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The Phantom - Serial
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Product Description
Professor Davidson and his lovely daughter Diana search Africa for the Lost City of Zoloz. Legend pegs it to be the source of a vast hidden treasure. Their search is hindered by a local crook, Singapore Smith, who wants the treasure for himself. It is further complicated by Dr. Bremmer, an international criminal, who plans to destroy the peace with the local native tribes and build a secret air base at Zoloz. Fortunately, the Phantom, who is also Diana's fiance, is more than a match for the two villains. The Phantom, with his superhuman strength, manages to outwit each enemy move, escaping from one death trap after an other: avalanches, poison gas, flaming pyres, and explosions fail to shake his fearless spirit. With the help of his four-footed pal Devil, he finally overpowers all the enemy factions, and brings peace to the jungle once again. Another exciting serial adventure produced by Columbia Pictures and based on one of King Features' funny-paper heroes. 15 Chapters.
Product details
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : Unrated (Not Rated)
- Product Dimensions : 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 2.72 ounces
- Item model number : 89859826825
- Director : B. Reeves Eason
- Media Format : Black & White, NTSC, Multiple Formats
- Run time : 4 hours and 14 minutes
- Release date : January 30, 2001
- Actors : Various
- Studio : VCI Entertainment
- ASIN : B000051SH3
- Country of Origin : USA
- Number of discs : 2
- Best Sellers Rank: #54,392 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #649 in Fantasy DVDs
- #2,681 in Mystery & Thrillers (Movies & TV)
- #5,467 in Action & Adventure DVDs
- Customer Reviews:
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 13, 2011"The Phantom" is a 15-chapter 1943 Columbia serial directed by B. Reeves Eason, based on the newspaper feature by Lee Falk. Unlike many such adaptations, this one doesn't stray too far from the original, though it has a few of the problems often seen in serials from Columbia.
The Phantom, "The Man Who Never Dies" or "The Ghost Who Walks" rules the jungle, the peace of which has recently been disrupted, and after a long absence The Phantom (Sam Flint) needs to return, calling a meeting of the tribes. The Phantom appears, but a poisoned dart hits him so he cuts his speech short, and vanishes. Knowing he is dying, The Phantom sends a message to his son, Geoffrey Prescott (Tom Tyler) who now has to take over. Geoffrey and his dog Devil (Ace, the wonder dog) have been with Professor Davidson (Frank Shannon), his niece Diana Palmer (Jeanne Bates) and her fiance Byron Anderson (Guy Kingsford) on an expedition to find the lost city of the Zoloz. So far they have found the not-so-lost city of Sai Pana, where the Professor meets Singapore Smith (Joe Devlin), with whom he compares segments of a map made of pieces of ivory. They find one segment is still missing, and Singapore Smith entrusts his pieces to the Professor, planning to steal all of them later. Of interest to Smith is a treasure rumored to be in the lost city. But the local doctor, Max Bremmer (Kenneth MacDonald) works against the Professor and Smith, since he is trying to build a secret airbase at Zoloz, and is in fact responsible for the unrest in the Jungle.
Some of the facts of the plot have been incorrectly stated not only in other reviews, but on VCI's package, where Diana is identified as Professor Davidson's daughter and The Phantom as her fiance. Dr. Bremmer is not in search of the segments of the map; he wouldn't be building an airbase at Zoloz if he didn't already know where it was, but he needs a labor force and plans to get it through control of the tribes.
