Development In October 1992,
TriStar Pictures and
Steven Spielberg's
Amblin Entertainment were planning to start production on
Zorro the following year, and hired Joel Gross to rewrite the script after they were impressed with his
adaptation of
The Three Musketeers. At the time, Spielberg was producing
Zorro with the potential to direct. Gross completed his rewrite in March 1993, and TriStar entered
pre-production, creating early promotion for the film that same month at the
ShoWest trade show. By December 1993,
Branko Lustig was producing the film with Spielberg, and
Mikael Salomon was attached as director. In August 1994,
Sean Connery was cast as Don Diego de la Vega, while Salomon stated that the rest of the major cast would be Hispanic or Latino. The first chosen for the role of Zorro in his young version was
Andy García, a fashionable Latin actor at the time. The role of Zorro was offered to
Tom Cruise, but he declined as he felt it was not a good idea. Colombian singer
Shakira was also initially considered to play Elena but turned it down due to her limited acting experience (despite having co-starred in the Colombian television series
El Oasis) and her own poor English skills at the time. Pre-production proceeded even further in August when Salomon compiled test footage for a planned April 1995 start date.
Viggo Mortensen read for a role as a sheriff. TriStar and Amblin had been surprised by Rodriguez's low-budget filming techniques for his action films,
El Mariachi and
Desperado, and shifted away from their initial plans with Salomon to make a big-budget version of
Zorro. Spielberg had hoped Rodriguez would start filming in January 1996 for a Christmas release date, but the start date was pushed back to July. The release date was later moved to Easter 1997. Banderas remained with the production, and
Martin Campbell signed on later that month, turning down the chance to direct
Tomorrow Never Dies. The finished screenplay would be written by
John Eskow,
Ted Elliott and
Terry Rossio, based on a story by Elliott, Rossio, and
Randall Jahnson.
Filming The principal photography for the film began in Mexico on January 27, 1997, on a $60 million (~$ in ) budget. Production stalled for four days in February when Campbell was hospitalized for bronchitis. Filming resumed in
Tlaxcala, three hours east of Mexico City, where the production crew constructed the Montero
hacienda and town set pieces. Sony sent David Foster to join the project as a producer to help fill the void left by Steven Spielberg,
Walter F. Parkes, and
Laurie MacDonald, who were busy running
DreamWorks. Foster and
David S. Ward, who went uncredited, re-wrote some scenes; the troubled production caused
The Mask of Zorro to go $10 million over its budget. During the post-production phase, Spielberg and Campbell decided that Diego de la Vega's death in the arms of his daughter was too depressing. The ending, where Alejandro and Eléna are happily married with their infant son, was added three months after filming had ended.
Lawsuit On January 24, 2001,
Sony Pictures Entertainment filed a lawsuit in United States District Court, Central District of California, Western Division, against
Fireworks Entertainment Group, the producers of the
syndicated television series Queen of Swords. Sony alleged
copyright infringement and other claims, saying the series "copied protectable elements from [the] 'Zorro' character and 'Zorro' related works". On April 5, 2001, U.S. District Judge Collins denied Sony's motion for a
preliminary injunction, noting "that since the copyrights in [Johnson McCulley's 1919
short story]
The Curse of Capistrano and [the 1920 movie]
The Mark of Zorro lapsed in 1995 or before, the character Zorro has been in the public domain." As to specific elements of
The Mask of Zorro, the judge found that any similarities between the film and the TV series' secondary characters and plot elements were insufficient to warrant an injunction. ==Soundtrack==