have the lead.
We probably shouldn't try to get rid of him.
It's just too dangerous.
So let's just do what he wants.
It's weird.
That's like addressed several times of like, should we do something about this?
They're like, no, no, no, no, no, no.
You don't you don't do something about the phantom he will pay his salary do you see the way he
wiggles that chandelier i don't like i don't like the cut of his chin well and that's where like
part of the function of madame sherry's character is just every time someone offers a practical
solution she's sort of just like but you can't yeah and then it's like oh i guess we can't oh
the one of the last points I wanted to bring up was,
because we just did an episode on V for Vendetta,
the kidnapping slash re-education trope.
Kidnapping for your betterment.
Exactly.
Kidnapping with the intent being that I'm going to teach you
and you're going to be mine.
He's like, I gave you music.
You belong to me.
You owe me something.
You owe me your body and your talent and your presence. And it's just like, ah, why are you falling for this?
Right.
And it's, you know, obviously done to a very selfish end.
It barely has anything to do with Christine at all.
It sort of seems like where he just, you know,
wants companionship and
wants hot companionship.
He should just
fuck his wax doll.
I mean, he for sure does.
He for sure does.
That doll...
Let's watch it again and be like,
that doll's...
Congealed phantom cum
yeah
phantom cum
phantom cum
hey speaking of other
other movies
I would argue that there is
a titanic illusion
in the beginning of phantom
where
there's the big reveal
go for it
bear with me
bear with me
there's a big reveal
of the
of the chandelier
and then that
all of a sudden
is like
oh we're gonna
transition into
the
I hate the framing
device so much
it's so bad
but whenever
everything is like
dusty and shitty
and then it transitions
into like
a nice shiny thing
look at these
Schumacher nipples
yeah
statue nipples
that I think
is a direct allusion to when in Titanic,
when there's the shot of the old, gross, grimy, underwater Titanic,
and then it fades into this like...
Schumacher's like, worked for them?
Yeah.
Let's try it.
This is also a sweeping romance.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sure.
Does anyone have any other final thoughts about the movie The Phantom of the Opera?
I think the two people
who do very well
in this movie
are
Minnie Driver is great
I think Patrick Wilson
escapes unscathed
and does as well
as anyone could do
in this movie
I'm also just
I just love Patrick Wilson
he's good
but his character
so Raoul sucks
he's so boring
Raoul's on his fall
yeah
Raoul's he's a he's a bland they're slinging Raul fandom. Yeah.
Raul, he's a bland man.
How about that scene? And he's kind of pushy, and I don't care for him.
What about that scene whenever she's sleeping in a room, gets up, and then goes to the cemetery,
and he's just like sleeping outside of her room?
Why is he doing this?
He's looking, I guess, protecting her.
Yeah.
But that's why I would argue that that's a choice
because she sneaks past him.
She doesn't ask for permission before he goes somewhere.
True. She does make an active choice
in that role. Yeah, she does actively choose
to rip his mask off. I forgot about that.
Oh, that is true.
Again, something that makes
a lot more sense in the book.
He specifically tells her,
don't do this. And so she's like, I think I'm going to do that.
Yeah.
I think I will, actually.
And that's a pretty 16-year-old girl thing to do.
Like, oh, you told me not to do that thing?
Okay.
Yeah.
But in the movies, both times it happens, it feels so unmotivated.
Like, why is she doing?
I also love the way it's, like, shot where he's just kind of like piano like ducking his head
back and forth and well I mean it's really funny in the show because she like reaches and he'll
kind of like duck away like to write something that's good stuff the reveal in the movie's so
funny too because it's like that's not that bad yeah I don't know I mean like because I say like
watch the live at the Royal Albert Hall version it used to be on netflix um i think it maybe it still is might be like on
amazon or something now uh because i i watched it with one of my more cynical friends who had
seen the schumacher movie and that was all he had ever seen and like after he left that it was just
like you know what i get it it's not for me but like I get the Phantom thing. It is honestly kind of impressive how much the movie fails to capture what worked about the show,
even though it doesn't really change much about the story.
I am just going to go home and watch Moulin Rouge, the only musical I like,
and South Park Bigger, Longer, and Uncut.
Everything else, I hate musicals.