We aren't really sure where this jungle is located. The tribesmen look more South American Indian than African, except for Chief Tartar (Dick Curtis) and his men, whose fur-trimmed costumes suggest more northern climates, maybe Siberia or Mongolia. Tartar's gorilla doesn't seem to be credited even at IMDb, though he looks exactly like Ray Corrigan in his "Bonga" suit. The events in Tartar's domain are a world apart from the rest of the action, all too much like something out of a Three Stooges comedy, familiar territory to both Dick Curtis and Kenneth MacDonald. The "Fire Princess," actually a dancer hired by Bremmer named Ruby Dawn (Early Cantrell) in Chapter Nine isn't much better, though at least she is supposed to be a fake. Fortunately this tendency only lasts a couple of chapters fairly late in the serial, and director B. Reeves Eason is a decided asset to the action sequences, which are better than usual from Columbia. The studio backgrounds are a little lacking, especially those for a fight on a suspension bridge, and The Phantom's costume has a lot of wrinkles, though fortunately Tom Tyler looks believable in it. It is helpful that the emphasis is on action, though Tyler does justice to his spoken lines. Jeanne Bates' role is a little limited, only requiring rescue a couple times, but she fits into the plot fairly well. Frank Shannon as her uncle sounds a lot like Dr. Zarkov, for some reason, though he looks enough like an old archaeologist while Kenneth MacDonald is suitably menacing without the excesses often used by Columbia's villains. There are a number of well known serial-movie actors in secondary roles, including Stanley Price as Chief Chota, Ernie Adams, for once a good guy as Rusty Fenton, John Bagni as Moku, and a host of henchmen including George Chesebro, Edmund Cobb, Al Ferguson, I. Stanford Jolley and Kermit Maynard. The music by Lee Zahler is appropriate, better than in many Columbia serials, if not quite up to the "pulse-pounding" scores used by Republic.
VCI's edition, # 8268 is on two discs, the image sharp with good gray scale. There are a few visible splices, brief horizontal double-lines that do not affect the sound, though in Chapter Five a different kind of horizontal line is seen, a tape wrinkle scrolling in the upper half of the picture, 10:56 into the chapter for eight frames, a very minor defect. The sound is mostly fine, low in noise, with good frequency response and low distortion by standards of films of the era. Chapter 11 had most of the soundtrack missing, and had to be restored with music from other chapters and actors speaking the lines, mostly of characters in Tartar's domain. While not too disruptive, the substitution is especially noticed in the introduction, where the voice used is not a good match for narrator Knox Manning. The Special Features include "Bios" of Tom Tyler, Jeanne Bates, Kenneth MacDonald and B. Reeves Eason. There is a "comic art" feature with 25 covers of comic books that included The Phantom, and a "photo gallery" with sixteen pictures, plus one daily comic strip that unfortunately is not sharp enough to read. And there is commentary, by Dick Tracy writer Max Allan Collins, presented on an alternate audio track during the first chapter, probably best heard after watching the chapter.
This is a good serial with a plot that doesn't seem illogical when watched one chapter at a time, and VCI's excellent print makes it one of the better relases of its kind.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 5, 2005Republic was certainly best known for serials, but other studios often got into the act. One of these was Columbia Pictures. In truth, Columbia's serials weren't anything to write home about--but there was one exception: the 1943 THE PHANTOM, which cracks along at a memorable pace with an entertaining storyline, some excellent fight choreography, visually interesting set pieces, and a truly fine performance from Tom Tyler in the title role.
Tom Tyler (1903-1954) was a handsome, well-built man who played in well over 150 films between 1924 and 1953--but whose final years was marred by rheumatoid arthritis that reduced him to small supporting roles. But he was very much at his peak in 1941 when he appeared in the legendary Republic serial THE ADVENTURES OF CAPTAIN MARVEL--and no less so for the 1943 THE PHANTOM. Seen today, many serial "super heroes" of the 1930s and 1940s look more than a little chubby in their skin-tight costumes, but not Tyler: he had the body to carry it off, and if his acting chops weren't up to the standards of Hollywood's A-List actors they were perfect for this sort of comic book fun.
The story finds the peace of jungle tribes threatened by the evil Dr. Bremmer (Kenneth MacDonald), who seeks to create an airbase for use by an unfriendly country at the long-lost jungle city of Zoloz. But in order to locate the hidden city, Bremmer must obtain "the keys"--pieces of a puzzle-like map--from newly arrived Professor Davidson (Frank Shannon) and his party. Can the Phantom, with the aid of his clever dog Devil, foil Bremmer, protect Davidson, and bring peace to the jungle once more?
