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Shadows

United States

1959

81 Min
Black and White
English
  • Currently 4.0/5 Stars.
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DIR John Cassavetes

PROD Maurice McEndree

DP Erich Kollmar

CAST Ben Carruthers, Lelia Goldoni, Hugh Hurd, Anthony Ray, Dennis Sallas, Tom Allen, David Pokitillow, Rupert Crosse

ED John Cassavetes, Maurice McEndree

Synopsis

John Cassavetes’ directorial debut revolves around an interracial romance between Lelia (Lelia Goldoni), a light-skinned black woman living in New York City with her two brothers, and Tony (Anthony Ray), a white man. The relationship crumbles when Tony meets Lelia’s brother Hugh (Hugh Hurd), a talented dark-skinned jazz singer struggling to find work, and discovers the truth about Lelia’s racial heritage. Shot on location in Manhattan with a cast and crew made up primarily of amateurs, Cassavetes’ Shadows is a visionary work that is widely considered the forerunner of the independent film movement. —The Criterion Collection

Director

John-cassavetes

John Cassavetes

Perhaps better known to the general public as an actor, John Cassavetes’ true artistic legacy derives from his work behind the camera; arguably, he was America’s first truly independent filmmaker, an iconoclastic maverick whose movies challenged the assumptions of the cinematic form. Obsessed with bringing to the screen the “small feelings” he believed that American society at large attempted to suppress, Cassavetes’ work emphasized his actors above all else, favoring character examination over traditional narrative storytelling to explore the realities of the human condition. A pioneer of self-financing and self-distribution, he led the way for filmmakers to break free of Hollywood control, perfecting an improvisational, cinéma vérité aesthetic all his own.
The son of Greek immigrants, Cassavetes was born December 9, 1929, in New York City. After attending public school on Long Island, he later studied English at both Mohawk College and Colgate University prior to enrolling at… read more

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Displaying 4 of 12 wall posts.
Picture of Tom Rubendall

Tom Rubendall

31Jan10

in 1959 France had The 400 Blows. Breathless wasn't released till 1960  
Picture of JP. Schmidt

JP. Schmidt

25Jan10

Sometimes during the most weak of tinder there are still many sparks of genius.  

Kurt Walker

14Jan10

1959: France had Breathless, and America had Shadows. Shadows is not a film about racism, but a film about the avoidance of vulnerability. The rarity of Cassavetes auteurship is that he rejects the medium. His interest, instead, lies with the planes in which people intersect upon; whether it be the trivialization of innocence or the reluctance to confront our essence, Cassavetes pleads us to be vulnerable.   
Picture of Robert W Peabody III

Robert W Peabody III

17Dec09

Corner boys and faux hipster witness a social movement resulting in mea culpa. Film cries out for a script; Ray cries out for Gena. Development of a sustainable theme in an oeuvre and mumblecore, sometimes called slackavettes, starts here.  

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Shadows

By gino on December 25, 2009

Shadows is a moving Film about changing times, shot in the hustle and bustle of New York City, in a stunning black and white. John Cassavetes is one of my favorite Directors, and it didn’t come as…  read review

Untitled

By Apocaly​pse Salem on September 29, 2009

John Cassavetes vastly improvised and groundbreaking directorial debut still feels amazingly fresh today, Underlined with a fantastic Jazz score by Charles Mingus and saxophonist Shafi Hadi; Shadows…  read review

Untitled

By Jung Ji Sung on April 25, 2009

Shadows is a fitting title for this film. The film deals with racial tension in a way that disintegrates the concept of ‘race’ as a social construction. The fact that it was made during a period culminating…  read review

Untitled

By Antoine Doinel on December 2, 2008

I think the most astounding thing about Cassavete’s debut “Shadows”, the scene that emotionally rings true for me (something Cassavete’s totally perfected in his later films) is the one featured in…  read review

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DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.