The Shadow Returns

1946 film by William Beaudine, Phil Rosen
  • February 16, 1946 (1946-02-16)
Running time
61 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglish

The Shadow Returns is a 1946 American comedy crime film directed by Phil Rosen and starring Kane Richmond, Barbara Read, and Tom Dugan. It features the pulp-fiction character The Shadow, already a popular hero of novels and a radio show. It was the first in a series of three films released by Monogram Pictures in 1946 starring Richmond in the role.

Plot

Private detective Lamont Cranston steps in to solve a murder for the police with the assistance of his alter ego, The Shadow.

Cast

  • Kane Richmond as Lamont Cranston/The Shadow
  • Barbara Read as Margo Lane
  • Tom Dugan as Shrevvy
  • Joseph Crehan as Police Insp. Cardona
  • Pierre Watkin as Police Commissioner J.R. Weston
  • Robert Emmett Keane as Charles Frobay
  • Frank Reicher as Michael Hasdon
  • Lester Dorr as William Monk
  • Rebel Randall as Lenore Jessup
  • Emmett Vogan as Joseph Yomans, aka Paul Breck
  • Sherry Hall as Robert Buell
  • Cyril Delevanti as John Adams, the Butler

Reception

The New York Times called The Shadow Returns "the first of three above-average Monogram features" but that the character Margo Lane, an intelligent and resourceful character on the radio series, was portrayed as a "blithering idiot" and that Margo came off "far stupider than the film's official comedy relief, Cranston's chauffeur Shrevvie". The Shadow Returns was thought to be "an entertaining mystery" and the disappearing gimmick considered "handled with subtlety and inventiveness" by director Phil Rosen.[1]

Sequels

The film was followed by two sequels, Behind the Mask (1946) and The Missing Lady (1946), with Kane Richmond and Barbara Read reprising their roles.

References

  1. ^ Hal Erickson, Rovi. "The Shadow Returns (1946)", The New York Times. Retrieved 15 February 2015.

External links

  • The Shadow Returns at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  • The Shadow Returns is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive
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Magazine
  • The Shadow (1931–49)
Key novelsFilms
Games
  • Unreleased video game
  • Pinball
Music
"Original Sin" (Taylor Dayne song)
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Films directed by Phil Rosen


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