You better believe it, but before he does there are crocodiles, lions, tigers, a "fire princess," and booby-traps galore to overcome, most of them cleverly imagined and all of them expertly performed. Director B. Reeves Eason keeps everything moving at a sharp pace, and if the dialogue and cinematography are seldom inspired they are never less than entertaining, and there's not a dull moment in all fifteen chapters.
Like many serials, THE PHANTOM does adopt certain racial sensibilities that will cause modern viewers to roll their eyes from time to time. It is actually a bit difficult to tell where this film is supposed to be set: at times the script seems to imply Africa, at other times it seems to imply South America, and the "natives" are pretty much clumsy white men in dark make-up who look silly in diaper-like costumes. Even so, the thing goes like a house afire, and if you're interested in the serial genre this is one you can't afford to miss.
The VCI DVD edition features a nice commentary by Max Allan Collins on "Chapter One," a handful of biographies, and samples of comic book art and lobby cards; the real plus, however, is the quality of the film itself, which is quite fine--and this in spite of an instance where the soundtrack was lost and had to be re-created by modern actors. The picture quality is very good and the sound is more than adequate. Recommended to serial fans everywhere!
GFT, Amazon Reviewer
- Reviewed in the United States on April 16, 2015Here we go again with another classic forties serial. This one has plenty of action and very distinct good guys and bad guys. I'm not spoiling anything when I tell you that in the beginning the old Phantom gets croaked and his son has to take over. After that, the action begins and never lets up. Oh, it's a classic cliff-hanger, believe thee me, but I have to say that it is one of the better ones and it moves right along. It kind of has you wondering if there'll be any bad guys left by the last chapter, but take heart, there are. Throw the disk on your playback, grab a bowl of nosh, pop open a bottle of whatever, kick back in your Lazy-boy or sprawl out on the sofa and enjoy, enjoy.
Top reviews from other countries
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Amazon KundeReviewed in Germany on August 21, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars ein klassiker
leider nie auf deutsch erschienen, aber trotzdem ein klassiker
- claudio Testoni.Reviewed in Australia on November 14, 2020
4.0 out of 5 stars againthis was very old but I enjoyed it very much
very old but very good
