Novels and short stories Whitman The first novel about the Phantom was published in 1944 by Whitman Publishing Company, and was called "The Son of the Phantom". Written by
Dale Robertson, the book was based on Lee Falk's comic strip story "Childhood of the Phantom", although Falk had no involvement with the novel. It featured a cover drawn by Wilson McCoy. The Phantom's son, while in the United States, studying and meeting Diana Palmer, is called Kip Walker. His home country in the novel is Bengali.
Avon Avon Publications in the United States put out 15 books based on Lee Falk's stories. The series ran from 1972 to 1975, and was written by several authors, including Falk; the covers were done by George Wilson. Many of the books were translated into foreign languages. •
The Story of the Phantom: The Ghost Who Walks 1972, Lee Falk •
The Slave Market of Mucar 1972,
Basil Copper •
The Scorpia Menace 1972, Basil Copper •
The Veiled Lady 1973,
Frank S. Shawn (pseudonym of Ron Goulart) •
The Golden Circle 1973, Frank S. Shawn •
The Mysterious Ambassador 1973, Lee Falk •
The Mystery of the Sea Horse 1973, Frank S. Shawn •
The Hydra Monster 1973, Frank S. Shawn • ''Killer's Town'' 1973, Lee Falk •
The Goggle-Eyed Pirates 1974, Frank S. Shawn •
The Swamp Rats 1974, Frank S. Shawn •
The Vampires & the Witch 1974, Lee Falk •
The Island of Dogs 1975,
Warren Shanahan •
The Assassins 1975,
Carson Bingham •
The Curse of the Two-Headed Bull 1975, Lee Falk In 2006, the books
The Story of the Phantom: The Ghost Who Walks and
The Veiled Lady were released as
audiobooks in Norway and Sweden, as part of the celebration of the seventieth anniversary of the character. To coincide with the 1996 Phantom movie, Avon published
The Phantom, based on the Paramount Pictures film. It was written by
Rob MacGregor.
Hermes Press also published a reprint of the Avon novels.
Moonstone Books In 2007,
Moonstone Books released
The Phantom Chronicles, a collection of short stories written by authors
Mike Bullock,
Ron Fortier,
Jim Alexander,
David Michelinie,
Craig Shaw Gardner,
CJ Henderson, Clay and Susan Griffith,
Will Murray,
Michael Oliveri,
Nancy Kilpatrick, Ed Rhoades,
David Bishop,
Grant Suave,
Trina Robbins,
Richard Dean Starr,
Dan Wickline, and Martin Powell. The book was released in both a softcover and limited hardcover edition, and featured an introduction written by Lee Falk's daughter, Valerie Falk.
The Phantom Chronicles 2 was released in 2010. It features an unfinished story, written by
Harlan Ellison, where the Phantom would have teamed up with
Green Hornet, and has a foreword written by Diane Falk.
Other appearances In
Umberto Eco's novel,
The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana, the main character describes his childhood experiences of reading The Phantom, as well as other comic strip characters like
Flash Gordon and Mandrake the Magician. The book also features illustrations of the Phantom, drawn by Ray Moore. In
Papua New Guinea, the
Wahgi people have used images of the Phantom on their ceremonial war
shields, or "kumbe reipe". Art historian N.F. Karlins believes that comic books featuring the Phantom may have been brought to Papua New Guinea by American troops as early as the 1940s. The Phantom's popularity amongst the Wahgi has been attributed to his being a "man who cannot die", and who vanquishes his enemies by using his "strength, intelligence, and fearsome reputation"; Karlins has suggested that, as Wahgi warriors wear masks, the Phantom's own mask may have also been a contributing factor.
