Gaston Leroux Movies
Gaston Leroux is remembered today for the novel The Phantom of the Opera and not much else. In his own time, however, he was a celebrated journalist and an international adventurer, and one of the most popular authors of mysteries and dark, occult-related thrillers in the entire world, as well as a flamboyant gambler. It was a life that might easily have come out of a novel, had it not all been true.Born on May 6, 1868, Gaston Louis Alfred Leroux grew up in a life of relative comfort, developing a love of sailing and swimming, and discovering a serious interest in literature during his childhood. He wrote poetry for his own enjoyment, and was a top student who was seemingly headed for a career as a lawyer. Even as he began studying for that profession, however, Leroux had started writing short fiction and poems for publication. By the time Leroux earned his law degree and was beginning his practice, he was looking toward a career as a writer. During this period, he inherited a substantial sum of money from his father at age 21, and managed to squander most of it before he was 23 on fine wine and cuisine, as well as on gambling. Leroux never overcame his passion for those indulgences, or the socializing that went with them. By that time, he'd recognized the legal profession for the personal dead-end that it represented, personally and financially, and turned to writing as a means of sustaining his lavish lifestyle.
Leroux became a drama critic for L'Echo de Paris, which had previously published his poetry, and soon turned to covering criminal trials, where his training as an attorney made him uniquely qualified as a reporter. His work soon moved him to more prominent newspapers and into the field of serious investigative journalism; his own exploits, which included sneaking into jails in disguise to interview prisoners, soon rivaled the attraction of his stories. Writing for the Paris newspaper Le Matin, Leroux was among the earliest modern celebrity journalists, his name on a story guaranteeing the sales of an issue. Soon, he had his own international beat, crossing Europe, Asia, and Africa, often anonymously or in outright disguise, reporting on wars around the world and such events as the Turkish slaughter of Armenians, strife in the Middle East, and the Ruso-Japanese War. He also took a hand, if not as prominent as that of Emil Zola, in the exposure of the scandal surrounding the prosecution of Captain Alfred Dreyfuss. Even when he failed to achieve his desired goal, as when Leroux sneaked in to interview the British statesman Joseph Chamberlain during the Boer War, only to be ejected, he wrote a full-length piece entitled, "How I Failed to See Chamberlain." The latter was considered one of the more effective humorous and self-effacing serious newspaper articles of its time, and a model for the genre.
Leroux began writing fiction professionally with the start of the 20th century. His first novel, The Seeking of the Morning Treasures, based on the life and supposed legacy of the bandit Cartouche, appeared in 1903 as a serialized work in Le Matin, and created a major public sensation in Paris. Leroux's first major critical success came in 1907 when he published The Mystery of the Yellow Room, which introduced the character of reporter/sleuth Joseph Rouletabille. In its time, this novel was considered the best -- if not necessarily the first -- example of a logical detective story in which the murder is committed in a sealed room, a mystery subgenre that was later the purview of such celebrated authors as John Dickson Carr. It was followed a year later by The Perfume of the Lady in Black and six more subsequent sequels. He was able to give up journalism after The Mystery of the Yellow Room, though he retained a certain topicality in his books, most notably in The Haunted Chair, in which he satirized the Academie Francais and its intellectual pretensions, which had previously resulted in his being snubbed.
Leroux's personal life was nearly as colorful as his fiction. He remained married to his first wife until soon after the turn of the century, and from 1902 onward, he was openly living with a woman whom he didn't marry until 1917. By that time, he had long since left Paris for the more favorable climate and alluring gambling activities of Nice. By all accounts, he loved to live dangerously with his assets, confident that a new book (which he always seemed to have in him) would replenish his bank account if necessary. Coupled with that love of gambling was a friendly, outgoing manner through which he'd been able to win over the subjects of his articles as a reporter. But Leroux also had a darker side, a fixation on the grimmer sides of life and death, and on horror and fantasy, as well as aspects of the macabre.
In 1911, he published The Phantom of the Opera, which seemed to draw out his darker side in its most flamboyant manifestation. The inspiration for the book was supposed to have come from the author's visit to the Paris Opera and tour of its cellars. A dazzling work of dark romantic fantasy shrouded in mystery, it sold well, as had all of his thrillers up to that time, but it wasn't especially better received than his best-known previous novels. It sold more steadily over time than some, but not so much as to make it stand out. It was the movies that made the difference. Leroux's books first started coming to the screen in 1913, when his novel Balaoo became the basis for a movie of that title. It was to be six years before his next screen adaptation, Mystery of the Yellow Room, would appear. Leroux had written a screenplay in 1916, and had became partner in a film company in 1919 that had lasted for three years, but his involvement in film was limited. Fate intervened in the guise of Universal Pictures, whose success with The Hunchback of Notre Dame in 1923, a tale of horror, thrills, and mystery done on a grand and vastly expensive scale, had sent the studio in search other properties that lent themselves to such treatment. The Phantom of the Opera seemed a logical choice, and it became one of the most enduring classics of the silent era, produced on an immense scale on outsized sets built specifically for the film (some of which were still standing into the new millennium), with images that have remained familiar to the present day.
