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Clear to see this is a creative reboot Terrific Moss is put through hell

- The Invisible Man

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DVD/Sky

When Universal put a stake through the heart of its planned Dark Universe following the critical and commercial mauling of Tom Cruise’s The Mummy, it seemed the studio’s iconic monsters were put back in their coffins and cages for the foreseeabl­e future.

Wisely, though, the industry behemoth decided to go back to basics, concentrat­e on standalone flicks and give directors carte blanche to deliver their own take on its rogues gallery.

In the Dark Universe planning days, The Invisible Man was set to star Johnny Depp but we’re a long way from that here – and the Claude Rains-led 1933 original.

Instead, writer- director Leigh Whannell takes a more pure horror approach and frames the titular antagonist – The Haunting of Hill House’s Oliver Jackson-Cohen – as an abusive manipulato­r targeting his exgirlfrie­nd, Elisabeth Moss’ Cecilia.

Whannell, who helped create the Saw and Insidious franchises, proves his previous directoria­l effort Upgrade was no fluke by giving us another surprising, fresh flick.

The decision to make the Invisible Man a more nasty conspirato­r pays off and it’s genuinely unsettling watching Cecilia put through emotional and physical hell while disbelievi­ng friends and medical profession­als dismiss her as crazy.

Moss is wonderful here as she flips between terrified and defeated and fiery and determined.

Although he’s not actually on screen very much, Jackson-Cohen is terrific too; he’s been a genre standout over the past 18 months.

Whannell expertly builds the tension to a crescendo, aided and abetted by Benjamin Wallfisch’s skin- crawling score.

By scaling back its ambition and encouragin­g creativity, Universal may just have resurrecte­d its monster mash plans.

● What are your thoughts on The Invisible Man? How does it compare to other takes on the story and character?

Pop me an email at ian.bunting@ reachplc.com and I will pass on your comments – and any movie or TV show recommenda­tions you have – to your fellow readers.

Caroline Smith got in touch to say: “I watched the movie The Perfection on Netflix and while it’s a tough watch at times, I thought it was tremendous.”

 ??  ?? Target for abuse Elisabeth Moss puts in a powerful performanc­e as Cecilia
Target for abuse Elisabeth Moss puts in a powerful performanc­e as Cecilia

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