Live-action adaptations The Phantom serials A 15-episode, 240-minute
movie serial, starring
Tom Tyler in the title role, was made in 1943 by
Columbia Pictures and directed by action specialist
B. Reeves Eason, featuring
Jeanne Bates as
Diana Palmer,
Frank Shannon as her uncle Professor Davidson, and
Ace the Wonder Dog as Devil. Creator Lee Falk was billed on screen as "Leon Falk". The story shows the 21st Phantom's first mission after taking over the mantle of the Ghost Who Walks from his murdered father: to find the Lost City of Zoloz and prevent the evil Dr. Bremmer, played by
Kenneth MacDonald, from building a secret airbase in the jungle. The serial has been released on DVD through VCI. The Phantom's real name in the serial was Geoffrey Prescott, as the alias of Kit Walker had not been mentioned in the strip at that point. However, he goes by the alias of Mr. Walker after having become the Phantom. Two episodes loosely adapted Lee Falk's story "The Fire Princess" for the screen, and fit it into the plot of the Phantom's fight against Dr. Bremmer. Tom Tyler in costume bore a striking resemblance to the comic-strip character, and the serial was a success. In 1955, when Columbia's serial producer
Sam Katzman was making low-budget remakes of older cliffhangers, he cast
John Hart in a sequel, filmed as
Return of the Phantom.
The Phantom (1996) The Phantom was also adapted into a live-action film in 1996. Produced and released by
Paramount Pictures, the movie was set in the 1930s, and incorporated elements from several of the Phantom's earliest comic-strip adventures. It starred
Billy Zane in the title role,
Kristy Swanson as Diana Palmer, and
Catherine Zeta-Jones as Sala, an aviator. It was directed by
Simon Wincer, after director
Joe Dante and producer
Michael Douglas dropped out of the project, and was written by
Jeffrey Boam, who also wrote
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. Cult-icon
Bruce Campbell was another choice for the role, but Zane, already a huge fan of the comic strip since being introduced to Australian Frew comics on the set of
Dead Calm, ended up getting the part after actively lobbying for it for years. After his casting, he pumped iron for a year and a half to fill the Phantom's costume, refusing to wear a costume with moulded muscles. He also closely studied panels of the comic to capture the character's body language. Though the film was not a theatrical success, it was the reason why Zane was cast as Caledon Hockley in
Titanic, the world's third most commercially successful film, and has sold well on
VHS and DVD. The movie was filmed on location in Australia, Thailand, and Los Angeles, and featured the Phantom in his attempt to stop madman Xander Drax (
Treat Williams) from obtaining a weapon of doom, the legendary "Skulls of Touganda". The story also features the Singh Brotherhood, the all-female clan of air pirates known as the Sky Band, of whom Sala is the leader and a subplot wherein the 21st Phantom recovers his father's gunbelt and avenges his father's murder, inspired by the Lee Falk/Wilson McCoy story "The Belt". The film also has elements taken from the 1936 story "The Singh Brotherhood", the first Phantom story, and its 1937 continuation "The Sky Band". In 2008, syndicated gossip columnist
Liz Smith claimed that Paramount was putting a sequel into development, with Zane returning to play the title role, because of the good VHS and DVD sales of the first film.
The Phantom was released on
Blu-ray February 2010 by
Lionsgate.
The Phantom: Legacy Sherlock Symington Productions secured the rights to the Phantom in December 2008, and were set to make a film called
The Phantom: Legacy (unrelated to the Moonstone Books 2006 graphic novel of the same name and any other screen incarnation of the character). The film was set to have a budget of $130 million, and be written by Tim Boyle. Bruce Sherlock, executive producer and head of Sherlock Symington Productions, said that
The Phantom: Legacy would follow the lead of films like
The Dark Knight and
Iron Man, and present a serious treatment of the character. The film will be set in the present day, and revolve around the relationship between the Phantom and his son, and what it means to be the Phantom. Work on the film was expected to begin in 2009. Filming was scheduled to take place in Australia, and producers were in talks with both Australian and international actors to work on the film. In an interview with
Dark Horizons, Boyle said the film would feature two main antagonists, one taken from the comic and one created for the movie. The Phantom's costume was expected to be updated for the screen, with Boyle seeking to make it more reality-based. Characters such as Diana Palmer, Kit, Heloise Walker, Colonel Worubu, President Lamanda Luaga, and Guran would appear. The film was said to be heavily focused on the mythology of the comics, with a lot of screen time expected to be devoted to the origin of the 1st Phantom. The Phantom's eyes behind his mask would be white, unlike in previous film-versions. Actor
Sam Worthington was considered to play the Phantom, after having worked with Boyle on the film
Fink. Boyle was originally considered to direct the film, but in 2011 confirmed he was only attached as the writer.
