Invisible Avenger (1958)
Facts
| Directed by | James Wong Howe, John Sledge and Ben Parker |
| Cast | Richard Derr, Jeanne Neher, Dan Mullin, Mark Daniels, Lee Edwards and Helen Westcott |
| Theatrical Release | December 2, 1958 |
| DVD Release | January 21, 2003 |
| Running Time | 60 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 089218408990 |
| Buy this item | $7.98 at Amazon.com As of Sep 7 11:04 EDT (details) 1 DVD, ALPHA VIDEO, Usually ships in 24 hours, Black & White, DVD-Video, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language) Or 17 new from $0.99, 5 used from $3.00 |
About Invisible Avenger
The legendary mind-clouding man of mystery is back in this film noir tale set in New Orleans, where nothing is ever as it seems. Exiled Spanish leader Pablo Ramirez is hiding out on Bourbon Street as plans are laid to overthrow the oppressive dictatorship Product Description
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User Reviews
Average user review:| enjoyable |
| Bourbon on the rocks |
It's a dreadful backdrop story to this unique little Shadow vehicle. THE INVISIBLE AVENGER is, for the most part, true to its pulp and radio origins, although it's odd that the popular radio hero would be featured in this low-budget quickie. I mean, The Shadow was popular enough to merit a more ambitious feature debut than this. Wasn't he?
Richard Derr stars as Cranston/the Shadow with Mark Daniels co-starring as personal guru Jogendra. Margo Lane is sorely missed, although Jogendra is an interesting Xandadu/Viennese mystic. His best bit of wisdom is this pearly observation on love and honor - "It is a great victory to win a place in a girl's heart, but even a greater victory to save her country from tyranny." Wrap it in a expensively clothed, well groomed and vaguely foreign mystic and you will be as impressed as I was.
Derr makes a decent enough Shadow, and there's quite a bit of location photography in late-50's New Orleans that's fun to see. If you aren't familiar with the Shadow you'll probably be confused, because the movie seems to take on faith you know who he is and what he does.
I don't know the behind-the-scenes story on this, but I think the fact that's there's two directors credited should tell us something. Hack director Ben Parker is likely the one replaced, Academy Award winning cinematographer James Wong Howe probably cleaned it up as well as he could. Howe won a Best Cinematography Oscar for 1955's THE ROSE TATTOO and 1963's HUD. THE INVISIBLE AVENGER has some great location shots of New Orleans, but for the most part its look doesn't rise above the lame script or the movie's low budget.
Recommended for Shadow fans only, more as a curiosity piece than a good movie.
October 15, 2004
| More Of The Shadow You Know |
For Shadow fans, this is a must have and a steal at the price. 50's Sci-fi fans would also enjoy this film for the "special effects." Grab this, the double VHS serial and the Alec Baldwin film before you get "International Crime / The Shadow Strikes." March 5, 2003
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