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szdaily -> Movies -> 
The Invisible Man
    2020-12-18  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

Starring: Elisabeth Moss, Aldis Hodge, Storm Reid, Harriet Dyer, Michael Dorman, Oliver Jackson-Cohen Director: Leigh Whannell

AN architect’s abusive boyfriend won’t let her go — even after he’s dead — in “The Invisible Man,” a reimagining of the iconic Universal monster that leans heavily on Elisabeth Moss’ feverish, grounded performance. Suspenseful but increasingly farfetched, writer-director Leigh Whannell’s horror-thriller seeks to speak to the trauma many women feel in toxic relationships — not to mention the anguish they endure when others don’t believe them. But “The Invisible Man” ends up exploiting rather than exploring its timely theme, resulting in a skilful exercise that’s too invested in its twists and turns.

As “The Invisible Man” begins, Cecilia (Moss) desperately escapes from the home of her rich inventor boyfriend Adrian (Oliver Jackson-Cohen) in the middle of the night. Grateful to be free of his controlling, violent ways, she hides out in her cop friend James’ (Aldis Hodge) house, frightened Adrian will track her down. That’s when she learns that Adrian has killed himself — but rather than feeling relieved, she becomes convinced that he’s still alive and stalking her using an invisibility technology he developed.

Drawing inspiration from the H.G. Wells novel, which was memorably turned into the 1933 film with Claude Rains, Whannell (who wrote and directed 2018’s “Upgrade”) has crafted a crowd-pleasing horror movie with plenty of chills and scares as Cecilia comes to realize that the man who tormented her hasn’t gone away. Clearly, Adrian is meant to be a stand-in for all abusive partners who torture their loved ones, leaving them permanently scarred from the experience. But unlike most survivors, Cecilia now must contend with the fact that Adrian (who everyone assumes is dead) can escape detection, making her life miserable by undermining her credibility until everyone around her believes that she’s crazy.

The film’s sci-fi conceit wouldn’t have nearly as much impact without Moss, who works in the same vein as she does on “The Handmaid’s Tale” in presenting a character at her breaking point who nonetheless remains resilient. “The Invisible Man” doesn’t ask us to wonder whether Cecilia is simply paranoid — unquestionably, some sort of invisible presence is preying on her — yet the Emmy-winning actress illustrates how this abuse survivor starts to unravel once the menace grows stronger and those around her stop taking her fears seriously. Whannell is so invested in unloading juicy surprises that this initially realistic story becomes increasingly preposterous, but Moss keeps the film anchored in plausibility; although sometimes just barely.

Despite being barely on screen, Jackson-Cohen is appropriately despicable, while Hodge does his best playing a bland good guy who is not sure if Cecilia is losing her mind. “The Invisible Man” recycles plenty of silly horror tropes — just because a door opens slowly on its own doesn’t mean you should walk through it — but Benjamin Wallfisch’s score does a nice job paying homage to Bernard Herrmann, whose music gave Alfred Hitchcock’s films their tense pulse. Still, the film’s best asset is Moss, who elevates the material with her commitment to Cecilia. Almost everyone in “The Invisible Man” underestimates this battered architect — including Whannell — but Moss sees her for the wary warrior she’ll become.

The movie is now being screened in Shenzhen.

(SD-Agencies)

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