2014 announcement In 2014 Mark Gordon and his production company were developing a new film with Management 360, Drew Simon was executive producing, and they were looking for a new writer on the script.
Unauthorized versions At least three unauthorized Phantom movies were made in Turkey. Two were made in 1968 and both were titled
Kızıl Maske (the Turkish name for the Phantom, translated as "Red Mask"). The Phantom was played by Ismet Erten and Irfan Atasoy.
Television 1961 pilot An unaired color Phantom TV-pilot was made in 1961 starring
Roger Creed as the Phantom, with
Lon Chaney Jr. and
Paulette Goddard as the antagonists, and
Richard Kiel as the assassin "Big Mike". Called "No Escape", the pilot saw the Phantom breaking up a slave camp in the jungle. Made on a limited budget, the pilot features fight scenes and the Phantom terrorizing villains in the jungle. Writer
John Carr originally wrote four episodes, but because the pilot was not picked up by a network, the remaining three were never filmed. Actress
Marilyn Manning had originally been cast as Diana Palmer, but never appeared in the pilot. Devil, Hero, and the Jungle Patrol all appear throughout the course of the story. The pilot was shown at the
Mid-Atlantic Nostalgia Convention in 2008 and has also been shown at
San Diego Comic-Con.
Popeye Meets the Man Who Hated Laughter The Phantom made an appearance alongside other
King Features characters in the 1972 animated movie
Popeye Meets the Man Who Hated Laughter.
Defenders of the Earth In
Defenders of the Earth, which ran from 1986 to 1987, the 27th Phantom, voiced by actor
Peter Mark Richman, teams up with fellow
King Features adventurers
Flash Gordon,
Mandrake the Magician, and Mandrake's
bodyguard and assistant Lothar. The cartoon also featured a daughter, Jedda Walker, who briefly took on the Phantom mantle in an episode where she believed her father to have perished. Other episodes of the series featured classic Phantom villains like the Sky Band, the Phantom's evil older brother Kurt Walker (created specifically for the show), and a flashback to the days of the first Phantom. The episode "Return of the Sky Band" also featured lengthy flashbacks to the Phantom of Lee Falk's comic strip, the 21st Phantom, showing him and his wife, Diana Palmer, and their encounter with the original Sky Band. In the original presentation pilot for the series, the Phantom had a son, Kit Walker, and Flash Gordon had a daughter, but this was changed for the final series. In
Defenders of the Earth, the Phantom was able to use supernatural means to give himself increased strength and speed, by saying the incantation:
"By jungle law, the ghost who walks calls forth the power of ten tigers!" It is only in this cartoon series that the Phantom has such an ability. In the series, the Phantom also used a special helicopter nicknamed the Skull Copter, and had an updated Skull Ring that would shoot a laser on to the faces of antagonists, marking them for life.
Phantom 2040 Premiering in 1994 to widespread critical acclaim,
Phantom 2040 depicts the adventures of the 24th Phantom on a future Earth rife with pollution and heavy industrialization. Young Kit Walker, was living happily with his aunt Heloise (daughter of the 21st Phantom) in the city of Metropia (previously known as New York) in the year 2040, knowing nothing about his family's legacy, when one day, The Phantom's friend Guran turned up to reveal the secret of the Phantom legacy. Kit takes up the mantle of the Phantom, and starts a battle against the evil company Maximum Inc., and their plans for the "Maximum Era" (a horrific plan for world domination through mass extinction by the complete collapse of Earth's ecosystem). He also tries to solve the mystery of the death of his father, the 23rd Phantom. This animated series, created by David J. Corbett and
Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens, lasted two seasons (35 episodes) and spawned a number of merchandise tie-ins, a comic book series, and a video game. The show's ahead-of-its time voice casting and vocal direction by
Stuart M. Rosen had a lasting impact on animated adventure television, introducing (alongside
Andrea Romano's acclaimed work on
Batman: The Animated Series) a new level of maturity and complexity to animated vocal performance that set the standard for all TV animation that followed. The Phantom was voiced by actor
Scott Valentine and
J.D.Hall played The Phantom's mentor
Guran.
