Big shot TV newswoman returns home for a vacation, as several of the town's residents start dying under mysterious circumstances.Big shot TV newswoman returns home for a vacation, as several of the town's residents start dying under mysterious circumstances.Big shot TV newswoman returns home for a vacation, as several of the town's residents start dying under mysterious circumstances.
Stuart Quan
- Tai Jung
- (as Dane Chan)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
10ripsurf
The entertainment value on this priceless and timeless movie is beyond words! The actors and actresses do a great job portraying the fear that gets lodged into the people's hearts and minds is fantastic!
That actress that plays Beth could go on to do some superb work, if only someone gave her a chance. She has the look of stardom, and could easily pull off any hard rolls thrown her way. Just because this movie didn't get any awards, doesn't mean that it isn't a great film. The music, the acting, and that werewolf!!! are amazing! Hats off to everyone involved in this movie. I hope all of them go on to great careers in the movie business. Good luck to everyone who worked on this movie, you made a movie that is scary, fun, and exciting for everyone to enjoy. The night we rented this movie was something our family will remember forever, we had so much fun, and for days we repeated scenes to relive the great time we had while watching this movie together. I will always remember this amazing movie and the great time my family had with it! Thanks so much Night Shadow!!
That actress that plays Beth could go on to do some superb work, if only someone gave her a chance. She has the look of stardom, and could easily pull off any hard rolls thrown her way. Just because this movie didn't get any awards, doesn't mean that it isn't a great film. The music, the acting, and that werewolf!!! are amazing! Hats off to everyone involved in this movie. I hope all of them go on to great careers in the movie business. Good luck to everyone who worked on this movie, you made a movie that is scary, fun, and exciting for everyone to enjoy. The night we rented this movie was something our family will remember forever, we had so much fun, and for days we repeated scenes to relive the great time we had while watching this movie together. I will always remember this amazing movie and the great time my family had with it! Thanks so much Night Shadow!!
I had the opportunity to work in this film that was originally titled "Lycanthrope" which means werewolf in Greek. I was the Stunt Coordinator, stunt double, stunt driver and played a biker. We had a couple of good fight scenes, chases, high fall, a crash and car explosion. The acting was surprisingly good without any big names or budget. It was fun to work on. Kato Kaelin was natural in his acting and should have been made known from this instead of the OJ trial. Cohlan and Temple also made a film with Bruce Cooke before this in 1987 called "Line Of Fire", which I also worked on. I don't know if the film is available. Thanks guys for a great start in the beginning of my career. Keep it up!
RELEASED IN 1989 and written/directed by Randolph Cohlan, "Night Shadow" (originally titled "Lycanthrope") concerns a humble Los Angeles newscaster (Brenda Vance) who returns to her home town on vacation as several people crop up dead, as if by a vicious animal. Alta LaFlame plays the sheriff, Rick Scott a mysterious hitchhiker, Stuart Quan the protagonist's kung fuey brother and Kato Kaelin his friend.
This is akin to a modern Syfy creature feature, but with a production quality a notch below that prosaic level. The serviceable score, for instance, sounds like it was performed entirely on a Casio keyboard (and no doubt it was). There's also too much marking time. Still, the cast is likable, the small town setting is quaint and the monster is pretty effective for a man in a suit, but you have to wait till the final act to see him.
Vance is a more-than-agreeable protagonist, but the film drops the ball in the female department, as far as taking advantage of the resources (and I'm not tawkin' 'bout nudity or sleaze). But there's a lot of martial arts action due to the presence of Quan; and the late 80's ambiance is to die for (take, for instance, Quan's absurd bra-like billie shirt and Kato's hideous mullet).
THE FILM RUNS 91 minutes and was shot in Hanford & Fresno in the heart of California.
GRADE: C
This is akin to a modern Syfy creature feature, but with a production quality a notch below that prosaic level. The serviceable score, for instance, sounds like it was performed entirely on a Casio keyboard (and no doubt it was). There's also too much marking time. Still, the cast is likable, the small town setting is quaint and the monster is pretty effective for a man in a suit, but you have to wait till the final act to see him.
Vance is a more-than-agreeable protagonist, but the film drops the ball in the female department, as far as taking advantage of the resources (and I'm not tawkin' 'bout nudity or sleaze). But there's a lot of martial arts action due to the presence of Quan; and the late 80's ambiance is to die for (take, for instance, Quan's absurd bra-like billie shirt and Kato's hideous mullet).
