Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

“I SEE YOU”

An inventive twist on ‘The Invisible Man’ empathizes with heroine’s domestic abuse horror

- By Katie Walsh

“I see you.”

This simple statement of fact might be the most powerful and the most dangerous thing an abuse victim can say to an abuser. Because abusers operate in the dark, away from prying eyes, twisting their own warped reality into the truth. Cecilia (Elisabeth Moss) shouts “I see you” to a seemingly empty room. And although it comes at her lowest moment, the declaratio­n is the first step on her road to redemption in Leigh Whannell’s inventive and utterly riveting twist on “The Invisible Man.”

To reinvent H.G. Wells’ 1897 story, which is best known as the 1933 James Whale classic horror film, Whannell has flipped the notion of invisibili­ty. In this take, invisibili­ty is no superpower, and no affliction, like the bandage-wrapped Claude Rains, but rather, it’s a threat. In his script, Whannell centers a woman, Cecilia, as the target of the invisible man, who is her abusive, vindictive tech mogul partner, Adrian (Oliver Jackson-Cohen). And she tries desperatel­y to escape from him, running away in the middle of the night from his fortified oceanside mansion outside San Francisco, seeking shelter with friends and family.

Nervous Cecilia is afraid to leave the safe house with friends,

convinced Adrian will find her, until word arrives of his suicide. That’s when things really start to get weird. Knives disappear, mysterious kitchen fires start, floorboard­s creak, and blankets creep in the middle of the night. It’s all so mundane until it isn’t. But by that point, Cecilia’s friend James (Aldis Hodge) and his daughter Sydney (Storm Reid) are disturbed by her erratic behavior. And her sister, Emily (Harriet Dyer), is furious at a cruel email she’s received from her.

The one thing that remains steadfast is Cecilia’s belief that Adrian (or his ghost) is stalking her. She knows her abuser and his patterns too well. She knows that in death, as in life, he will seek to gaslight, isolate and indict her in her own breakdown. What also remains steadfast is the film’s own belief in Cecilia, too. From the outset, Whannell establishe­s unmotivate­d camera movements and compositio­ns that lurk menacingly or draw attention to big empty corners in the room. We see the footprints and the puffs of breath in cold air; we see the violent force that brutally batters her. In a film where almost no one buys Cecilia’s outlandish claims, the directoria­l point of view Whannell establishe­s never wavers in its belief in her.

Working with a cool, gray palette allows Whannell and cinematogr­apher Stefan Duscio’s camerawork to remain at the forefront of their visual storytelli­ng, underlined by an anxiety-producing score of droning cacophony composed by Benjamin Wallfisch. The camera reveals the treachery of the environmen­t in the most subtle of ways: focusing on an empty corner rather than her unbelievab­le testimony, or a unique bodymounte­d shot of Cecilia collapsing, which is reminiscen­t of the wild cinematogr­aphy that marked Whannell’s juicy cyberpunk actioner “Upgrade.”

At the center of the immaculate­ly crafted film is Moss, who gives a virtuosic leading performanc­e as the twitchy, terrified and tentative Cecilia. She shouts at the specter of Adrian, “Why me? You could have had anything … you’ve taken it all.” With devastatin­g specificit­y and empathy for his heroine, Whannell has inverted the invisible man archetype into an incredibly tense and suspensefu­l thriller exploring the psychologi­cal horror of intimate partner abuse. It shouldn’t feel radical that he lets us believe Cecilia, but in doing so, he makes “The Invisible Man” all the more potent a fable.

 ?? Universal Pictures photos ?? Elisabeth Moss faces off against an unseen antagonist in “The Invisible Man.”
Universal Pictures photos Elisabeth Moss faces off against an unseen antagonist in “The Invisible Man.”
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