Lost Horizon is a 1937 American drama-fantasy film directed by Frank Capra. The screenplay by Robert Riskin is based on the 1933 novel of the same title by James Hilton. The film exceeded its original budget by more than $776,000, and it took five years for it to earn back its cost. The serious financial crisis it created for Columbia Pictures damaged the partnership between Capra and studio head Harry Cohn, as well as the friendship between Capra and screenwriter Riskin, whose previous collaborations had included Lady for a Day, It Happened One Night, and Mr. Deeds Goes to Town. Before... returning to England to become the new Foreign Secretary, writer, soldier and diplomat Robert Conway has one last task in 1935 China: to rescue 90 Westerners in the city of Baskul. He flies out with the last few evacuees, just ahead of armed revolutionaries. Unbeknownst to the passengers, the pilot has been replaced and their aircraft hijacked. It eventually runs out of fuel and crashes deep in the Himalayan Mountains, killing their abductor. The group is rescued by Chang and his men and taken to Shangri-La, an idyllic valley sheltered from the bitter cold.
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| Release date: | March 3, 1937 |
| Directed by: | Frank Capra |
| Runtime: | 132 Minutes |
| Producer: | Frank Capra |
| Music by: | Dimitri Tiomkin |
| Cinematography: | Elmer Dyer, Joseph Walker |
| Screenplay by: | Robert Riskin, Sidney Buchman |
| Estimated budget: | $2,000,000 |
| Adapted from: | Lost Horizon |
| Genre: | Fantasy, Adventure |