The Lady from Shanghai's Mirror Maze

Origin
“The Lady from Shanghai” was released in 1947, starring Orson Welles, Rita Hayworth and Everett Sloane. The plot shows sailor Michael O’Hara (Welles), who meets the beautiful traveler Elsa (Hayworth) while on his free time. He quickly becomes infatuated with her and agrees to sign abroad the couple’s cruise. Bannister (Sloane), Elsa’s husband, also invites his partner Grisby to come relax with them. Grisby convinces O’Hara to “murder” him in a faked death scheme, promising reward money as payment. Things go awry with the appearance of a private investigator Broome, who threatens the scam. O’Hara is implicated in the planned murder of Bannister and homicide of Broome but manages to escape from court with Elsa.

He is whisked away to a theater, where Elsa’s Chinese contacts await to help them. It is there O’Hara realizes the true scope of the plan: Grisby and Elsa were working together, planning to murder Bannister and have O’Hara take the fall, but the arrival of Broome complicated matters. The climatic finale features a surrealist shootout in a hall of mirrors, where Elsa is badly injured and Bannister killed, but Michael leaves unscathed and in search of a now fair trial by law.

Effects
These shattered mirrors hypnotize and distort a person's grip on reality, trapping them in surreal visions similar to that of their film's climax. They will have a difficult time maneuvering within the confines and slowly lose their sense of orientation. The maze can be exited at the panel marked by two bullet holes, which is not distorted by the mirrors.