I think ALW liked the idea of an older Raoul reminiscing about his departed wife and using that as a framing device. It certainly feels more dramatic than a pudgy journalist uncovering the mystery. Thing is that prologue really only has the auctioneer to go "sold to the Vicomte de Chagny" and Raoul's little bit of dialogue to indicate this old guy is Raoul.And the managers. And Carlotta. And surely the police were given some idea what they were there to do. Quite a few people understand that the opening night of Don Juan Triumphant is a sting to catch some crazy stalker who has eyes for Christine, and then somebody grabs her mid performance and she's never seenagainuntil Raoul and Christine are seen again. ALW, why?
Ideally if you wanted to keep the structure of the musical mostly the same but preserve the original ending you have Raoul, after decades of living like a peasant in obscurity with his wife, return to Paris following Christine's death so he can retrieve the music box from the Opera's public auction in her memory. Hell, a plot of the prologue is that the Opera's knickknacks are being sold on the super cheap so Raoul can easily afford that even after forsaking his wealth and living most of his life as a peasant somewhere.
Problem is that would be a bit more involved to explain. It's certainly possible, and the more I think about it the more I like it and think it could work, but I think ALW just defaulted to the easier "he's still around as the Vicomte" setup. It's quick and easy. Which, as I said, robs Raoul of his big heroic moment. His willingness to sacrifice everything to be with Christine.
It also undermines one of the book's undercurrents, which is that Raoul and Christine were always going to have problems pursuing a relationship even if Erik's crazy ass never got involved. Raoul's a noble and Christine's the daughter of Swedish peasant folk who has the lowly career of performer. It adds a layer of tension to everything that makes their eventual marriage in obscurity feel extra rewarding if you're invested in their relationship working out.
But if hey he could always marry her and give her his noble status and never had to sacrifice anything THAT'S ROMANTIC TOO I GUESS
Oh well. I should just be happy ALW got as much right as he did. I genuinely enjoy book Raoul and Christine's backstory and relationship, and the ALW show is one of the more accurate adaptations of their deal. Hell, some adaptations just don't have Raoul at all.
As an aside... I always wondered how the Paris Opera sold Don Juan Triumphant to the public.
"Come see this opera you've never heard of. It was written by a crazy man who lives in our basement. If you don't come see it, he'll kill us all."
Best as I can tell, the newspaper that originally published the story in serial form misnumbered a few chapters. And then Leroux decided to condense some stuff when it came time for publication. And there were a few different publication runs early on, with Leroux pulling a George Lucas and deciding he didn't like how he condensed it last time, no now this is the definitive version.Coward's is truly unabridged. There are others that claim to be unabridged, but they're not. I don't know why this book gets treated like this.
Which meant between the original serial publication and a few versions of Leroux chopping it down, there were multiple French versions. The de Mattos translation, which is the one that's been the dominant version in the English speaking world, was done off of one of these abridged versions and it just took until the 2010s for someone to notice
Still, I find it funny that thanks to David Coward, we have Phantom of the Opera DLC before we got GTA VI.
I keep forgetting the Les Mis movie exists. Which is a shame because not only did I see it twice, but it actually did have some real ambition behind it, yeah.For all the flaws, Les Miserables definitely took advantage of the ability to do some things the stage show can't. That's been a while ago though. I don't know if current musicals really have a big enough sample size to say.
That would be the way to do it, yeah. Especially because Butler's version of the mask covers half of his nose, so you have it that half his nose is missing, and that would add to the uncanny nature of it. And give the impression that half of his face just never developed properly.I really think just CGI-ing out the nose would be enough. Yay for book accuracy, but I also think it would do wonders when shadows hit that spot just right, and accentuate what already works when shadows hit the makeup just right. And I think it would change how our brains instinctively process his face even when the side without makeup is more prominent. They could have had it both ways. I think it would instinctively read to our brains as a full deformity, but a partial mask would still be viable.
Hmm... an episode break would work, yeah.For a miniseries, I would want to keep the mystery. It's hard to cut away right at the moment of Christine's abduction, but an episode break might provide the structure that makes it work.
The question is how do you handle the flashback when she finally reveals to Raoul what's been going on?