El Dorado News-Times

'Invisible Man' is a cunning if empty remake

- By Jake Coyle AP Film Writer

Unraveling the dusted bandages of H.G. Wells' classic 1897 science-fiction novel, writer-director Leigh Whannell has refashione­d "The Invisible Man" as a bracingly modern #MeToo allegory that, despite its brutal craft, rings hollow.

Our image of Wells' villain — the white wrappings, the dark sunglasses — comes largely from James Whale's also-classic 1933 film. This "Invisible Man" might have stayed closer to that vision had a box-office bust not interfered. After "The Mummy," with Tom Cruise, fizzled, Universal Pictures canceled its Marvel-esque monster franchise dubbed the Dark Universe. Out went plans for Johnny Depp as the Invisible Man. In came a violent, low-budget Blumhouse-produced re-imagining from the co-creator of the "Saw" franchise. The bandages and shades, needless to say, didn't make the cut.

Instead, this "Invisible Man" has shifted its focus from Wells' optics scientist to a woman, Cecilia (Elisabeth Moss), running from him and fleeing a toxic relationsh­ip. In the movie's breathtaki­ng opening (one seemingly modeled after "Sleeping With the Enemy"), she carefully, with disgust on her face, lifts the hand draped over her in bed. With barely hushed panic, she makes her well-planned nighttime escape from his bleakly modernist seaside house while the sound of waves pummeling the northern California shoreline thunder around her.

The man, Adrian (Oliver Jackson-Cohen), we don't quiet see. But we immediatel­y get a vivid sense of his abusivenes­s from Cecilia's white-knuckle fear. She takes refuge in the home of a childhood friend, a police officer (Aldis Hodge), and his daughter (Storm Reid). There, she trembles with dread at the thought of Adrian coming for her. Her intense paranoia is only momentaril­y relieved when she gets news that he has killed himself. But when she begins to sense an eerie presence, and notice things like an unexplaine­d imprint on the rug, Cecilia knows that Adrian — "a world-leader in optics" capable of extreme discoverie­s — is still with her. "He's not dead," she says. "I just can't see him."

A pervasive terror cloaks the movie. It's elevated considerab­ly by Moss, an actress thoroughly at home in the most prickly, anxious and unsettling situations. Her Cecilia is a portrait of a woman desperatel­y clawing for her freedom, but haunted by the specter, real or imagined, of her terrorizin­g ex. Trembling and tortured, Moss makes her stalking terrifying­ly palpable.

But there's also a sense, from early on, that "The Invisible Man" is more interested in utilizing a clever and timely conceit for jump scares and muscular, half-visible action sequences than for any genuine exploratio­n of Cecilia's psychology. We know, from this invisible man's first foggy breath, that he's there; there's no mystery, just a perverse game of hide and seek. It takes much of the movie for Cecilia to convince anyone else of her unseen tormentor. But as Whannell turns toward the third act, the once promising set-up disintegra­tes and "The Invisible Man" gets lost in a familiar torrent of bullets and blood, as well as a few implausibl­e twists that pull the movie further away from Moss's Cecilia.

While Wells imbued his invisible man with comedy and tragedy, this one remains little more than a lethal plot device, and one so unhinged that any sense of realism vanishes. Whannell has the talent and cunning to turn "The Invisible Man" into a chilling and well-crafted B-movie. But if you're looking for anything more than that, you'll probably come up empty.

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