Shadow Conspiracy (1997)

Shadow Conspiracy (1997)

Taglines: Life, liberty, and the pursuit of absolute power.

Shadow Conspiracy movie storyline. Bobby Bishop (Charlie Sheen) is a special assistant to the President of the United States. Accidentally, he meets his friend professor Pochenko on the street. Pochenko has time to tell Bishop about some conspiracy in the White House but then immediately gets killed by an assassin. Now bad guys are after Bobby as the only man who knows about a plot. Bishop must now not only survive, but to stop the conspirators from achieving their goal. And he doesn’t know whom to trust.

Shadow Conspiracy is a 1997 American political thriller film starring Charlie Sheen, Donald Sutherland, Linda Hamilton and Sam Waterston. It was the final film directed by George P. Cosmatos, who died in 2005. The film was poorly received by critics and was released on DVD in the United States in November 2003 by Buena Vista Home Entertainment.

Shadow Conspiracy was filmed in 19 days, with most of the principal photography taking place in Richmond, Virginia, Georgetown, Washington and Baltimore, Maryland. Shadow Conspiracy received negative reviews from critics, with Rotten Tomatoes giving the film a 0% rating. The film did not fare well at the box office, grossing a little over $2 million domestically.

Shadow Conspiracy (1997)

Film Review for Shadow Conspiracy

“Shadow Conspiracy” is a simple-minded thriller that seems destined for mercy killing in the video stores after a short run before appalled audiences. There isn’t a brain in its empty little head, or in its assembly-line story, which is about how Charlie Sheen pauses occasionally between ludicrous action scenes, some of them ripped off from better films.

Sheen plays a special assistant to the president of the United States. After a dozen people are shot dead in Washington (five victims at a conspiracy center, several reporters at the local paper, etc.) he catches on that something is not right. “Remember that article you wrote about a shadow government?” he asks his former lover, a reporter played by Linda Hamilton. “A conspiracy in the highest levels of government?” She does.

The president (Sam Waterston) threatens to call a halt to all federal spending. His chief of staff (the ominous Donald Sutherland) can’t have that. An expert killer (Stephen Lang) is dispatched to kill those who would expose Sutherland’s conspiracy. Lang is expert, but not subtle; he pulls women’s hair, knocks over laundry carts, runs through public places firing his gun, and tries to assassinate the president with a toy helicopter that fires real machineguns. (If any students of Newton’s Second Law are reading this, I hope they will explain why a toy weighing five pounds would not be disabled by the recoil from these weapons.)

The movie starts with the assault on the center for conspiracy studies, where all of the researchers are apparently deaf, since none of them hear a thing when Lang shoots his first victim through a plate glass window. Later Sheen twigs to the conspiracy and is chased through Washington by Lang; the chase leads into one of my favorite cliche locations, a Steam & Sparks Factory–so named because all it apparently produces are steam and sparks. From the factory Sheen dives into a river, escapes over a waterfall, and dries off with the hot-air blower in a men’s room (I will not soon forget him directing the jet of air down the front of his pants).

Oh, I almost forgot that the sequence began with Sheen surviving a fall from a high-rise window-washer’s platform. (“It’s funny how 24 hours in this town can put you on the other side of the fence,” he philosophizes.) I especially doubted some of the technical details. Sheen hacks into a top secret national security database to discover the fate of a colleague, and reads on the screen: “Terminated with Extreme Prejudice. Authorized by Jacob Conrad.” Conrad is the Sutherland character. I’m sure secret government agencies carefully enter all their murders into their databases.

Then there’s the matter of the surveillance satellites used by the White House conspirators to track down Sheen and Hamilton in her Jeep. Starting with a view of the hemisphere, the spy cameras can apparently scan every license plate in Washington and find hers–not once but several times. I’m thinking (a) how come the car is never parked in a garage, or pointing the wrong way, or under a tree? and (b) is this tracking method really the easiest way of spotting two famous people driving around central Washington in an open Jeep?

Such quibbles do not easily slow the director, George P. Cosmatos, whose credits include “Rambo II,” “Cobra” and “Leviathan.” His movie contains a scene with Lang riding a motorcycle that chases Sheen into the subway system and onto the tracks. Moviegoers with long memories will recall this sequence in its original, much superior incarnation, in “Diva” (1982). Only moviegoers with very, very short memories, however, should attempt to see “Shadow Conspiracy.”

Shadow Conspiracy Movie Poster (1997)

Shadow Conspiracy (1997)

Directed by: George P. Cosmatos
Starring: Charlie Sheen, Donald Sutherland, Linda Hamilton, Stephen Lang, Ben Gazzara, Sam Waterston, Paul Gleason, Dey Young, Nicholas Turturro, Theodore Bikel
Screenplay by: Adi Hasak, Ric Gibbs
Production Design by: Joe Alves
Cinematography by: Buzz Feitshans
Film Editing by: Robert A. Ferretti
Costume Design by: April Ferry
Set Decoration by: Anne D. McCulley
Art Direction by: William Hiney
Music by: Bruce Broughton
MPAA Rating: R for violence and language.
Distributed by: Buena Vista Pictures
Release Date: January 31, 1997

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