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s_watanabeReviewed in Japan on October 15, 2017
4.0 out of 5 stars 連続活劇版『ファントム』参上!
黒いアイマスクに、全身紫色のタイツに身を包み、悪と戦うヒーローとして、1936年に、リー・フォークが連載を開始した新聞連載漫画"The Phantom"。日本では馴染みの薄いヒーローだが、フォークは、亡くなる1999年まで精力的に連載を続け、彼の死後も、別の作者の手によって、その連載は続けられ(2017年現在)、世界的には、The Phantom人気が衰えるということはない。あだ名でもある”The Man Who Cannot Die”の通り、彼の存在と人気は、不死身のようだ。
すでに書いたように、日本では、あまり知られていないものの、映画化もされ、1996年には、パラマウント映画が、それなりの大作として『ザ・ファントム』を作り、アメリカではそれなりに話題になった(日本では、その知名度の低さから劇場未公開に終わった)。もっとも映画化されたのはそれが最初ではなく、新聞連載開始から7年経った1943年にも、コロンビア映画で、全15話から成る連続活劇も作られたことも、映画ファンには知られているところだろう。
本DVDは、その連続活劇版を2枚のディスクに収めたもの。
アフリカのジャングルに住む多くの部族たちは、アイマスクと全身タイツに身を包んだ「ファントム」と呼ばれる人物を畏れ崇め、彼のリーダーシップのおかげで平和が保たれていた。その頃、かつてジャングルのどこかにあったといわれる幻の都市ゾロズを探すために、大学教授のデイヴィッドソン(フランク・シャノン)率いる探検隊がやって来る。同じく、ゾロズの場所に、秘密の空港を作ろうと画策しているブレマー医師(ケネス・マクドナルド)やゾロズに眠ると言われる財宝を狙うシンガポール・スミス(ジョー・デヴリン)も絡み、ジャングルには暗雲が立ち込め…。
【Disc1】:
・第1話”The Sign of the Skull”
・第2話”The Man Who Never Dies”
・第3話“A Traitor's Code”
・第4話”The Seat of Judgement”
・第5話”The Ghost Who Walks”
・第6話”Jungle Whispers”
・第7話“The Mystery Well”
・第8話”In Quest of the Keys”
・第9話”The Fire Princess”
・第10話”The Chamber of Death”
【Disc2】:
・第11話”The Emerald Key”
・第12話”The Fangs of the Beast”
・第13話”The Road to Zoloz”
・第14話”The Lost City”
・第15話”Peace in the Jungle”
連続活劇ということで、細かい心理描写などは一切なく、正義と悪が明確に描き分けられた、実に分かりやすい展開の作品だ。数々のA級作品の第2班監督や低予算作品の監督として腕を鳴らしたB・リーヴス・イーソン監督の演出は、メリハリのある感じで、各話20分を簡潔にまとめ、次の話数への期待を高めている。
また、ジャングルが舞台ということで(ハリウッド・ヒルズをジャングルに見立て撮影したという)、ワニ、ライオン、豹、ゴリラなどの猛獣が襲い来るのに加え、底なし沼、ガス室、井戸、吊り橋、落石…、などファントムを危機に陥れる数々の状況が、いかにも連続活劇と言う感じのスリルと興奮を味わわせてくれる。
ファントムを演じるトム・タイラーが、まさに適役で、すでに、同様のスーパーヒーローを”The Adventures of Captain Marvel"で演じているだけあり、本作でも、その恵まれた肉体を駆使してのアクションをこなしている。立ち回りの切れの良さ、機敏さは、さすがという感じだ。
15話という長さ(4時間強!)の割に、結末があっさりし過ぎているなど、脚本の貧弱さは連続活劇の常で気になるところだが、それでも、だれることなく楽しめる一編だ。
本DVDは、パブリック・ドメイン作品(連続活劇も多く含まれる)を良質の35mm素材からテレシネ、レストアして発売することで定評のある米VCIのもの。本盤は、状態の良い35mm素材からテレシネ、レストアされたマスターを使っている。
もちろん、メジャー会社によってレストアされたクラシック作品などに比べると、全編に渡って、白黒諧調が良好というわけでも、ディテール表現が良好な画質というわけでもないし、ノイズも残った音声ではある(2002年のDVD黎明期のものということも関係あるだろう)。しかも、第11話の35mm音ネガの状態が悪く使えず、声質の似た声優が、新たにセリフを吹替えているので、若干の違和感もある。それでも、現状、本作を楽しむには、最上の質であることは間違いない。英語字幕は未収録。
特典には、作家、マックス・アレン・コリンズのコメンタリー(1話分)、フォト・ギャラリー、コミック・ブック・アート・ギャラリー、スタッフ紹介が収録。
ケースは、2枚のディスクがスッキリと収まるマルチ(エコ)・ケースを採用。
本DVDは、北米盤ながら、リージョンAll仕様なので、日本製のリージョン2 プレーヤーで問題なく視聴可能だ。
- Old Film LoverReviewed in Canada on May 26, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars VCI Entertainment's 2-DVD Presentation of The Phantom (1943) Is a Winner
VCI Entertainment's 2001 DVD edition of the 1943 Columbia serial The Phantom is well-done.
