The Mask of Zorro | |
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Theatrical release poster
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Directed by | Martin Campbell |
Produced by | Doug Claybourne David Foster |
Screenplay by |
John Eskow Ted Elliott Terry Rossio |
Story by | Ted Elliott Terry Rossio Randall Jahnson |
Based on |
Zorro by Johnston McCulley |
Starring | |
Music by | James Horner |
Cinematography | Phil Méheux |
Edited by | Thom Noble |
Production
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Distributed by | TriStar Pictures |
Release date
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Running time
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136 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $95 million |
Box office | $250.3 million |
The Mask of Zorro: Music from the Motion Picture | ||||
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Film score by James Horner | ||||
Released | July 7, 1998 | |||
Recorded | 1997–1998 | |||
Length | 74:47 | |||
Label | Sony, Epic Soundtrax | |||
Producer | Jim Steinman, Simon Rhodes, Tony Hinnigan, James Horner | |||
James Horner chronology | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | |
Empire | |
Filmtracks | |
SoundtrackNet |
The Mask of Zorro is a 1998 American swashbuckler film based on the character of the masked outlaw Zorro created by Johnston McCulley. It was directed by Martin Campbell and stars Antonio Banderas, Anthony Hopkins, Catherine Zeta-Jones, and Stuart Wilson. The film features the original Zorro, Don Diego de la Vega (Hopkins), escaping from prison to find his long-lost daughter (Zeta-Jones) and avenge the death of his wife at the hands of the corrupt governor Rafael Montero (Wilson). He is aided by his successor (Banderas), who is pursuing his own vendetta against the governor's right-hand man while falling in love with de la Vega's daughter.
Producer Steven Spielberg had initially developed the film for TriStar Pictures with directors Mikael Salomon and Robert Rodriguez, before Campbell signed on in 1996. Salomon cast Sean Connery as Don Diego de la Vega, while Rodriguez brought Banderas in the lead role. Connery dropped out and was replaced with Hopkins, and The Mask of Zorro began filming in January 1997 at Estudios Churubusco in Mexico City, Mexico. The film was released in the United States on July 17, 1998 to financial and critical success. The Legend of Zorro, a sequel also starring Banderas and Zeta-Jones and directed by Campbell, was released in 2005, but did not fare as well as its predecessor.
In 1821, Don Diego De La Vega (Anthony Hopkins), a Californio nobleman fights against the Spanish in the Mexican War of Independence as Zorro, a mysterious swordsman who defends the Mexican peasants and commoners of Las Californias. Don Rafael Montero (Stuart Wilson), the corrupt governor of the region, learns of De La Vega's alter ego, and attempts to arrest him. De La Vega's wife is killed during the scuffle. Montero imprisons De La Vega and takes his infant daughter, Elena, as his own. Twenty years later Montero returns to California as a civilian, alongside Elena (Catherine Zeta Jones), who has grown into a beautiful woman. Montero's reappearance motivates De La Vega to escape from prison. He encounters a thief, Alejandro Murrieta (Antonio Banderas), who, as a child, once did Zorro a favor. De La Vega decides that fate has brought them together, and agrees to make Alejandro his protégé, grooming him to be the new Zorro. Alejandro agrees to undergo De La Vega's training regimen in Zorro's lair underneath the ruins of his family estate in order to be able to take revenge on Captain Harrison Love (Matt Letscher), Montero's right-hand man, who was responsible for killing Alejandro's brother, Joaquin.