Monday, October 21, 2019
I am not a Phantom I am a rat Julian Sands as Erik essays
I am not a Phantom I am a rat Julian Sands as Erik essays    A child is born, shunned by his own mother.  He is brilliant and     artistic, possessing skills untouched by even the greatest masters in many     areas.  Perhaps he is also insane, not relating to the human race.     Eventually, he will come to be known as a ghost, haunting the world of     normal people as he passes in and out of sight in one of the greatest     centers of musical performance in the world.  Passionate, he falls in love,     and in jealousy he falls even further.  This plot line has the potential to     be studied in depth by  sociologists, psychologists, historians, and     artists on so many levels, exploring the child himself and the life and     events that build around him.  Similar to any number of ancient myths and     fairy tales, this love story about an extraordinary outsider was  first     introduced as "Le Fantome de l'Opera" by Gaston Leroux, a French journalist     in the late 1800's who happened upon bits and pieces of historical truths     and superstitious rumors that were incorporated into this groundbreaking     and originally under appreciated novel.  Nearly a century later, after     dozens of film versions of this classic tale had already populated popular     and independent movie databases, one of the greatest horror movie directors     of our time decided to take a stab at re-exploring this haunting character.           In 1998, Dario Argento released "Il Fantasma Del l'opera," an Italian     remake of the Phantom story filmed in Hungary.  Not an attempt to     accurately transpose Leroux's novel into film version, nor an attempt to     remake any of the previous films, Argento took many liberties with the     basic plot elements known by Phantom fans.  However, Argento nonetheless     stayed true to the spirit and basic artistic essence of this tale.  Argento     opens his film with an abandoned child floating down the underground     waterways of Paris in a basket, abandoned like the baby Moses.  However,     instead of being found by ...     
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