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The Shadow

  • 1994
  • PG-13
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
28K
YOUR RATING
The Shadow (1994)
Trailer for The Shadow
Play trailer2:01
4 Videos
83 Photos
SuperheroActionAdventureCrimeFantasyMysteryThriller

In 1930s New York City, The Shadow (Alec Baldwin) battles his nemesis, Shiwan Khan (John Lone), who is building an atomic bomb.In 1930s New York City, The Shadow (Alec Baldwin) battles his nemesis, Shiwan Khan (John Lone), who is building an atomic bomb.In 1930s New York City, The Shadow (Alec Baldwin) battles his nemesis, Shiwan Khan (John Lone), who is building an atomic bomb.

  • Director
    • Russell Mulcahy
  • Writers
    • Walter B. Gibson
    • David Koepp
  • Stars
    • Alec Baldwin
    • John Lone
    • Penelope Ann Miller
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    28K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Russell Mulcahy
    • Writers
      • Walter B. Gibson
      • David Koepp
    • Stars
      • Alec Baldwin
      • John Lone
      • Penelope Ann Miller
    • 182User reviews
    • 90Critic reviews
    • 50Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 nominations total

    Videos4

    The Shadow
    Trailer 2:01
    The Shadow
    The Shadow
    Trailer 2:12
    The Shadow
    The Shadow
    Trailer 2:12
    The Shadow
    The Shadow
    Clip 3:02
    The Shadow
    The Shadow: Bridge Fight
    Clip 3:02
    The Shadow: Bridge Fight

    Photos83

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    Top cast73

    Edit
    Alec Baldwin
    Alec Baldwin
    • Lamont Cranston…
    John Lone
    John Lone
    • Shiwan Khan
    Penelope Ann Miller
    Penelope Ann Miller
    • Margo Lane
    Peter Boyle
    Peter Boyle
    • Moe Shrevnitz
    Ian McKellen
    Ian McKellen
    • Dr. Reinhardt Lane
    Tim Curry
    Tim Curry
    • Farley Claymore
    Jonathan Winters
    Jonathan Winters
    • Police Commissioner Wainwright Barth
    Sab Shimono
    Sab Shimono
    • Dr. Roy Tam
    Andre Gregory
    Andre Gregory
    • Burbank
    Brady Tsurutani
    • Tulku
    James Hong
    James Hong
    • Li Peng
    Arsenio 'Sonny' Trinidad
    Arsenio 'Sonny' Trinidad
    • Wu
    Joseph Maher
    Joseph Maher
    • Isaac Newboldt
    John Kapelos
    John Kapelos
    • Duke Rollins
    Max Wright
    Max Wright
    • Berger
    Aaron Lustig
    Aaron Lustig
    • Doctor
    Ethan Phillips
    Ethan Phillips
    • Nelson
    Sinoa Loren
    • Singer
    • (as Sinoa)
    • Director
      • Russell Mulcahy
    • Writers
      • Walter B. Gibson
      • David Koepp
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews182

    6.128.1K
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    Featured reviews

    Falkeep

    Walter Gibson Should Be Proud

    This movie was the best effort to bring this unique hero to the big screen. Granted, although I like her in general, Penelope Ann Miller was not as strong a Margo as I would have liked, otherwise, I thought this was an outstanding achievement. The look and feel are perfect and I loved how they made sure many of The Shadow's regular crew made their appearances... Shrivey, Roy Tam, Burbank.

    The main reason I wanted to comment on this movie, however, was because of the question raised by Patrick in London about why Baldwin's nose changed shape when he became The Shadow. Lamont Cranston's hawk-nosed profile was one of the most famous trademarks of The Shadow. Alec Baldwin, however, does not naturally have that kind of look (to be honest, Lee Van Cleef may be the only movie actor in history with the correct look to have been able to portray The Shadow without resorting to make-up or special effects). Personally, I thought it was a brilliant touch to make that profile an illusion which Cranston utilizes when he becomes The Shadow. It makes it more believable that no one would be able to figure out he is The Shadow. A profile as distinct as Cranston's traditional look would make it difficult to believe that no one could put two and two together... kind of like believing that no one could figure out that Clark Kent is Superman just because he wears glasses. To me, it was just one more thing that elevated this movie above the usual superhero genre flick because it showed an appreciation and respect for the source material that Hollywood is not necessarily known for.
    random_ax

    another look

    I have watched the movie several times now after purchasing it and it actually gets better each time I view it. I would highly recommend the film to everyone.