Hey, let's talk about whether or not the movie
passes the Bechdel test. Okay. I'm going with no. Yeah. I don't think so either. There is a scene
early on when Christine talks to Meg, but they're talking about Raul. She's like, we were childhood
sweethearts. He called me little Lottie or whatever. And then later on, they have a song
where Christine and Meg sing to each other and
christine is telling her about the angel of music but they're talking about who she perceives to be
a man who is sent they're talking about the phantom yeah yeah but she at this point doesn't
know who he is and seems to never figure it out through the entire movie there's a brief exchange
between madame giry and Christine.
Oh, this, no, it doesn't pass,
because this is after her first performance
where she takes Carlotta's place,
and Madame Giry's like,
yeah, like, you did very well.
He's very pleased with you.
Madame Giry is now my least favorite character in this entire movie.
Well, Madame Giry is just a whitewash,
because, you know, that character in the original novel
was a Persian guy.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Who was never in any of the adaptations.
Even in the Lon Chaney movie, they're like,
psych, he's not actually Persian, he's a French guy.
I love that reveal of, like, actually they were white the whole time.
Like in Hunchback.
Yeah, yeah.
She's not.
She's white.
It's cool.
Yeah, this is like 100% white.
I don't think you see any people of color at any point.
Which is funny because in the original book, that was not the case.
Hollywood white watching.
You see some non-white people in the Phantom flashback.
Oh, okay.
But the portrayal is not good.
They're like, ha ha, you're gross.
It was like the circus was run by Roma. They're like, haha, you're gross. It was like the circus
was run by Roma, right?
I think that's also there in all of the
some of them. There's one book that
I despise in every Phantom.
Every other Phantom fan loves called
Phantom by Susan Kay.
And it's in the romance novel section.
And for you, I know you're out
there getting mad. I can feel your anger.
I don't care.
Your hate fuels me.
Like, oof, boy.
Because, like, during his time with the, you know,
they use the G slur, the Roma.
They, like, kidnap him, put him in a circus, and there's one named Javert who, like, tries to rape him.
And it's, woof.
Woof.
Woof.
Okay.
Well, okay, so that's a hard no. I'm a phantom.
Phantom.
Oh, they love it.
The girls love it so much.
Yeah, I don't.
I mean, if women talk in the movie, they're always talking about either Raul or her daddy or the phantom.
I don't think there's an exchange about something that's not any of those people.
Nope.
Nope.
So does not pass the test.
Unsurprisingly.
Let's rate the movie on our nipple scale.
I would actually say surprisingly because
musicals are usually a lot better about that.
Yeah. And also
no shortage of opportunity
even from an adaptation point.
We never hear any of the
many female dancers we see
all the time, any of the female chorus members,
and there were missed opportunities sort of scattered.
When I say unsurprisingly,
I mean more that this movie is not good to women
or does not portray them in a strong way.
Oh, for sure.
Joel Schumacher does not know what to do with women.
Oh, he sure doesn't.
It's like, you have dark eye shadow, right?
That's sexy, right?
Put the corset
on the outside.
Some Captain Underpants.
Show my girl!
You're bad!
He's so bad.
You are bad.
Let's rate the movie
on a nipple scale
where we rate the movie
on a scale of
zero to five nipples
based on its portrayal
of women. I'm gonna give it, I'm gonna say a half nipple scale where we rate the movie on a scale of zero to five nipples based on its portrayal of women i'm gonna give it i'm gonna say a half nipple because hey great that there is a woman
in the story even more than one there's several so that's pretty much the only positive thing
about it apart from that it's a movie about a young woman, again, being gaslit by every person around her, being seduced by an old creep.
She is the object of his affection, emphasis on object, because she's really little.
He literally objectifies her in the real, like he turns her into an object.
You're so waxed all of you.
You like it. And there's a dress and
she uh she faints and then she wakes up and she's like actually i could see myself hanging out with
him again yeah he's my angel of music it was just a bad first impression right yeah yeah yeah yeah
so that and then her having no agency no specific specific desire in the story, despite the fact that she's supposed to be the protagonist of the movie, the character that we're, you know, rooting for and plugging ourselves into and all that stuff.
We have no idea what she wants. We hardly see her make any active choices or do anything. Decisions are either made for her or she just does fucking nothing and just stands by and watches and then all the other female characters are similarly useless therefore one half nipple
it belongs to the shiny um golden statue nipple that we see in the very opening
i just want to draw a parallel between uh meeting the Phantom and then meeting
someone that you
met online
he's like talking
through the walls
she's like he sounds
great
he's so nice
he thinks I'm so pretty
and then you meet him
and he's like
he's a murderer
he fucks dolls
I've accidentally
dated some doll fuckers
not a good scene
not a good scene
but you never
then you see them
you're like
oh for sure
you have a sword collection.