Leroux died in 1927, at age 59, from complications following surgery, two years after The Phantom of the Opera's release. In a bizarre episode in 1929, Universal announced plans for a sequel, "The Return of the Phantom," ostensibly written by Leroux; it was claimed, by no less than Carl Laemmle Jr., son of the studio's founder, that the author had been so impressed with the studio's adaptation, that he'd written a sequel before he died. This was totally untrue, but it does illustrate the author's prominence at the time, that his imprimatur would be invoked falsely. (No sequel was ever made, but Universal did recut and partly reshoot the 1925 film and adapt it to sound in 1929 and 1930.) Other adaptations of Leroux's work followed, from the 1920s into the 1940s, principally filmed in France, but none of them had remotely the impact of Universal's 1925 release. The studio's 1943 remake, though flawed with a key plot change and an emphasis on music over horror, failed to register nearly as well, but the images of the 1925 movie remained engrained in the public consciousness for decades to come. In the 1980s, following a handful of subsequent film adaptations of the novel, Leroux's story came to the London and Broadway stages, where the multi-year runs of the musical version led to the republication of the novel and multiple efforts at restoring the 1925 movie. Despite this 60-year chain of successes, and novels that continued to appear posthumously until 1930, memory of Leroux -- especially outside of France -- faded rapidly. Since the 1940s, his writing has become relatively obscure, apart from the various incarnations of his most famous novel. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Gina Manès, René Navarre, (more)
- Starring:
- Gina Manès
Lon Chaney stars as Erik, the Phantom, in what is probably his most famous and certainly his most horrifying role. Produced by Universal, the film shot in 1923 and shelved for nearly two years, and was subjected to intensive studio tinkering. While many expected a disaster, the film turned out to be a rousing success. It was both the stepping off point for Chaney's run as a superstar at MGM and the prototype for the horror film cycle at Universal in the 1930s. The story concerns Erik, a much-feared fiend who haunts the Paris Opera House. Lurking around the damp, dank passages deep in the cellars of the theater, he secretly coaches understudy Christine Daae (Mary Philbin) to be an opera star. Through a startling sequence of terrors, including sending a giant chandelier crashing down on the opera patrons, the Phantom forces the lead soprano to withdraw from the opera, permitting Christine to step in. Luring Christine into his subterranean lair below the opera house, the Phantom confesses his love. But Christine is in love with Raoul de Chagny (Norman Kerry). The Phantom demands that Christine break off her relationship with Raoul before he'll allow her to return to the opera house stage. She agrees, but immediately upon her release from the Phantom's lair, she runs into the arms of Raoul and they plan to flee to England after her performance that night. The Phantom overhears their conversation and, during her performance, the Phantom kidnaps Christine, taking her to the depths of his dungeon. It is left to Raoul and Simon Buquet (Gibson Gowland), a secret service agent, to track down the Phantom and rescue Christine. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Lon Chaney, Mary Philbin, (more)
A film that has apparently long since disappeared, Fox's The Wizard is, together with MGM's London After Midnight, one of the most highly sought-after of the "lost" silent horror films. Based on a story by Gaston Leroux (of Phantom of the Opera fame), the story concerns one Doctor Coriolos, played by the satanic-visaged Gustav von Seyfertitz. Outwardly a saintly humanitarian, Coriolos is actually a fiend in human form, secretly plotting the murders of those who sentenced his son to the gallows. To this end, he has developed and cultivated an "ape man" named Balaoo (George Kotsonaros) to do his bidding. To offset the grim goings-on, a pair of comedy-relief detectives stumble and bumble around to solve the murders orchestrated by Coriolos. The Wizard was remade, and considerably simplified, as Dr. Renautl's Secret, with George Zucco as Renault and J. Carroll Naish as his half-simian flunkey. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Edmund Lowe, Leila Hyams, (more)
A novel by Gaston Leroux (of Phantom of the Opera fame) was the source for Parfum de la Dame en Noir (Perfume of the Lady in Black). The story takes place on the Riviera, where the title character may or may not be involved in various shades of skullduggery, including murder. The film's highlight involves a coffin containing the body of a man who committed suicide -- or, did he? Huguette Duflos played the title character, while the comedy relief was in the capable hands of Belieres. In emulation of the 1928 American film The Terror, the opening credits are not printed on screen, but instead spoken by a mysterious "ghost" voice. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Huguette Duflos, Vera Engels, (more)
