With the massive commercial
success of Tim Burton’s Batman (1989)
every studio in Hollywood wanted to replicate it and this kickstarted a feeding
frenzy for a pulp story/comic book property that would connect with the
mainstream movie-going public. The result was a string of lavish adaptations of
Dick Tracy (1990), The Rocketeer (1991), and The Phantom (1996). The Shadow (1994) also came out of this same period and like the
aforementioned movies failed to perform at the box office at the same level as Batman. In fact, The Shadow barely made back its budget but has since gone on to
develop a cult following.
The Shadow was based on the pulp fiction character of the same name created in
1931 by Walter B. Gibson. The character got his start on the radio as an enigmatic
narrator and when he became popular enough was given an identity by Gibson who
developed the character and his world in a series of pulp novels that was soon
adapted into an even more popular radio series (voiced by none other than Orson
Welles for a short time). Over the years, the durable character was adapted in
comic books, movie serials and B-movies but it wasn’t until 1994 that The Shadow would get big budget
treatment from Hollywood.
We meet Lamont Cranston (Alec Baldwin, sporting horrible looking long hair) in Tibet. It is after the First
World War and he is indulging in his darker impulses, becoming a warlord and
opium kingpin known as Ying-Ko. One day, he is kidnapped by the servants of
Tulku (Brady Tsurutani), a holy man with mystical powers. He is forced to face
his dark side and use this knowledge to defeat evil in all of its various
guises. Tulku also teaches Cranston all of his abilities and sends him back to
his home in New York City where becomes a crime fighter known as the Shadow.
We meet his colorful alter
ego in an impressively staged sequence where he prevents three gangsters from
throwing a man off the Brooklyn Bridge. The Shadow uses fear as a weapon,
scaring the men with echo-y laughter and his voice that seems to come from
everywhere and nowhere, tormenting the lead goon by revealing his past crimes.
Initially, we only get vague glimpses of the Shadow as he appears and
disappears with alarming speed. It is only until he dispatches the gangsters
that we get a full reveal of the character and this is accompanied by Jerry Goldsmith’s rousing score.
Cranston switches back to
himself and heads off to the Cobalt Club where he meets with police
commissioner Wainwright Barth (Jonathan Winters) for dinner and proceeds to
ignore him when he spots Margo Lane (Penelope Ann Miller), the beautiful
daughter of a scientist (Ian McKellen) working for the War Department. We get a
nice moment where Cranston uses his mental powers to cloud the commissioner’s
mind to forget about creating a taskforce to stop the Shadow in a way that
director Russell Mulcahy portrays as part film noir and part Jedi mind trick.
A silver sarcophagus arrives
at the Museum of Natural History from Tibet housing Shiwan Khan (John Lone), a
rogue protégé of Tulku and the last descendant of Genghis Khan. He possesses
the same powers as Cranston but is obsessed with world domination. He plans on
achieving this by kidnapping Margo’s father and use his work to build an atomic
bomb. Cranston has to use all of the powers at his disposal in order to stop
Khan.
Alec Baldwin impresses early
on as the suave Cranston who not only uses his powers on his uncle but also to
pick up Margo. They go on an impromptu date at a Chinese restaurant and he amazes
her by ordering in Chinese. “You speak Chinese?” she asks him and without a
missing a beat he replies, “Only Mandarin.” Baldwin exhibits good comic timing
and his movie star looks are a great fit for the dashing millionaire. Watching
him in The Shadow makes me realize
what a good Bruce Wayne he would have been. The actor had the charisma,
presence and a commanding voice that would have been so well-suited for the
role.
With Awakenings (1990), Carlito’s
Way (1993), and The Shadow, the
early to mid-1990s saw Penelope Ann Miller at the height of her mainstream
popularity. With her retro good looks she makes for a good Margo Lane and has
nice chemistry with Baldwin. I was never a big fan of hers and so she doesn’t
do much for me in the role but she certainly looks the part.
The always-reliable Ian
McKellen has fun as the absent-minded professor too occupied with his work to
notice that his daughter is being romanced by Cranston. Peter Boyle shows up as
the Shadow’s most trusted ally and Jonathan Winters pops up in a mostly
straight-faced role as the city’s clueless police commissioner and gets to
criticize Cranston for his habitual tardiness. John Lone plays the movie’s
ruthless, scenery-chewing villain and is suitably evil in the role, holding his
own with Baldwin in their scenes together as they banter back and forth between
getting down to serious issues.