    At first (see my earlier comment) I found John Lone's villain to be too weak...but I see now why. The REAL foe in the film is not Khan..but the SHADOW himself. His inner darkside vs his good side. Lone is just there to show you what the darkside could be. HE isn't what scares the Shadow. It's his own past, his evil side, loss of control that plagues the hero.

    I wish this had been better received because we could've enjoyed a few sequels by now. And the same goes for THE PHANTOM and THE ROCKETEER.
    7Scarlet-22

    Fun Film, Beautiful Looking, Great Performances

    Before BATMAN, there was THE SHADOW. In the history of troubled billionaires donning disguises at night, THE SHADOW told the story of Lamont Cranston before Bruce Wayne's story filled DC Comics' pages. Finally, in 1994, the long-running radio drama came to life on the big screen in one of the best adaptations since Tim Burton brought The Dark Knight to the silver screen in 1989. For some reason, the movie never caught on with the public; maybe not as many people remembered the radio version as I did. I loved it, though; I could watch this film again and again.

    Alec Baldwin (BEETLEJUICE, HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER) plays Lamont Cranston, a former drug lord who is captured by a Tibetan monk and retrained to fight evil as his penance for doing it. Cranston's power is a kind of hypnotic telepathy; he has the power to "cloud men's minds", which he uses to make himself invisible to evildoers except for his shadow (because light itself can never be fooled).

    Cranston lives an exciting double life in what is apparently a glamorized version of the 30's, playing the town as a billionaire playboy and building up a secret network of helpers from those he saves as The Shadow (each identified with a silver fire opal ring given them upon their rescue), until he meets his match in two ways: Cranston loses his heart to enchanting-but-scatterbrained Margo Lane (Penelope Ann Miller), and The Shadow must fight his evil counterpart, Shiwan Khan (John Lone), last descendant of Genghis Khan, who has a hypnotic telepathy of his own and is seeking to bring life as we know it to an end using elements that have never been combined before (Dr. Roy Tam to Cranston: "I guess you'd call it an implosive-explosive-submolecular destruction device." Cranston: "Or an 'atomic bomb'." Tam: "Hey, that's catchy.").

    Forget trying to follow the plot; like BATMAN, the plot isn't the point. The point is the look and feel of the movie, and this movie has glamour and pizazz to spare. 1930's New York City has NEVER looked better. The special effects are brilliant (at one point, as water rises in an enclosed room, the invisible Shadow's legs make deep dents in the rising water) and very well used throughout, so that they are not intrusive but rather a part of the story. Like BATMAN, there's also a large assortment of anachronistic gadgetry (pneumatic tubes delivering messages over a sophisticated network, video phones, elaborate neon billboards) that somehow work with the story as well. And the acting--Baldwin, Miller, Lone, Peter Boyle as Cranston's driver, Tim Curry as an evil scientist in league with Lone, Ian McKellen as Margo's father, another scientist whose discoveries are exploited by Khan--is also first-rate. THE SHADOW is the perfect Saturday Night movie: Fun to watch, attractive-looking, and not terribly taxing on the brain. Go see it.
    10Snatchy

    A misunderstood gem

    This movie got poor-to-middling reviews when it was released in 1994 but I still hold out hope that it eventually gets its proper respect in TV and Cable reruns, because it's a terrificly entertaining film. Maybe it just takes a certain frame of mind or background to enjoy this movie, but I absolutely love it and frequently go back to it when I want to see how a dark, edgy, and FUN movie is done right.

    Alec Baldwin is excellent as Lamont Cranston/The Shadow. Baldwin has never achieved the commercial sucess many predicted for him and this movie perhaps shows why; Baldwin doesn't play a straight protagonist. The movie begins with Cranston as a hedonistic warlord in China and then jumps to his reformed Shadow persona is 1930's New York, and it is Baldwin's performance, which teeters between serious and funny, nice and cruel, that bridges the gap.

    Russell Mulcahy and crew did an excellent job creating a 1930's-noir feel to the picture. One of my friends complained that the movie sets were "too obviously fake", I think he missed the point. They re-created the feel of a 1930's movie set, not the 1930's itself!