In this melodrama, a magician finds himself accused of murdering his lover's father. He flees and the lover marries her other boyfriend--the real killer. When her husband dies, the magician gets plastic surgery until he resembles the killer and assumes his former position as husband to the girl. He then begins gathering the necessary evidence to clear his name. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- John Gilbert, Leila Hyams, (more)
Le Mystere de la Chambre Jaune (Mystery of the Yellow Room) is based on a novel by Gaston Leroux, of Phantom of the Opera fame. Hugette Ex-Duffos plays a scientist's daughter, who is targeted for a murder by an unknown assailant. When the police prove unable to protect the heroine, wisecracking reporter Roland Toutain assumes the responsibility. Toutain not only saves the girl from a second homicidal assault but also exposes the killer's identity. Critics complained that the film was too faithful to the original Leroux novel, dwelling too long on exposition and extraneous characters. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Roland Toutain, Huguette Duflos, (more)
Filmed in 1936 as Mr. Flow, this Robert Siodmak production was based on a novel by Gaston Leroux. Set in summertime Paris, the labyrinthine plotline is set in motion by the title character, a gentleman safecracker played by Louis Jouvet. To recount the entire plotline would require a dictionary-sized synopsis, but its essence can be captured in a single sentence: the clever Mr. Flow is finally outmaneuvered by his beautiful but chronically unfaithful mistress, Lady Helena Scarlett (Edwidge Feuillere). At the time of the film's release, Robert Siodmak was brought to task by critics who felt that the director was trying too hard to imitate Ernst Lubitsch. Such an accusation could never be levelled against Siodmak's Hollywood films, which relied heavily upon horror and melodrama. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Edwige Feuillère, Mila Parély, (more)
A remake of the 1927 horror melodrama The Wizard (which, alas, no longer exists), 20th Century-Fox's Dr. Renault's Secrets packs a real wallop in its brisk 58-minute running time. The scene is a remote French village, where the murder of drunken tourist Austin (Jack Norton) coincides with the arrival of young doctor Larry Forbes (John Sheppard, aka Sheppard Strudwick). It develops that Sheppard is the house guest of the outwardly benign Dr. Renault (George Zucco), who lives with his pretty niece Madeline (Lynne Roberts) and his bizarre manservant Noel (J. Carroll Naish), who possesses more than a few apelike tendencies. Several more murders occur, and the clues point in a number of directions. Upon learning Dr. Renault's secret -- which is something straight out of H. G. Well's The Island of Dr. Moreau -- the audience is able to discern the killer's identity. Alas, it may be too late for heroine Madeline, at present being kidnapped by a local hooligan (Mike Mazurki) and thus apparently at the mercy of the rampaging murderer. Dr. Renault's Secret was frequently shipped out on a double bill with Fox's other 1942 horror piece, The Undying Monster. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- J. Carrol Naish, John Shepperd, (more)
This Technicolor retelling of the Gaston Leroux "grand guignol" classic The Phantom of the Opera has a little more opera than phantom, but that's because the stars are soprano Susannah Foster and tenor Nelson Eddy. Claude Rains carries the acting honors on his shoulders, playing a pathetic orchestra violinist who worships aspiring opera-singer Foster from afar. The girl is unaware that Rains has secretly been financing her music lessons with instructor Leo Carrillo. When he runs out of money, Rains attempts to sell the concerto that he's been working on all his life. Mistakenly believing that his precious concerto has been stolen from him, Rains attacks and kills the music publisher he holds responsible. Terrified, the publisher's mistress throws a pan full of acid into Rains' face. Rains runs screaming into the night, and is not heard from for the next reel or so. Soon afterward, the Paris Opera house is plagued by a series of mysterious accidents. The managers are informed via letter that the "accidents" will continue if Foster is not immediately promoted to leading roles. Only after reigning diva Jane Farrar is drugged into incapacitation is Foster given her big break. Farrar accuses Foster's boyfriend, police inspector Nelson Eddy, of doping her in order to advance Foster's career. Farrar is later strangled, and Eddy is accused of the crime. The culprit is, of course, Rains, who now poses as the masked-and-caped "phantom". Maniacally determined that no one will impede Foster's success, Rains causes a huge chandelier to crash down on the opera audience when Foster fails to appear onstage (she'd been kept from performing by police-chief Edgar Barrier, who hoped in this manner to flush The Phantom out of hiding). A chase through the catacombs below the opera house ensues, with Rains holding Foster prisoner. When Rains briefly lets down his guard, the tremulous Foster removes his mask. It's "yecccch," all right, but nowhere near as frightening as the unmasking scene in the silent Lon Chaney version of Phantom of the Opera. The same can be said for the rest of this 1943 remake, though in fairness it appears as though the film wasn't really designed to scare anyone, but instead to serve as a suspense yarn with musical interludes. Hume Cronyn makes his second film appearance in Phantom in a microscopic role. The huge sets designed for this picture were hastily reused for the 1944 Universal melodrama The Climax, starring Boris Karloff and (again) Susannah Foster. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Nelson Eddy, Susanna Foster, (more)