THE FILM RUNS 91 minutes and was shot in Hanford & Fresno in the heart of California.
GRADE: C
Up-and-coming TV journalist Alex Jung (Brenda Vance) returns to her home town of Danford (the film was shot in Hanford) as local police attempt to cope with a series of brutal murders. The small town plunges into a state of panic and the murders continue... until Alex comes face to face with the evil itself.
Some of the hair and clothes are so late 1980s, early 1990s that it is hilarious. The Asian guy has a cut off shirt that looks more like a women's sports bra. And, of course, he knows martial arts...
The blood and gore effects are surprisingly not terrible, and they invested in some live maggots, which I appreciate. I am not going to say this is on the level of, say, Rob Bottin... but it is respectable.
Kato Kaelin, made notorious from the OJ Simpson trial, appears here in all his mullet glory! And Aldo Ray as inventor Gene Krebelski is like a next generation "Gremlins" dad.
The music has Richard Band written all over it, but this is not a Full Moon picture and it is Ken Carlton behind the score. George Temple produced and edited, as well as acted as story consultant.
Some of the hair and clothes are so late 1980s, early 1990s that it is hilarious. The Asian guy has a cut off shirt that looks more like a women's sports bra. And, of course, he knows martial arts...
The blood and gore effects are surprisingly not terrible, and they invested in some live maggots, which I appreciate. I am not going to say this is on the level of, say, Rob Bottin... but it is respectable.
Kato Kaelin, made notorious from the OJ Simpson trial, appears here in all his mullet glory! And Aldo Ray as inventor Gene Krebelski is like a next generation "Gremlins" dad.
The music has Richard Band written all over it, but this is not a Full Moon picture and it is Ken Carlton behind the score. George Temple produced and edited, as well as acted as story consultant.
This movie was totally awesome!
Stuart Quan steals the show as Tai Jung, but there's not really an epic fail from any of the actors (especially considering the budget). It's very much an atmospheric (then or now), and the little town of Danford is an additional character that shines.
I don't know why everyone is hating on Tai's half shift, he wears it to show off his totally rad body! Duh! I love that his other one says, "Lazy Guy's Club" since that's exactly what he and his three friends are (except when it comes to Tai's martial arts hiiii-yaaaa!).
Back in the '80's, we could laugh at, and make fun of -stereotypes, which is why you get a five minute scene of Tai going all Kung-Fu on a bunch of rotten bikers. We didn't take offense, (or even feel the need to mention) that an Asian guy knows martial arts, or that Dean (Kato Kaelin), a white guy knows a lot about baseball, or that a small town cop is an idiot. We were all in on the joke, and had a great time (something the whole world is missing now with the PC police).
The only problem I have with this movie is the idiot police persecuting hometown kids. Small towns are insular, and the cops would be way more interested in the bikers (or a passing stranger), than in Tai, or his goofy friends. Small towns will do anything to keep their sense of safety, it ALWAYS has to be the outsider. This one script point is the only real problem here.
This movie is part old Western, part monster flick, and now, it's also a nostalgia-fest. Enjoy!
Stuart Quan steals the show as Tai Jung, but there's not really an epic fail from any of the actors (especially considering the budget). It's very much an atmospheric (then or now), and the little town of Danford is an additional character that shines.
I don't know why everyone is hating on Tai's half shift, he wears it to show off his totally rad body! Duh! I love that his other one says, "Lazy Guy's Club" since that's exactly what he and his three friends are (except when it comes to Tai's martial arts hiiii-yaaaa!).
Back in the '80's, we could laugh at, and make fun of -stereotypes, which is why you get a five minute scene of Tai going all Kung-Fu on a bunch of rotten bikers. We didn't take offense, (or even feel the need to mention) that an Asian guy knows martial arts, or that Dean (Kato Kaelin), a white guy knows a lot about baseball, or that a small town cop is an idiot. We were all in on the joke, and had a great time (something the whole world is missing now with the PC police).
The only problem I have with this movie is the idiot police persecuting hometown kids. Small towns are insular, and the cops would be way more interested in the bikers (or a passing stranger), than in Tai, or his goofy friends. Small towns will do anything to keep their sense of safety, it ALWAYS has to be the outsider. This one script point is the only real problem here.
This movie is part old Western, part monster flick, and now, it's also a nostalgia-fest. Enjoy!
Did you know
- ConnectionsReferenced in Best of the Worst: The Item, the Crawlers, and Blood Lock (2014)
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