I'm not a big fan of serials, and don't collect them as a matter of course, but I heard good things about this one, and the praise was justified. This is a very entertaining serial, ranking up there with Zorro's Fighting Legion (1939) for quality of production, script and acting. Tom Tyler (who played The Mummy in the 1940 Universal film The Mummy's Hand) is great in the lead role. It's very hard for an actor to wear a comic-book hero suit without looking ridiculous, but Tom Tyler looks really good in the Phantom suit. His dialogue is also reasonably fluid and natural (compared with, say, the stiff and robotic dialogue of Clayton Moore in the Lone Ranger serial). Perennial Three Stooges villain Kenneth MacDonald is the Phantom's nemesis in the serial, and MacDonald is very good as an oily schemer. The action scenes, often cowboy-style fisticuffs, are pretty good. Some of the cliffhanger endings are good, too, though I wouldn't say brilliantly original. The film is flawed by its indefinite geographical location: the lions indicate Africa, the tigers Asia, the tailed monkeys South America, and the natives look like a cross between Indians from Hollywood Westerns and Polynesian islanders. And how a supposed Tartar warlord who resembles Attila the Hun (who figures in one episode) would still be around in the 20th century is a mystery which the screenwriters don't even pretend to explain. Suspension of historical and geographical disbelief is very much required. But once you make the concession, the story is engaging and enjoyable.
The picture and sound are very good throughout. They are not flawless, but except for Chapter 11 (to be discussed momentarily), the flaws do not seriously distract, and there are many feature films from the 1940s that are in worse audio/video shape on DVD than this serial. Chapter 11 has required some tampering, because the original audio has been corrupted; the folks at VCI have supplied some modern voices to replace the damaged parts. This is openly acknowledged on the back of the DVD case. The co-ordination of new voices with the lip motions of the original actors is pretty well done. It is slightly irritating to have to listen to the wrong voices for the Phantom and the other characters, but the alternative -- a sound track which would not allow us to hear the dialogue properly -- would have been worse. I think the repairs were handled acceptably.
There are 15 episodes in the serial, 10 on Disk 1 and 5 on Disk 2. The first episode, which introduces the Phantom character, is the longest, at over 28 minutes. The second episode runs for over 18 minutes. After that, the episodes average about 16 minutes 30 seconds. The total running time of all the episodes (including roughly 10-second gaps between episodes) is about 260 minutes. This is quite a bit less than the 299-minute running time indicated on the IMDb. The question is whether something is missing from the VCI version or the IMDb report is in error. The latter seems more likely. If there were 39 minutes missing from the episodes, surely there would be leaps or gaps in the story in several places, and I didn't notice any such. There is one episode that is rather short -- Episode 6 runs only about 15:19 -- but that is only a minute, and can't account for 39 missing minutes. My guess, then, is that the IMDb figure is an error (or perhaps represents a longer pre-release running time, before the serial was edited into final form for its 1943 stint in the theatres).
The main special feature is a partial commentary by comic book writer Max Allan Collins. The commentary is only on Chapter 1, the longest of the chapters. It is reasonably good. I guess Collins only wanted to do the first chapter. It's too bad VCI couldn't find others to comment on the other chapters. I would like to have had some help from a film scholar in identifying the various "bit" players in the episodes. Beyond the commentary, there is a gallery of images of Phantom comic book covers (including some rare Harvey covers I had never seen before), another gallery of stills from the serial, and some brief text-format biographies of the stars and the director.
Overall, this is a nice presentation of a rare film item, and VCI is to be congratulated for a good job. It probably deserves about a 4.2 out of 5 stars, but since no fractions are allowed I'll give it 5 stars. And since you can find this item for under $20 if you look around, if you have any love for serials, or even if you've never seen one and are curious to see what the serials were like, this purchase is an easy decision.
- Old BluebottleReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 3, 2004
5.0 out of 5 stars Will THE PHANTOM survive the Pit of Doom? Don't miss .......
I have looked forward to the day that I would see this gem, and I wasn't disappointed. I admired Tom tyler as 'Captain Marvel' and even as 'The Mummy',but he is an actor who was born to play The Phantom. What a presence! And what a pity he only essayed the role the once. Kenneth MacDonald (hey, doc can you give me something for this aaaarrrgh) is a prime villain.(hisss) Dr Zarkov has gone grey, and is now a loveable old professor! The heroine screams and faints on cue. And finally 3 cheers for Devil (wonder dog) who saves more than the day on a number of occassions. A winner all the way.