- Starring:
- Hélène Perdrière, Janine Darcey, (more)
- Starring:
- Hélène Perdrière, Serge Reggiani, (more)
Originally a character in a Gaston Leroux novel, Cheri-Bibi was transformed into a popular French comic-strip character in the 1930s. The character was also featured in two films, the second of which was in 1955. Jean Richard plays the title character, a born loser who undergoes plastic surgery in order to resemble his rival for the hand of Lea Padovini. Once he emerges from the bandages, Cheri-Bibi is plunged into a series of melodramatic misadventures. Though never "camp" in its tone, Cheri-Bibi is engagingly tongue-in-cheek, having fun with its source material rather than poking fun at it. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Jean Richard, Raymond Bussières, (more)
This Gothic melodrama from Hammer Studios is in color, but the plot is basically the same as the two previous efforts. Instead of Paris, the action takes place at the Royal Opera House in London. The Phantom (Herbert Lom) is a facially disfigured musician/composer who had his opera stolen by a conniving composer, the lecherous Lord d'Arcy. The Phantom -- who lives in the sewer beneath the opera house -- has his dwarf assistant (Ian Wilson) kidnap Christine Charles (Heather Sears), the lead actress in Gough's production, with whom he has fallen in love, and trains her to become an opera singer, performing a work he has written. Meanwhile, Christine's fiance, Harry Hunter (Edward de Souza, researches the phantom's history and, after locating his whereabouts and finding him, decides to unmask the mysterious fellow. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Herbert Lom, Heather Sears, (more)
In this horror comedy, the new owner of the beautiful old Ritz theater is in the process of renovating it when he discovers that beneath the stage lives the evil, enraged spirit of a teen who was burned and disfigured during a drag race in the mid '50s. Afterward, he took to living in the Ritz and remained there until 1992 when the hapless new owner took over. The trouble begins because the phantom does not want any one messing with what he believes is his theater. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Gaston Leroux's classic tale of love and suspense gets a face-lift in this horror story loosely adapted from Leroux's novel. Christine (Jill Schoelen) is a young classical vocalist who, in the midst of performing a recently discovered piece by an obscure composer, is struck on the head by a sandbag and wakes up in London in 1884. Eric Destler (Robert Englund) is a composer who is desperate to succeed -- so much so that he sells his soul to the devil in exchange for writing songs that people will love. However, the devil adds a twist to the bargain by horribly scarring Eric's face, which can only be disguised by flesh from a living victim. Living below the London Opera House, Eric works night and day on his music; when he hears Christine's voice he falls in love, he and lures her to his lair. Eric decides that Christine is the perfect woman to sing his music; he coaches her to a perfect interpretation of his work, and he kills anyone who stands between her and success. Future Saturday Night Live star Molly Shannon made her film debut in a small role in the film's modern day sequences. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Robert Englund, Jill Schoelen, (more)
This adaptation of Gaston Leroux's indefatigable "grand guignol" piece The Phantom of the Opera stars British actor Charles Dance as Erik the Phantom. This adaptation by playwright Arthur Kopit soft-pedals the horrific elements of the story to concentrate on the love the tragic Erik bears toward innocent chorus singer Teri Polo. The film boasts a stronger supporting cast than was usual for a TV movie, including Burt Lancaster (as the masked phantom's father), Ian Richardson and Jean-Pierre Cassel. The 1990 Phantom of the Opera reunited director Tony Richardson and composer John Addison, who'd both won Oscar for Tom Jones. Filmed on location in France, Phantom was originally telecast in two two-hour installments. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Burt Lancaster, Teri Polo, (more)
