The Mask of Zorro (1998)
Facts
| Directed by | Martin Campbell |
| Cast | Antonio Banderas, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Anthony Hopkins, Yolanda Orisaga, Paco Morayta, Catherine Zeta Jones and Victor Rivers |
| Theatrical Release | July 17, 1998 |
| DVD Release | October 18, 2005 |
| Running Time | 137 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) |
| UPC Code | 043396109353 |
| Buy this item | $8.49 at Amazon.com As of Jul 20 8:13 EDT (details) 1 DVD, Sony Pictures, Usually ships in 24 hours, AC-3, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Portuguese (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), English (Original Language), French (Dubbed), Portuguese (Dubbed), Spanish (Dubbed) Or 55 new from $3.36, 45 used from $2.15 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| It could have been a whole lot better |
I could easily love Antonio Banderas as Zorro and Don Diego if only they had stuck to the original storyline. The idea that Anthony Hopkins could have been Zorro is ridiculous. Zorro was a Spaniard living in Spanish California. Also, the idea that the old Zorro could train a new one to take his place is also absurd, unless it had been his own son and he had been training him over the years to be an excellent swordsman, horseman, acrobat and handle a whip, etc.
The Zorro I know and love was way more intelligent than the other characters in the stories. He was charming, handsome and virtuous.
I also don't buy Kathryn Zeta Jones in her role as a swordswoman! Back in those days, senoritas were protected, wooed and watched over by a duenna. Why can't Hollywood make a good, fun, adventure movie that has a little realism to it? Part of the Zorro story is also getting to see a little bit of historical documentation. I feel like I have learned something when I read a good book or see a good movie, but this is nothing more than your average fighting and chasing movie. What a shame. June 30, 2008
| Lost his daughter |
| The man behind the mask... |
In 1995, Martin Campbell exploded onto the Hollywood action film-making scene with Goldeneye, a film that revitalized the stumbling Bond franchise and made Pierce Brosnan a star. In 1998, he released what stands as possibly his best film (even including the fantastic Casino Royale, which cemented Campbell as a Bond film director for the ages) which introduced modern audiences to Zorro, the Robin Hood of 19th-century Mexico and inspiration for Bob Kane's Batman. The Mask of Zorro not only serves as something of a sequel to the Tyrone Power-starring The Mark of Zorro (1940) and throwback to the romance adventure films of its ilk, it is quite simply a brilliant adventure movie that can stand alongside the best work of Fairbanks and Flynn.
Beginning in the 1820's, on the even of Spain's departure from Mexico, "Mask" tells of Don Diego de la Vega (Anthony Hopkins), a Spanish nobleman who protects the opressed as Zorro from the greedy Govenor of California, Raphael Montero. After one final desperate attempt to capture Zorro ends with the hero riding victorious once more into the sunset, things go horribly wrong for the masked swashbuckler. Robbed of his title, lands, and his loved ones, the man once known as Zorro is thrown into prison and left to rot for decades as Montero sails back to spain with Diego's daughter in his arms.
Fast-forward twenty years, Diego escapes from prison only to find Alehandro (Antonio Banderas), a petty thief reeling from his brother's murder at the hands of the bloodthirsty US soldier-turned-mercenary Captain Harrison Love. When it becomes apparent that Love has been hired by Montero, now returned from Spain, for some sinister purpose that once against threatens the peace and prosperity of California, the old hero and the young rogue join forces in a quest for justice and revenge. It then becomes apparent the Montero has brought Diego's daughter, Elena (played by the scorching Catherine Zeta Jones), who remembers nothing of her real father, and things get complicated.
What makes the film work more than anything else is the character dynamics, both hero and villain. Banderas and Hopkins share a master/pupil relationship as Diego trains Alehandro in the ways and philosphies Zorro used to protect the people, and their parallels and personality clashes are well-written and acted with a beautiful on-screen chemistry. Likewise, the sizzling romantic tension between Banderas and Zeta Jones works well on every level, bringing a 90's sexuality to the classical hero/heroine banter seen in films like The Adventures of Robin Hood. And the villains, one an obsessed man who geniunely believes he is doing what's right, the other a borderline-psychotic, bring a contrast (and at times, even depth) not usually seen in antagonists in action films. The build-up to a dual clash between each hero and their opposite number is a perfect example of creating a path to satisfying payoff.
And the payoff is beautiful - sword duels, horse chases, explosions, and fist fights. No one set piece stands out simply because all are so beautifully-coreographed, imaginitively-staged, and perfectly-shot. The final clash at El Dorado demonstrates some of the finest action of its kind in decades. Each scene's musical accompaniment, provided by veteran composer James Horner (Aliens, Braveheart, Titanic) brings an extra level of melancholy to a forgotten father, a pounding cadence to a hectic escape, or a layer of sensuality to a provacative dance number, and everything in-between.
With the extravagant production values, larger than life heroics, and lavish clashes of heroes and villains, The Mask of Zorro does so many adventure films of its kind have failed to do since the days of The Seahawk. An imformative fist-ful of extras and a solid transfer round out a package that no swashbuckling fan should be without. Now if only someone could get Campbell working on that new Prince of Persia movie. November 18, 2007
| Mask of Zozo |
| A Whole Lotta Fun! |
This movie is just plain fun! Antonio Banderas is a manly gentleman, but vulnerable. Anthony Hopkins is.. Anthony Hopkins! He's captivating as usual. Catherine Zeta-Jones is incredibly beautiful and mesmerizing, and nobody looks finer in pre-usa California costume. The rest of the supporting cast does well too, and the casting well matches the script.
This movie has charm! The music is wonderful. The costumes and other production design elements are well done, and the casting is superb. There is a lot of action, a lot of humor, a lot of drama, and all in all, it's a light hearted romp through pre-statehood California, centered around that wonderful hero called Zorro! Who can resist that?
I'd give it more stars if Amazon's form allowed 'em. And even if it did, I'd still add more stars to the rating! This movie will have you cheering!
September 20, 2007
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