Today we
conclude our weeklong interview with Lee Falk (1911-1999), the creator of The
Phantom and Mandrake the Magician!
What do you think of
the recent incarnations of The Phantom, like the cartoon series Phantom 2040,
or Defenders of the Earth?
First off,
the animator of Defenders of the Earth concentrated
on Mandrake, The Phantom, and Flash
Gordon. They figured the kids would like something in a future time, with
interesting technology and what not. So they grouped them with Flash in the
future. I rather reluctantly agreed, thinking that maybe that was the way of
the future, so let’s do it. We made The Phantom the 25th generation of the
character, and the great-grandson of Mandrake. But when the animators depicted
them, they just used the three, Mandrake, The Phantom, and Flash Gordon. I
asked why they had excluded Lothar from it all. Here’s a hero who happens to be
black, and millions of black and brown fans think of him as a role model. I
argued that he had to be in the posters as well.
The show
came out fairly well, in the end, I guess.
Now with Phantom 2040, they again wanted
something that has futuristic technology. So I told them to set it ahead, with
the 23rd Phantom. We had to set it in the future, because if there was any
change in the current character, the Swedish and Scandinavian fans would be
furious! They want the “classic Phantom.” So we worked around that by making
this his grandson. We put some armor on his arms, and gave him futuristic
weapons, but at least they didn’t change him too much. At first, they wanted to
put wings on him! But it’s pretty well done.
What can you tell us
about the new Phantom film?
The movie
is to me, and I’m a bit prejudiced, just great. Billy Zane is the perfect Phantom, he looks wonderful. I saw the
dailies everyday while I was on the set for two weeks.
Is the plot an
adaptation of one of your stories?
Yes,
several of them. It deals with pirates and it has all of the elements that
Phantom fans expect. Jeffrey Boam
did a terrific screenplay, and came up with an original gimmick for the story.
I told him that in all the years where I’ve written over 1000 stories for the
character, the twist he came up with was one I had never tried. It’s a good
story.
Is it set in
contemporary times?
It’s the
1930s, and the cities have a 30s feel. But the jungle scenes seem as if they
could be any time, so it feels contemporary, too. But it is the “classic”
Phantom, just as his fans like him best. Billy Zane is marvelous. They first
showed me a picture he had done called Dead
Calm. Do you know the film?
Yes, it’s a tight
little shocker.
They did it
about eight years ago, when he was 23, or 24. Billy played a psychopathic
killer -- but that’s not what I saw. What I saw was a nice looking young man,
slim; a very strong actor. He also had charm and strength, and this is what I
wanted for The Phantom. I didn’t want just a muscle man, I wanted that charm
and elegance. He had all of that, but he was slim, didn’t really look like The
Phantom, but rather like a young man. I figured, though, if he were good enough
an actor, they would pad him up.
When I met
Billy in January, he came over to say hello. He said he wanted me to see him
before he went out on the set. And there was Billy, looking like The Phantom,
without padding! It turns out that when he was hired by Paramount, in 1994, he
went into training with a professional trainer, and did four hours a day for
two years. So he wound up with a beautiful, powerful body, along with the same
charm and elegance. He’s a good strong actor. The whole cast is good. Treat Williams plays the bad guy, and
he’s a fine actor. Kristy Swanson
plays Diana, the girlfriend. She was in Buffy,
the Vampire Slayer. She a beautiful girl. She's also in Flowers in the Attic.
Based on the V. C.
Andrews novel.
I must say
you’re a knowledgeable young man! I had never heard of the novel. The other
woman, the bad gal with the heart of gold, is Sallah. She’s based on a
character in a story of mine called “The Sky Bandit,” from the 30s. It was
about a female gang of sky pirates, and that’s well before feminism. Sallah is
the number two gal, and I remember her very well because I designed her to look
like Louise Brooks. Do you remember her? In the film, she has long black hair,
which is a change, but Cathrine Zeta
Jones, a beautiful English-Welsh actress, plays her. She wears a skin tight
costume, and she’s magnificent. If I were 60 years younger, I’d marry her!
They’re all fine.
You know, Sergio Leone wanted to do a Phantom
picture. I had met him in Mexico, and he was an enormous man. He just loved The
Phantom, and he wanted to do a jungle picture with pygmies, all of that. We met
again at his house in Rome, but he died and nothing came of it.
What are your future
plans?
Well, after
more than 60 years, I’m still writing Mandrake and The Phantom. When I write a
script, it’s like film script, broken into panels. I include descriptions of
characters, place, and detail, as well as dialogue and narration. So my plans
are just to go on living and working.
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