In the grand tradition of Britain's Hammer low-budget horror films of the '60s, this Gothic and gory chiller is the third screen version of Gaston Leroux's tale The Wax Museum. The prologue is set in turn-of-the-century Paris at New Years. Just as the bells ring out, a young sleeping couple are attacked by a hooded figure whose hand has been replaced by a fearsome steel claw. Their gruesome deaths are witnessed by their unseen little girl. The story moves ahead 12 years and moves to a Roman brothel where Lucas, a young patron, accepts a bet to spend an entire evening in a particular wax museum filled with gruesome reenactments of the world's most horrible crimes. Though he knows the figures are only wax, they literally horrify Lucas to the point of death. The official cause is listed as heart failure, a fact that attracts considerable attention from the press causing the curator, Boris, to devise a new set of grim tableaux. His latest creations are chillingly real, mostly because they are real but for the special chemical Boris injects into them. The curator's diabolical schemes unravel shortly after he hires Sonia, the little girl from the prologue, as his new costumer. The museum exhibits bring her childhood trauma flooding back to the surface. Fortunately, her lover, an ingenious reporter has teamed up with a determined police inspector who has been investigating her parents' murder for the past 12 years. The film is dedicated to Lucio Fulci, one of Italy's premiere masters of schlock horror who died during production in March, 1996. He was replaced by first-time director Sergio Stivaletti. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
In keeping with the his cult reputation, Italian filmmaker Dario Argento's take on Gaston Leroux's enduring Gothic tale of terror and obsession features plenty of sex and graphic, high-tech gore (although hard-core Argento purists may find the splatter scenes rather sparse). Unlike other renditions of the illustrious Phantom, Argento's version suffers no facial disfigurement and therefore remains unmasked. His creepiness, shown in the early parts of the story, comes from having been abandoned as a baby and raised by rats in the labyrinthine catacombs beneath the Paris Opera. Unaccustomed to humankind, the Phantom (Julian Sands) spends his days in the darkness playing an organ, murdering intruders, saving his rodent family members from the theater's exterminator and occasionally wandering about the opera house. His life changes when he falls in love with beautiful young singer Christine (Asia Argento), understudy to temperamental zaftig diva Carlotta (Nadia Rinaldi). Desperate to have her, the Phantom plays a haunting melody and lures her into the bowels of the great theater. There he will begin a macabre courtship destined to end in tragedy. Those who enjoy finding continuity mistakes will be delighted to discover that while the story is set in 1877, the theater is lighted with electricity, something that did not happen in real life until 1888. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Julian Sands, Asia Argento, (more)
- Starring:
- Denis Podalydès, Sabine Azéma, (more)
One of the most popular stage musicals in the history of Broadway and London's West End makes its long-awaited arrival on the motion-picture screen in this lavish adaptation directed by Joel Schumacher. Christine (Emmy Rossum) is a beautiful and gifted young woman who longs to join the company of the Paris Opera House. During rehearsals for one of the opera's grand productions, a backdrop falls and crashes to the floor, nearly crushing leading lady Carlotta (Minnie Driver). When several members of the company suggest this could be the work of the "Phantom of the Opera," a spectral presence said to haunt the building, Carlotta drops out of the show, and the fates permit Christine to step in as her replacement. Christine's performance is a triumph, and on opening night she becomes reacquainted with Raoul (Patrick Wilson), a former childhood friend who is now a wealthy and well-known nobleman. Christine soon finds herself smitten with the handsome Raoul, but the same evening she makes a startling discovery -- the story of the Phantom is not just a legend. A brilliant but horribly disfigured composer (Gerard Butler) lives deep in the depths of the opera house, and taken with the beauty of Christine's voice, he abducts her and brings her to his lair, where he offers to help her perfect her talents, offering to write an opera especially for her. As the terrified Christine is comforted by Raoul, the two fall in love, but the phantom sees her affection for Raoul as a tremendous betrayal, and the jealous phantom nearly kills Christine as he nearly killed Carlotta. When the phantom emerges to present the opera's management with the piece he has written for Christine, the singer is asked to put her life on the line in an effort to capture the mad genius once and for all. Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical version of Gaston Leroux's novel, which had already enjoyed several stage and screen adaptations in the past, opened in London in 1986 and has been a popular favorite around the world ever since; the show was still running in New York and London when the film version premiered in late 2004. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Gerard Butler, Emmy Rossum, (more)



















