The Shadow (1994) Dir. Russell Mulcahy
From the pages of the old pulp magazines of the 1930s came 1994's The Shadow, one of the most original and mysterious fantasy characters ever brought to the silver screen. A reformed criminal who is redeemed and taught the secrets of the mind by a Tibetan holy man, the Shadow is a one-of-a kind anti-hero who manipulates and terrorizes both villains and friends alike to serve his own ends as well as the scales of justice. Who better to embody such a handsome and egotistical hero than Alec Baldwin at the height of his Hollywood fame. Transformed by facial makeup partially hidden under a wide-brimmed slouch hat and brandishing nickel-plates .45s under his dark cloak, Baldwin with his sonorous deep voice personifies the duality of this deadly hero of the dark. John Lone (The Last Emperor) makes for a deliciously evil antagonist while amusing supporting performances are provided by Jonathan Winters and Tim Curry. Composer Jerry Goldsmith provides a suitably menacing musical accompaniment to the sumptuous art deco production design. Although Australian director Russell Mulcahy (Highlander) was a good choice to visualize such an effects driven project, he fails to bring the film’s contrived romance to life due to the miscasting of a stiff but sensational looking Penelope Ann Miller. Screenwriter David Koepp (Jurassic Park) went onto much bigger success with Mission Impossible (1996) and even wrote the unfairly despised penultimate sequel Indiana Jones and Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008). The idea to go back to the original pulp origins of The Shadow seemed sure fire at the time but audiences were just not ready for the off-beat humour Koepp brings to this fantastical tale of vengeance.
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