Reading Anne's reviews (coupled with viewing The Phantom Reviewer's hilarious YouTube commentaries on the various Philm versions) have encouraged me to go back over my own Phantom collection.
I've just recently finished re-reading Susan Kay's "Phantom" novel.
My first impression of the book had been that it would've been a brilliant prequel had Kay simply chopped the last two chapters (the "Erik/Christine: Counterpoint" and "Raoul" sections) off completely... but instead she decides to make "Phantom" a retelling, and Leroux's story is rushed through and given a fan-fiction denouement.
Fortunately, I had enjoyed the previous chapters so much, I felt I could forgive Kay for a very weak wrap-up.
Reading it now, seven years later, my opinion of the novel as a whole is much the same... I still feel that this could've been a brilliant novel if only Kay had chopped off the last two chapters... although I don't have quite as high an opinion of the previous chapters as I did when I read it the first time.
The dialogue is over the top (I feel that Kay was aiming for "larger than life" by design, but it doesn't change how melodramatic it is) and Kay does explain virtually every nuance of the characterisation exhaustively (not enough that I felt my intelligence was being insulted, but enough that I realised certain descriptive passages could've been cut completely without effecting my understanding of things in any way whatsoever).
But still, the historical detail is meticulously well researched and it adheres quite closely to Leroux's original outline of Erik's earlier life. The way she puts more dramatic meat on the bones of "The Persian" is wonderful (the Persian court segments are the highlight of the novel for me) and I love the way she doesn't tone down the violence and ruthlessness of The Phantom's character.
But then comes the final two chapters and Kay, previously so disciplined, succumbs to her inner fangirl and the whole exercise goes off the deep end into the realms of fan fiction.
And yet...
There is something odd about the way Kay has gone about this.
Most fanfic which tries to cast the relationship between Erik and Christine in a more romantic light does so by softening the Phantom's character in order to make a match between them seem more credible to the reader.
Kay does the opposite, she tries to make it palatable by portraying Christine as being just as mentally disturbed, in her own way, as The Phantom.
Really, Christine came across as a complete basket case to me most of the time. Even the Christine of Meyer's "The Canary Trainer" wasn't this crazy... the only Christine I can think of who was more off her rocker was Argento's incarnation.
I've got to read Leroux's book again, if only to see if he portrayed the character as being such a loony tune (I'm sure he didn't but I want to see if there's room for that kind of interpretation).
But does anyone else here find that odd? That Kay took this route to enabling a consummated relationship between Erik and Christine?
Also... I must say that I find it odd that Kay doesn't vilify Raoul all that much. Most fan fiction I've read ends up portraying him as a wife-beating, alcaholic retard...
In this one he reminded me more of the typical "fallback guy" from Hollywood rom-coms. You know, the kind that Bill Pullman used to be typecast in, the ones who "just want to see her happy". This was really rammed home to me in the final chapter where Raoul talks of how he is just Christine's custodian, watching over her until she can be reunited with her one true love (Erik, natch) in the afterlife.
Does anyone else find this odd and somewhat atypical of fan fic portrayals of this character?
Because, make no mistake, that's exactly what Kay's book is - extraordinarily well written fan fiction.
The final two chapters drag the rest of the book down for me and stop me from taking it seriously as anything else. Again, if only they had been cut off and Kay had contented herself with letting her book be a prequel...
I have a sneaking suspicion that the main reason so many fans embrace Kay's book and insist it is canon is because it depicts something that they wish had happened with the original story.
(personally I'm one of the minority who thinks that Christine was right in choosing Raoul over Erik - but that's a whole other can of worms that can be debated elsewhere)
It might also be to do with what Anne refers to in her reviews as "the entitlement of the underdog" - the very modern notion that Erik deserves compensation for having such a miserable life up till this point... or the idea that his miserable life somehow excuses his immoral actions (what Alan Dershowitz facetiously refers to as "The Abuse Excuse")