Much like Batman and Dick Tracy, the world of The
Shadow is created with a combination of soundstages and matte paintings,
which gives it an intentionally stylized look – a 1930s inhabited by Art Deco
nightclubs and sinister alleyways. The attention to period detail, down to the
cars, clothing and advertisements that decorate buildings is fantastic. It is
also great to see big city scenes populated by numerous living and breathing
extras. Unlike the CGI worlds of today, the one in The Shadow feels tangible and real. It has depth and detail that we
buy into and this is even more glaringly evident in the CGI-created Phurba, a
mystical flying dagger, which is controlled by Khan. It looks awkward and out
of place with the rest of the practical effects.
Journeyman director Russell
Mulcahy provides the requisite stylistic flourishes without being too showy. He
is savvy enough to know when to inject some style and orchestrates this big
movie with skill but lacks the personal idiosyncrasies that Tim Burton brought
to his Batman movies. As a result,
there is a bit of generic complacency to The
Shadow that was also evident in The
Phantom.
After Batman everyone seemed content to ape Danny Elfman’s score
(including himself) for their own comic book superhero movies and so it is
refreshing to hear that Jerry Goldsmith avoids this with a score that has a
classical feel while also a contemporary heroic vibe to it. His cues help
propel the action and add atmosphere to the downtime between these sequences.
The Shadow has a nice streak of light-hearted humor that runs throughout and
David Koepp’s screenplay picks the right moments to use it, like when Cranston
and Khan meet for the first time and these two powerful men sniff each other
out, even engaging in banter like the latter admiring the former’s tie before
Khan reveals his true intentions:
Khan: In three days, the entire world will hear my roar, and willingly fall subject to the lost empire of Shiwan Khan. That is a lovely tie, by the way. May I ask where you acquired it?
Cranston: Brooks Brothers.
Khan: Is that mid-town?
Cranston: 45th and Madison. You are a barbarian. Khan: Thank you. We both are.
Khan: In three days, the entire world will hear my roar, and willingly fall subject to the lost empire of Shiwan Khan. That is a lovely tie, by the way. May I ask where you acquired it?
Cranston: Brooks Brothers.
Khan: Is that mid-town?
Cranston: 45th and Madison. You are a barbarian. Khan: Thank you. We both are.
Remember when super hero
movies didn’t take themselves too seriously? Obviously, they went too far by
the end of the decade with Batman &
Robin (1997), which is just out-and-out silly, but then with X-Men (2000) they got serious again and
going darker with the genre has reached its apex with Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016). Watching The Shadow again, with all of this in
mind, I was struck at how well it gets the mix of humor and dramatic heroics
that is sorely missing from most comic book superhero movies today.
For years, movie producer
Martin Bregman had been trying to get The
Shadow made. He had gone through numerous screenwriters but none of them
could figure out the material to his satisfaction until he approached David
Koepp, who started working on it in 1989. According to Bregman, “Thematically
the earlier drafts didn’t work…No one really could get this guy and it never
had the size it should have.” The writer was a fan of the old radio show and
for research read The Shadow Scrapbook,
The Duende History of the Shadow Magazine
and many of the pulp novels featuring the character. He incorporated elements
from all of these various sources into his script. For example, he took
characters and villains from the pulp novels and took the tone of the radio
show and made up his own story.
When it came to casting, Roy
Scheider had been considered as the Shadow at some point as did Jeremy Irons. Bregman
approached Alec Baldwin to play the Shadow and the actor loved Koepp’s script
and agreed to take on the role. One of the challenges he faced was looking and
acting like the Shadow: “You have to learn how to move with all that stuff on.
You want to be graceful. It’s something you have to learn how to integrate into
the performance you’re going to give, because the minute you get all the makeup
on, everything changes.”
At the wrap party for Carlito’s Way (1993), which he was also
producing, Bregman asked Penelope Ann Miller to read the script for The Shadow. She saw the character of
Margo Lane as “reminiscent to me of the great characters that Carole Lombard,
Myrna Loy and Joan Crawford played.”
Director Russell Mulcahy knew
about the project ten years prior but when he heard people like Robert Zemeckis
were being considered he assumed there was no chance despite being interested.