For sure. You fucked off.
Oh, I don't want to hear about your katana, sir.
Oh, God. That's I I can I can think of three different examples of like going to a man's house for the first time and being like, OK, there's a sword.
I better see myself out.
Yeah. Hard pass. I'm going to, I'm sorry.
I'm going to give Hand of the Emperor 2004 directed by Joel Schumacher.
If you give it any more than zero nipples, I'm going to be furious.
I'm going to give it two nipples.
I'm going to do it.
No.
And I don't, I'm sorry.
Defend yourself.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
First of all, I'm sorry.
You know what?
I'm second of all, I.
Not sorry.
I'm not sorry.
Sorry. Sorry. Sorry.
Because, okay, Madame Jury, especially in this movie, garbage, really like upset with
her.
Meg, nothing to do.
We don't know.
Carlotta, I think, is a good character who's mistreated by the story, particularly in this
adaptation where she's just receiving abuse from angry
poor people.
Confusing.
So I like Carlotta.
And I do like I think that Christine sort of in this movie in particular and in the
stage adaptation suffers from the same thing that Bella Swan suffers from, where she is
a very clear figure that a young audience can plug themselves into,
sort of reacts to a lot of things, I think,
in not too dissimilar to a way a teenage girl would,
but then all the bad things that are happening to her
are framed as good things.
Romantic.
Romanticizes her being like,
oh, just give in.
Give in to the abuse
to the psychological...
The first boy who pays attention to you,
you're gonna want to marry him.
You know?
Like, so it sucks to see,
not realistic,
but like a clear avatar
that people can plug themselves into,
have all the bad shit
that happens to them
framed as like,
oh, yeah, just give up.
That's fine.
But I'm gonna,
I gotta give it two nipples.
I have to. I have to. Well, then I gotta give it two nipples. I have to.
I have to.
Well, then I take back my half nipples.
And I'm giving it zero just to, when we average it out, to lower the score.
Is this worse than so many of the movies that we've seen, though?
Yeah, that's what I'm thinking.
What is the scale here?
Because if it's not a scale of all movies, you know.
Right.
Where it's like there's so many.
Maybe I'm biased because i hated this movie
so much for sure but it's like i mean i feel like if this movie gets zero nipples then
twilight would have to certainly i think i gave twilight pretty close to zero nipples i mean we
didn't give it a lot i gave transformers i think zero nipples yeah yeah that's my thing i'm like
yeah i don't know because like to me zero nipples would be like Transformers 3.
You know?
Because compared to that, I'm like,
boy, this is pretty good, you guys.
I don't know what you're talking about.
Maybe it's because I watched a lot of Transformers.
Yeah, which is a great series.
Yeah, check out Lindsay's.
Oh, yeah, The Whole Plate.
The Whole Plate.
It's my series about film theory and Transformers.
Very good.
It's great.
Lots of things I had certainly never thought about in regards to transformers i think about transformers
a lot i don't know if it shows i think on the scale of movies we've covered here it certainly
does not do well but i don't know i mean i think we're biased in opposite directions i'm certainly
biased in wanting to give it more nipples than it deserves. Because I love it. Phantom
rules. I'm going to see it again. I'll see the movie
again. I'll see the stage adaptation again.
But I recognize that, you know,
feminist icon Phantom of the Opera?
I think not.
No, no, no, no. Two nipples.
Christine gets the nipples. Okay.
All right. Yeah. Lizzie, what about you?
Again, for aforementioned reasons, where if
like zero is Transformers 3, I'm going to have to go with two and a half for reasons that you outlined.
Like, Carlotta—actually, no, I'm going to go back down to two because I feel like stage show I'd give more because Carlotta doesn't receive that and just abuse.
And, like, Christine is a little more—I mean, there's a lot of strange decisions in that.
But, you know, I think the fact that Christine is just sort of like a cipher in this,
you know, is a huge disservice.
But at the same time, it's like, man,
there's a lot of really bad representations
out there on the grand scheme.
I'm like, eh, it's better than Twilight.
It is better than Twilight.
I don't know.
I think it's about around the same.
Really?
I feel like that ending, though,
because, like, she ends up with Edward.
She does not end up with the Phantom.
Right, right.
But then she ends up with Raoul, who had also been gaslighting her and being all weird.