Margot Kidder voiced main antagonist
Rebecca Madison while
Jeff Bennett played her sociopathic son
Max Madison Jr.
Ron Perlman (and, later,
Richard Lynch) played tortured cyborg
Graft,
Debbie Harry played
Vaingloria, and
Mark Hamill lent his voice to the character of
Dr. Jak. The first four episodes of the series were edited into a feature-length film and released on VHS in 1994 and 1996 (and later on DVD in 2004), called
Phantom 2040: The Ghost Who Walks. Other episodes of the series were released on
VHS in 1995. Season One (containing the first 20 episodes of the show) was released on DVD in Australia in 2013.
Betaal Pachisi A series aired on
Doordarshan in 1997 named
Betaal Pachisi depicting the 25th Phantom played by
Shahbaz Khan. He is shown fighting poachers and supernatural entities.
Krutika Desai Khan plays Naina Jogan, the jungle spirit in love with Betaal (the Phantom).
Sonu Walia plays a TV reporter who becomes his love interest.
The Phantom (Syfy) Screenwriter
Daniel Knauf and his son and collaborator
Charles Knauf completed a four-hour
TV-movie script for
Sci Fi Channel, later renamed
Syfy, starring the 22nd Phantom. The mini-series, simply called
The Phantom, and was produced by
Muse Entertainment and
RHI Entertainment. It premiered in Canada on
The Movie Network in December 2009, as a two-part mini-series, a total of three hours.
Ryan Carnes stars as the Phantom, with
Paolo Barzman directing. The series was shot in New York City,
Costa Rica and
Montreal. The story sees law student Kit learning that he was adopted, and that he is actually the son of the 21st Phantom and Diana Palmer Walker. He joins the Phantom team in the jungles of Bengalla (in this version, Bengalla is a small island in
Indonesia), and is trained in martial arts and combat, emerging as the next Phantom to battle the Singh Brotherhood and save the only man who can bring peace to the Middle East. The 22nd Phantom wears a modified costume that is highly resistant to bullets, blades and falls, doubles his strength and can make him move faster. The mini-series aired on
Syfy in June 2010, and was released on Blu-ray and DVD by
Vivendi Entertainment.
Parodies Paul Hogan, of
Crocodile Dundee fame, continually parodied the Phantom on his Australian TV-show,
The Paul Hogan Show. He would dress up in the purple Phantom costume, and act out different humorous situations. The Phantom had also been frequently parodied on Scandinavian television, in different humor programs. In 1984, Australian stand-up comedian
Austen Tayshus released a single
Phantom Shuffle in the video of which he appeared in Phantom costume, wearing sunglasses instead of a mask. Many elements of the Phantom myth were parodied, such as him being "Mr Walker, the man who cannot drive". In 2017, Australian comedian
Sammy J began touring with a new show,
Hero Complex, in which he pays tribute to what he says is the role the Phantom has played in his life: "a chance encounter set off a chain of events that led to me meeting my wife and ended with police searching my attic".
Hero Complex has won a "Best Comedy" award or nomination in every festival in which it has featured. In the
Adult Swim show
The Venture Bros., the character
The Phantom Limb bears a strong visual resemblance to the Phantom, right down to the same purple suit and mask, except that the Phantom Limb's limbs are invisible, making him look like a floating torso. However, The Phantom Limb is a villainous character. He also appeared in the animated
Beatles movie
Yellow Submarine. The myth surrounding the Phantom also provided Turkish humorists with a lot of material. The humor magazine
Leman has published many comic strips some of which were inspired by the (imaginary) saying "in the jungle, it is rumored that the Phantom has the strength of ten tigers" where Phantom runs into trouble with 11 or more tigers. The Phantom was parodied in a 2007 episode of
Robot Chicken titled "
Werewolf vs. Unicorn", where he appeared alongside Flash Gordon and Mandrake the Magician. He was voiced by
Frank Welker. The Phantom was a frequently appearing character in the Finnish
comic strip Fingerpori by
Pertti Jarla. He was often involved in humorous situations such as using his throne as a toilet seat.