While working on the Bregman-produced The
Real McCoy (1993) its star Kim Basinger was so impressed with Mulcahy that
she recommended to her then-husband Baldwin that the director should helm The Shadow.
For the look of the movie,
production designer Joe Nemec III created a world that was set in the 1936-38
range. Since most of the movie takes place in New York City, he consulted a
period era map in order to get an idea of where everything was located, like
Cranston’s mansion, which was around East 52nd Street. Creating the
city was the responsibility of visual FX supervisor Alison Savitch who was
hired just before principal photography started when the producers realized
they needed someone in charge of the increasing number of visual effects. She
ended up using a combination of models, matte paintings and CGI to recreate
late ‘30s New York.
Principal photography began
in the summer of 1993 on the Universal Studios lot in Hollywood on five of
their soundstages over 14 weeks on a $40 million budget. Filming went
relatively smoothly with only one week lost when an earthquake struck,
destroying the Hall of Mirrors set.
For the most
part, the movie was ripped to shreds by mainstream critics. In her review for The New York Times, Caryn James wrote,
“Such dark-hearted, cartoonish crime fighters are awfully familiar on screen
right now, and this movie is too meek to set itself apart.” Entertainment Weekly gave the movie a
“D” rating and Owen Gleiberman wrote, “Baldwin, a good actor who needs to start
playing characters with an edge, looks puffy and smug in this cockeyed-hero
role. Like Batman, the Shadow is meant to be a good guy with a touch of evil, but
Baldwin just acts like James Bond’s smart-ass brother.” In his review for the Los Angeles Times, Kenneth Turan wrote,
“Baldwin, Lone and Penelope Ann Miller as the glamorous Margo Lane continually
struggle for the right tone, while Tim Curry as a mad scientist gives up the
fight and goes totally over the top. And what could have been a classic ends up
yet another story of what might have been.” The Washington Post’s Desson Howe wrote, “But without a compelling
story at the center, this is just a mediocre MTV-Wagnerian fantasy.”
However,
Roger Ebert gave the movie three out of four stars and wrote, “The story itself
may not be so mesmerizing, but who really cares? Style and tone are everything
with a movie like this, which wants to bring to life a dark secret place in the
lurid pulp imagination.” Finally, Jonathan Rosenbaum felt that the movie had
“enough of the innocent exoticism and splendor of silent thrillers to suggest a
continuity with the past missing from most other movies; all that’s required is
a capacity to sit back and dream.”
Coming after Batman, The Shadow was accused of copying it when in fact Bob Kane’s
creation is indebted to Gibson’s stories, which came first, but most moviegoers
were unaware of this at the time and the movie did not perform well. No one has
made another adaptation since with only Sam Raimi currently owning the movie
rights but has so far done little with the property. The time is right for
another take on this iconic character but whoever tackles it might want to
contemporize it much like Howard Chaykin did with his controversial comic book
adaptation in 1986 as audiences don’t seem to respond to retro pulp adventures
(with a few notable exceptions, like The
Mummy and Captain America: First
Avenger).
While The Shadow may not be as visually dazzling as Dick Tracy, the characters are more fully realized than in Warren
Beatty’s opus, which feels overstuffed. It is more successful translating its
source material than The Phantom, but
isn’t quite as satisfying or as distinctive as The Rocketeer, the best of the post-Batman crop of retro comic book adaptations. That being said, The Shadow is an entertaining and
engaging effort that has a lot going for it, most notably an appealing
performance by Baldwin, a terrific score by Goldsmith, and top notch production
values.
SOURCES
Jones, Alan. “Me and My Shadow.” Starburst. November
1994.
Murray, Will. The Shadow: The Official Movie Magazine.
1994.
Peterson, Don E. “The Shadow Takes Shape.” Sci-Fi
Entertainment. August 1994.
It's nice to see somebody else appreciates "The Shadow". Visually it was one of the most impressive "superhero" movies I ever saw. And although I wish they'd picked a different actor, Baldwin did a pretty good job of it.
ReplyDeleteI like Baldwin. At first, I wasn't crazy about him but the more times I watch it the more I think he was actually very good in the role.
ReplyDeletefor me the movie had its issues, but i love it. too bad it didn't do better, the release time was off and the earthquake in '94 didn't help either.
ReplyDeleteYeah, it just didn't connect with audiences at the time but has since found a cult following.
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