And he's like, you're a woman, so I need to protect you.
And also, there is no Phantom of the Opera.
You're crazy.
But also, give the man some room to be wrong.
He can't be perfect.
You've got to have room to grow.
It changes my view of raul a little bit that
they're supposed to be the same age i think that that's another sort of thing that is almost never
true on in the stage version or and certainly not in the movie version where they never
appear to be the same age in reality if they are you know suspend your disbelief patrick wilson
and emmy rossum are the same age. That makes Raoul a little more palatable.
I mean, I still don't like that character.
Yeah, because there is no Raoul fandom in the grand...
There's no team Raoul.
Yeah, there's no team Raoul. It's funny.
Well, gang, that was the Phantom of the Opera episode.
Hope you liked it.
I am so glad we did it.
Yeah.
Me too.
Thank you for joining us, Lindsay. Thank you for having me. Of all the topics, I'm glad glad we did it. Yeah. I'm really glad. Me too. Yeah. Thank you for joining
us, Lindsay. Thank you for having me.
Of all the topics, I'm glad it was this one.
Yay!
And where can people find you online?
Well, like on YouTube,
my name on YouTube is just my name,
Lindsay Ellis. You can also find me on Twitter
at TheLindsayEllis.
Awesome. Yay. You can follow us
on all the platforms,
Twitter, Instagram,
Facebook, everything
at Bechtelcast.
You can donate
to our Patreon.
If you do,
it's $5 a month
and you get
two bonus episodes
a month of the podcast.
Hey, that's fun.
Yeah.
And you can go to
patreon.com
slash Bechtelcast
to do that.
We strongly encourage it
because it helps
with our production
costs and then we
have great bonus
episodes for you
guys, the fans.
The PH.
The PH.
The PH.
I love it.
I love it.
Also, you should
go to our
live show.
Oh my God.
Oh my word.
Oh.
Heavens to
Betsy. Wait, what does Kathy Bates say? Oh my.. Oh my word. Oh. Heavens to Betsy.
Wait, what does Kathy Bates say?
Oh my.
In Titanic?
Stars and stripes.
God Almighty.
God Almighty.
That's what she says.
She says, God Almighty.
What we're trying to say is that we have a live show in Los Angeles.
We sure do.
At the Nerdist Showroom at Meltdown Comicsdown comics yeah we're sitting on top of it
right now god it's on saturday december 2nd yes at 7 p.m yes we have a guest her name is deborah
digiovanni you know her you love her she's one of our most popular episodes of all time love
actually but this time we're talking with her about Die Hard.
A Christmas movie.
That's dripping with masculinity.
Oh, we cannot wait to yell and scream.
So, if you're in SoCal, baby, check it out, dude.
You can't say SoCal without saying baby.
SoCal baby, rock on, surfers, and also long also long boards yeah that's what they say
every time they talk about the area we call a socal baby so if you're there in that area
please come to our live show um tickets are only ten dollars and if you do come bring some feminine
hygiene products yes because we're going to donate them to an organization called Project Caged Birds.
They do a lot of help with victim advocacy of intimate partner abuse.
We love that organization.
So please, yes, bring something with you and come to the goddamn show.
You're going to have a blast.
It's going to be so much fun.
We've got a lot of treats planned.
We've got treats. You might get a
free movie ticket out of it. Not to spoil
anything, but we talked about it yesterday.
And this time we made a plan.
So...
Hot brag. We are...
We're trying up here.
We're ready. We're prepared.
Can't wait to try up here
season two, Saturday, December
2nd.
Yeah.
See you there.
Bye.
Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who on October 16th, 2017, was assassinated.
Crooks Everywhere unnerves the plot to murder a one-woman WikiLeaks.
She exposed the culture of crime and corruption
that were turning her beloved country into a mafia state.
Listen to Crooks everywhere on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
To listen to new episodes one week early and 100% ad-free,
subscribe to the iHeart True Crime Plus channel, available exclusively on Apple Podcasts. Live audio of a woman's nightmare. Can Kay trust her sister or is history repeating itself?
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm.
Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
There's so much beauty in Mexican culture.
Like mariachis, delicious cuisine, and even lucha libre.
Join us for the new podcast, Lucha Libre Behind the Mask,
a 12-episode podcast in both English and Spanish
about the history and cultural richness of lucha libre.
And I'm your host, Santos Escobar, emperor of lucha libre and a WWE superstar.
Listen to Lucha Libre Behind the Mask on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you stream podcasts.