Documentaries In 1996, the
A&E Network created a documentary about the history of the Phantom for television, called
The Phantom: Comic Strip Crusader. Narrated by
Peter Graves, it featured interviews with creator Lee Falk, actors
Billy Zane and
Kristy Swanson, director
Simon Wincer, Frew-editor Jim Shepherd, George Olesen, Keith Williams, and president of the US Phantom fan club
Friends of the Phantom, Ed Rhoades. The documentary was released on DVD in 2006. To promote the 1996 Paramount Phantom movie, an
HBO special called "Making of The Phantom" was made. It featured behind-the-scenes information on the movie and the comic. An original documentary presentation called
History of the Phantom was shown at the Mid-Atlantic Nostalgia Convention in September 2008.
MythBusters "Superhero Hour" On
MythBusters season 5, episode 17 "Superhero Hour", it was tested whether the Phantom's skull ring would make an imprint on someone when you punch them while wearing it, as it did in the comic. The result was that the myth was "busted", in that hitting a person in the face hard enough to leave a ring imprint on the skin required more than enough force to crush a human skull. In
The Last Phantom comic, it had been revealed that the Phantom's ring actually had sharp edges and was covered with a permanent ink synthesized from plants found in the depths of the Bengallan jungle, leaving a permanent scar-like mark. It was, in effect, an instant tattoo.
Video games The Phantom has appeared as a playable character in two video games,
Phantom 2040 and
Defenders of the Earth. Both were based on the animated series with the same titles. However, in
Defenders of the Earth, the Phantom was not the only
playable character, as players were given the choice to control Mandrake the Magician and Flash Gordon as well. In
Phantom 2040, released on
Sega Genesis,
Game Gear, and
Super NES, the Phantom was the only playable character. He had use of a number of his special skills and high-tech gadgets from the Phantom 2040 TV-series. The game had a complex storyline and featured several different endings, which were dependent on the choices the player made during the game. In 2003, a video game made for
Game Boy Advance was announced, called "The Phantom: The Ghost Who Walks". It was developed by
7th Sense and produced by Microids, and it was described as a free-roaming jungle adventure. During the development process, Microids went bankrupt, and the game was never released. In 2006,
The Phantom Mobile Game became available for cellphones, where the Phantom fought zombies, floating skulls, and other magical creatures to find his kidnapped wife, Diana Palmer. It was described as a free-roaming jungle adventure, with a film-like plot. In 2024,
The Phantom was announced for
PlayStation 4,
PlayStation 5,
Nintendo Switch,
Xbox Series X and Series S, and PC. It is being developed by Art of Play as a
side-scrolling beat 'em up.
Theme park "Fantomenland" ("Phantom Land") was a part of the Swedish zoo Parken Zoo,
Eskilstuna, where audiences could visit the
Skull Cave, and several other places from the comic, like the Whispering Grove and the headquarters of the Jungle Patrol. Visitors could also meet actors dressed up as the Phantom and witness short plays featuring the characters of the comic. Fantomenland was inaugurated by Lee Falk in 1986. Fantomenland closed in April 2010.
Fine art A gallery in
Brisbane, Australia, ran an exhibit of Phantom-inspired artwork in 1973. Australian Galleries ran an exhibit, "The Phantom Show", consisting of traditional art inspired by the Phantom, from December 9–21, 2014. Curated by Peter Kingston, "The Phantom Show" opened in Sydney in 2014 and travelled across Australia, stopping in Wollongong, Mackay, Toowoomba and Broken Hill. Contributing artists, all fans of The Phantom, sought to revive the spirit of Ray Moore and Wilsom McCoy's work on the original comic strip before, as Kingston put it, "The Phantom became a slick, purple superhero". ==References==