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1998 film directed by Joe Chappelle From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Phantoms is a 1998 American science fiction horror film directed by Joe Chappelle and starring Peter O'Toole, Rose McGowan, Joanna Going, Liev Schreiber, Ben Affleck, Nicky Katt, and Clifton Powell. The screenplay was adapted by Dean Koontz from his own 1983 novel of the same name. The film takes place in the peaceful town of Snowfield, Colorado, where something evil has wiped out the community. It is up to a group of people to stop it or at least get out of Snowfield alive.
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Phantoms | |
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Directed by | Joe Chappelle |
Screenplay by | Dean Koontz |
Based on | Phantoms by Dean Koontz |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Richard Clabaugh |
Edited by | Randolph Bricker |
Music by | David C. Williams |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Dimension Films[1] |
Release date |
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Running time | 96 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $12–16 million[2] |
Box office | $5.8 million[3] |
While Koontz's novel included many literary references to the work of H. P. Lovecraft, these are largely absent from the film.[4]
Dr. Jennifer Pailey brings her sister Lisa to Snowfield, Colorado, a small ski resort village nestled in the Rocky Mountains where Jenny works. There, the sisters find no one around but some corpses. They then stumble upon the severed heads of the town baker and his wife in an oven before being found by Sheriff Bryce Hammond, a former FBI agent, and his deputies Stu Wargle and Steve Shanning. Hammond and his deputies are investigating the killings.
The group arrives at a nearby hotel and find the writing of a victim on the mirror reading "Timothy Flyte". Shanning leaves to investigate a sound outside but does not return. The others find only his gun, hat and shoes while the rest of him is gone. At the sheriff's office, they request aid and create roadblocks around Snowfield. The group gets a phone call but are interrupted by an attack by a moth-like creature that rips Wargle's face off before Hammond kills it. Lisa later encounters Wargle while in the bathroom. They return to the morgue and find his body missing.
Hammond's FBI associates find Flyte, a British academic who theorizes that the town has fallen victim to the Ancient Enemy, an entity he generalizes as "chaos in the flesh". It periodically wipes out civilizations including that of the Mayans and the Roanoke Island colonists.
They are joined by an Army commando unit and a group of scientists led by General Copperfield who has come to Snowfield. They, along with Flyte, investigate the town. The creature kills soldiers investigating the sewers, while a dog approaches Flyte and the scientists and transforms into a monster that converts the group, except for Flyte. Flyte regroups with Hammond, Jenny, Lisa, and Copperfield. The creature attacks Copperfield through a manhole, converting him. Copperfield vomits a sample before melting into a puddle of liquid. Through it, Flyte and the group learn the nature of the Enemy.
The Enemy is an Earth-based amoebic life form that mimics its absorbed victims while gaining their knowledge. The creature creates Phantoms as temporary detachments for it to act through before absorbing them back into it. Furthermore, the Enemy absorbs all of the thoughts of its victims, making it intelligent, and because of the previous civilizations' perception of it, it believes itself to be a god. It had arranged all of the prior events so Flyte can assist the creature in revealing its existence to the world. The creature's body is physiologically almost identical to crude oil, and could be killed by bacteria bio-engineered to ingest fossil fuels. With the limited amount of the bacteria they have, they need to get it into the nucleus that is within the Enemy's main body.
They form a plan to use the Enemy's arrogance and god complex against itself. To do so, Flyte acts as if he is turning against the group by revealing their entire plan to the Enemy. In anger (and believing itself indestructible), it reabsorbs all the Phantoms and emerges from the sewers to assume a Mother Mass form. Hammond and the Pailey sisters fire the bacteria into the Enemy before it retreats underground with Hammond in pursuit.
While the sisters find themselves dealing with Wargle's Phantom, Jenny seemingly kills it with a gun containing the bacteria. Hammond finds the Enemy as it has assumed the form of the boy he accidentally killed during an FBI drug raid. When the boy grabs the last vial from him, Hammond shoots at it to expose the creature to its contents. It dies from the bacteria.
Though Hammond reassures Lisa and Jenny that it is gone, with the former stating the townsfolk are at peace, Flyte admits that the Enemy did achieve its victory as he has decided to tell the world what happened with a book based on what occurred in Snowfield. Later, watching Flyte being interviewed about his book, The Ancient Enemy, two bar patrons argue about the existence of alien life. Hearing laughter nearby, the patrons turn to see Wargle, who asks if they want to see something interesting.
The rights to Koontz' book were initially purchased by producer Steven Lane, a producer on The Howling series.[5] Producer Joel Soisson, after reading the book, spent the next ten years pursuing the rights and was instrumental in getting the film set up at Miramax.[6]
Phantoms was filmed on location in Georgetown, Colorado in the fall of 1996.[7][6] The Hotel de Paris Museum was used to depict the bakery and hotel where several scenes were set.
Phantoms was released theatrically in the United States on January 23, 1998 in 1,859 theaters.[3] The film earned $3,065,951 during its opening weekend,[8] and went on to gross a total of $5,755,333.[3]
Buena Vista Home Entertainment released Phantoms on VHS on August 19, 1998,[3] and on DVD in 1999; the DVD was reissued in 2001.[9] Scream Factory released the film in a collector's edition dual-format 4K UHD and Blu-ray set on July 16, 2024.[10][11]
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 9% of 32 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 4.2/10.[12] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 26 out of 100, based on 19 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable" reviews.[13]
Roger Ebert gave the film 1 star out of 4, saying: "If only we could learn to think more kindly of those who digest us, this movie could have ended happily".[14] Godfrey Cheshire of Variety gave the film a favorable review, writing that it is "perhaps most enthralling in its early sections, when the enemy is still unspecified and the horror thus remains purely psychological. After the Army arrives and the visual maelstrom is unleashed, there are moments when it’s hard to keep track of the characters or to tell exactly what the sound and fury are meant to signify. Still, the film rights itself in time to deliver a satisfying ending."[15]
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