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The Missing Lady
Overlook Pick

The Missing Lady

A Mystery Thrill-Treat from the Annals of The Shadow
48
User Score12 ratings
TMDB 4.816+19461hEnglish
Science FictionCrimeDramaMystery

Synopsis

While investigating the theft of a valuable jade statue known as "The Missing Lady" -- and the subsequent murder of an art dealer -- imperceptible sleuth Lamont Cranston aka the Shadow finds himself being blamed for the crime. It doesn't help the Shadow's claims of innocence when more bodies begin piling up. Good thing he knows exactly who's guilty among an increasingly smaller group of suspects.

Director
Phil KarlsonFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Release
August 17, 1946Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 17
Kane Richmond
Kane Richmond
Lamont Cranston / The Shadow
Barbara Read
Barbara Read
Margo Lane
George Chandler
George Chandler
Shrevvie
James Flavin
James Flavin
Police Insp. Cardona
Pierre Watkin
Pierre Watkin
Police Commissioner Weston
Dorothea Kent
Dorothea Kent
Jennie Delaney
Almira Sessions
Almira Sessions
Miss Effie
Nora Cecil
Nora Cecil
Miss Millie

Trailers & Photos

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Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Dec 10, 2024

So Kane Richmond takes top billing as the "Shadow/Cranston" but it's really "Miss Effie" (Almira Sessions) and "Miss Millie" (Nora Cecil) who steal the scenes as the busy-body lift operators who shimmy around in perfectly symmetrical attire running one of those counter-weight elevators that has a mind of it's own as they entrap their "passengers" whilst they accrue all the gossip. The rest of the plot is all centred on rather a silly misunderstanding between our sleuth and police inspector "Cardona" (James Flavin). You see, the eponymous character is not actually a person, but a foot-high jade statue worth a cool $250,000 - and it's been pinched. The policeman thinks it's a person but "Cranston" knows it's not - and that's the premiss of the hour as they both try to track it/her down whilst the body count mounts up. There's plenty of fisticuffs, trashed furniture and a few wise cracks along the way to an ending that's probably about as convoluted as they come. It's all production-line stuff this with little to remember, but I did think there was just a soupçon of charisma on display here from Barbara Read's "Margo" and the dynamic between the investigator, the inspector and is boss, the "Commissioner" (Pierre Watkin) does raise a smile now and again.

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