Falsely accused of murdering a crooked newspaper reporter, suave detective Lamont Cranston -- aka the Shadow -- vows to track down the real killer.

Lamont Cranston, aka The Shadow, investigates the murder of a New Orleans bandleader.

A group of people in an old dark house are terrorized by a mysterious hooded figure dressed in black...

The Shadow's second movie short, an adaptation from a Ray Humphreys story, "The Cat's Paw," from Det...

The Shadow's third movie short, an adaptation from a Donald Van Riper story, "Dying Lips," which app...

Lamont Cranston assumes his secret identity as "The Shadow", to break up an attempted robbery at an ...

While investigating the theft of a valuable jade statue known as "The Missing Lady" -- and the subse...

The Shadow (Kane Richmond) cracks a case of missing jewels, murder and plastics.

The Shadow battles a villain known as The Black Tiger, who has the power to make himself invisible a...

The second and final Grand National Pictures film to feature The Shadow, played again by Rod La Rocq...

Based on the 1930s comic strip, The Shadow is put up against his archenemy Shiwan Khan, who plans to...

Lamont Cranston, a psychiatrist on retainer to the police department, is asked to assist in the Case...
At a remote train station covered in heavy snow, a station master Gap-su is facing the last day of h...

The 200th episode of the venerated sci-fi series is discussed during this special.

Three stories intertwine to form a vision of war in a narrative kaleidoscope that transcends space a...

Twenty-eight weeks after the spread of a deadly rage virus, the inhabitants of the British Isles hav...

When a virus leaks from a top-secret facility, turning all resident researchers into ravenous zombie...

As the city is locked down under quarantine, Alice finds out that the people that died from the prev...

Mort Rainey, a writer just emerging from a painful divorce with his ex-wife, is stalked at his remot...

Defense attorney Martin Vail takes on jobs for money and prestige rather than any sense of the great...