The Mask of Zorro
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Template:Infobox Film The Mask of Zorro (1998) is an American action film directed by Martin Campbell, and stars Antonio Banderas, Anthony Hopkins, and Catherine Zeta-Jones.
A sequel starring Banderas and Zeta-Jones and directed by Campbell titled The Legend of Zorro was released in 2005.
Plot summary
In the early 19th century, the Mexican army is on the verge of liberating its country from Spanish colonial rule. In the area of present day California, the cruel and ruthless Spanish Governor Don Rafael Montero is about to be overthrown by the advancing Mexican Army. In a last ditch effort to trap his arch-nemesis, the masked swordsman Zorro (Hopkins), Montero lays a trap. The trap is thwarted with assistance from the local peasant population who see Zorro as their champion. Particularly helpful were two orphan brothers, Joaquin and Alejandro Murrieta.
However, Montero is able to surmise that Zorro is really Don Diego de la Vega, a Spanish noble living in California whom the governor thought to be his ally. Montero attempts to arrest de la Vega at his home later that evening. In the ensuing fight,Don Diego de la Vega's wife, Esperanza, is killed, his house is burned and his infant daughter, Elena, is adopted by Montero.
De la Vega remains imprisoned for the next twenty years until the day Montero returns to California and comes looking for him. De la Vega quickly escapes from prison, intent on killing Montero at the first possible chance but retreats when he sees Montero has brought Elena (Zeta-Jones), now a beautiful young lady, back also.
De la Vega soon encounters a grown Alejandro Murrieta (Banderas) and recruits and trains him to become Zorro. Alejandro poses as a visiting Spanish nobleman and infiltrates Montero's inner circle. Alejandro, bitter from the murder of his brother by Montero's minion, the sadistic Captain Love, learns that Montero has been operating a secret gold mine known as El Dorado using the peasants and petty criminals as slave labor. His goal is to buy California from Mexico (using gold that really belongs to Mexico) and establish himself as California's leader.
De la Vega convinces Elena that she is his daughter, not Montero's, and the two along with the new Zorro destroy Montero, Love and their grandiose plan. De la Vega dies after defeating Montero, and is given a grand funeral. Alejandro and Elena later have a son and settle in California. Zorro returns as the defender of California.
Goofs
- When Zorro is taken away in the prison wagon, the lights of a large city are clearly visible in the background to the left of the screen.
- Elena has a nylon zipper on her dress in the last scene. Zippers were not used in the 1840's and nylon was not used for this purpose until after WWII.
- When Don Rafael Montero shows a gold bar to the other Dons, he holds it only with two fingers and shows no signs that it's heavy. A gold bar this size would be much too heavy for anyone to hold like that.
- Alejandro tells Montero that he came to Mexico via Lisbon and San Francisco. In 1841, San Francisco was still Yerba Buena. The name change didn't occur until January, 1847.
- The Mexican flag appearing in the headquarters when Zorro is fighting the soldiers has the red and green areas reversed.
- During Alejandro, Joaquin, and Three-Fingered Jack's hold-up of the soldiers, the larger of Joaquin's two pistols swaps from his left hand in one shot, to the right hand in the next camera angle.
- In order to accomplish the effect of Elena's dress falling off from being sliced up by Zorro, a thin wire was attached to the dress to yank it off when the director called action. In the film, it is quite obvious that the dress is being torn off by a wire rather than simply falling off by itself. Additionally, the back of Elena's dress opens, which causes the upper half to fall, exposing her upper body, and then her skirt crumbling. Note that actress Catherine-Zeta Jones tried to cover for this movement by moving her arms slightly to suggest the fragility of the mutilated dress.
- After being undressed by Zorro, Elena is seen wearing a kind of long underwear, colored a light blue, that covers her below her hips. In the next long shot where she is covering her cleavage with Zorro's hat, her "underwear" changes in style, coloring and fabric.
- When Zorro snatches his hat away from the naked Elena, who is using the hat to cover her breasts, his hand in the close up is not wearing a glove even though he was wearing gloves throughout the entire sequence and can be seen wearing them as he exits.