    The movie is a bit campy at times but thankfully maintains the dark edge of the Shadow character, who has no qualms about killing or maiming his opponents (hey, this guy was a bloodthirsty killer in his previous life, you think he's going to forget how to use that power when he changes sides?). John Lone does a nice job as the Shadow's opposite number, Shiwan Khan. The supporting cast is excellent as well (Jonathon Winters, Ian McKellan, Tim Curry) with perhaps the exception of Penelope Ann Miller, whose character and performance were rather annoying, but I can live with it.

    Overall I give this movie a BIG thumbs up and recommend it to anyone that enjoys fun movies. I've gotten a mixed reaction from friends I've recommended it to but I think this is the kind of movie where if you like it all, you'll love it.
    lethalweasel

    Excellent adaptation, highly enjoyable

    I don't really understand the bad rep this movie has gotten. Sure, its not "high art" (then again, Shakespeare, Dickens and Herodetus weren't meant to be, or perceived as, high art when they were written). What The Shadow was, and remains, in my eyes, is one of the best super-hero adaptations ever (the best until X-Men came out, in my opinion).

    I'm not terribly familiar with the old radio drama Shadow, so I can't speak as to the details, but the feeling, the essence of the movie fits with what I've experienced. Much more importantly, it stand out well on its own.

    Special effects play a major part, but are not of the over-played. Action is well done, and acting is acceptable, though rarely outstanding (the Shadow's cabbie Shrebnitz is an engrossing exception).

    What really makes this movie stand out is the layering. Plots, characters, backgrounds, all are complex. The movie's basic plot is well-paced, occasionally a bit slow, but it makes up for it with the incredible wealth of details it packs in. Watching the movie, one gets the sense of an incredible amount of backstory for each character (little things, like the family life of some of the Shadow's agents, barely glimpsed, or even just the complex web of those agents across the city), or that around the corner there lies a world to explore.

    This movie can be difficult to classify, which may lead to its unpopularity. Clearly its not a drama, not is it a comedy, nor even entirely an action. Scifi or fantasy are both possible descriptions, but they fail. The Shadow is comicbook style, in the truest sense of the genre. Complex characters, pull-pounding action, some jokes, some drama...it all mixes together. If you can get a bead on the style, its a very enjoyable movie, far ahead of most other super-hero films (Superman, Batman, the Phantom, etc.)

    I recommend watching it, but only with an open mind.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When Shiwan Khan and Lamont Cranston first meet, their dialogue about where Cranston purchased his tie is a spoof on product placement during the radio airing of The Shadow.
    • Goofs
      The wire insulation on the bomb is modern day plastics not the correct cloth type for the day, and the nylon wire ties wouldn't be invented for another 30 years or so. The timer in the bomb used a display tube called the Nixie tube to show the digits of the countdown. The original Nixie tube was patented in 1938, but it looked like a small TV screen on which the numbers were displayed. The tube design used in the bomb was not introduced until 1962.
    • Quotes

      Margo Lane: Oh, God I dreamed.

      Lamont Cranston: So did I. What did you dream?

      Margo Lane: I was lying naked on a beach in the South Seas. The tide was coming up to my toes. The sun was beating down. My skin hot and cool at the same time. It was wonderful. What was yours?

      Lamont Cranston: I dreamed I tore all the skin off my face and was somebody else underneath.

      Margo Lane: You have problems.

      Lamont Cranston: I'm aware of that.

    • Connections
      Edited into Taylor Dayne: Original Sin (1995)
    • Soundtracks
      Original Sin (Theme from 'The Shadow')
      Written, Produced and Arranged by Jim Steinman

      Performed by Taylor Dayne

      Courtesy of Arista Records, Inc.

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    FAQ21

    • How long is The Shadow?Powered by Alexa
    • Is Reinhardt Lane color-blind or does he really have a hard time telling the difference between red and green?
    • List: "The Shadow" radio episodes

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 1, 1994 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Тінь
    • Filming locations
      • Alabama Hills, Lone Pine, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Universal Pictures
      • Bregman/Baer Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $25,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $32,063,435
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $11,713,845
      • Jul 4, 1994
    • Gross worldwide
      • $48,063,435
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 48 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS-Stereo
      • DTS
      • Dolby SR

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