Los Angeles Times

CLEAR FOCUS

‘Invisible Man’ collaborat­ors reframe its horror with a female-centric tech jolt

-

BY SONAIYA KELLEY >>> When writer-director Leigh Whannell was approached to update the horror classic “The Invisible Man,” he basically spitballed the entire plot on the spot. ¶ Fresh off the modest success of his low-budget 2018 sci-fi thriller “Upgrade,” Whannell found himself in a room with executives from Blumhouse Production­s and Universal when “they f loated this title to me like, ‘What do you think about the Invisible Man?’ ” he said. “Which was weird to me because it was a bit Mad Libs. I was like, ‘Not really sure? Never thought about the Invisible Man too much.’

¶ “But one of the guys in the meeting said, ‘Well, what would you do with the character?’ And purely to fill the airtime I was like, ‘I guess I would probably tell the story from the point of view of a victim, like a woman escaping a relationsh­ip.’ I sort of vomited out the entire movie.” ¶ Whannell conceived of the character as a wealthy scientist (played by Oliver Jackson-Cohen of “The Haunting of Hill House”) who is charming and controllin­g in equal measure. After his girlfriend manages to escape the glass prison they share together, he stages his own suicide just to continue to torment and control her under the cover of invisibili­ty. ¶ In a departure from the original H.G. Wells novel and its 1933 film adaptation — and despite the character’s title billing — this invisible man is a distant secondary character. ¶ “I think it’s really obvious that the way to make the Invisible Man scary is to not focus the film on him,” said Whannell. “Once you put the monster in the spotlight, you demystify it. Not showing something is always the scariest thing.” ¶ Instead, he shifted the narrative focus from the titular antagonist to his intimate partner Cecilia Kass, a woman who is gaslighted to the

brink of insanity, played by Emmyand Golden Globe-winning actress Elisabeth Moss. “One of the things I liked the most about this movie is that it’s a real-life monster,” Moss said during a joint interview with Whannell this month. “That’s what really curdles your blood when you watch the movie.

“That feeling of not being believed, not being heard or being scrutinize­d for believing something you know in your heart to be true is something I think on varying levels we can all identify with,” she added. “When I start telling people what this movie was about and how it was being used as an analogy for gaslightin­g, I was really surprised by how many people would get this look in their eye. It’s a commonalit­y that I think deserves to be explored.”

“I think the 1933 film is a classic horror movie with an important place in the history of horror, but it’s not terrifying to modern audiences,” said Whannell. “I saw an opportunit­y to reframe it in a way that could be scary. We didn’t want to rely on the histrionic­s of horror, we wanted it to be real. The scarier monster is the one you can imagine in your own life. It’s not a fanged beast, it’s the guy next door.” Upon finishing the script, Whannell quickly realized that the success of the film would hinge on its central performanc­e. “I realized that the whole movie rested on this one character’s shoulders,” he said. “The list of actors that can [carry an entire film] is short. And I remember everyone at Universal was really excited about Lizzie because they had just done ‘Us’ with her.”

In a stroke of kismet, Moss had been hankering to revisit the horror genre after her experience working with Universal and Jordan Peele on the filmmaker’s sophomore outing, which was produced by Jason Blum and starred Lupita Nyong’o as a woman battling her shadow self.

“I’ve always loved horror, but I really wanted to do one after the experience of watching Lupita and how absolutely magnificen­t she is in that movie,” said Moss. “I could see, ‘Oh, my God, OK, that’s what you can do with a role like that.’ She went so far and it was just the coolest thing, so I couldn’t wait to get the script. They said, ‘You’re going to get an offer for ‘The Invisible Man.’ And I was like, ‘OK, that’s amazing,’ because I loved working with Blumhouse. But I also was like, ‘... The Invisible Man ?’”

“‘I guess if they can’t see me, it’s fine,’ ” Whannell joked.

“Yeah, ‘If they can’t see me, I guess I can play any gender?’ ” said Moss. “But they said the woman was the lead and when I read the script, it was not only a horror film but this incredible character piece. It had a really challengin­g arc that you don’t get in some of your best dramas. So I said yes immediatel­y.”

After Moss was secured, Whannell leaned on his leading lady to authentica­te the female perspectiv­e. It’s the latest in a successful series of creative collaborat­ions for Moss, who has helped shape many of her strongest roles, from the heroine of Hulu’s “The Handmaid’s Tale” to her partnershi­ps with indie filmmaker Alex Ross Perry, including last year’s grunge rock drama “Her Smell.”

“That was the missing puzzle piece of the script,” Whannell said. “I was happy with the screenplay, but I needed that collaborat­ion with Lizzie. We would dissect scenes for hours, and we would rewrite the script and kind of do an autopsy on these scenes. I feel like the film became stronger because we were like copilots.”

“There were times when a scene would only exist on our scripts,” said Moss.

“Yeah, exactly,” said Whannell with a laugh. “And everybody would be like, ‘Scene what?’ ”

“It would just be written in the margins,” said Moss. “And some of it would be written in mine, and some of it would be written in yours.”

“The funniest thing was watching the reactions of the other actors,” said Whannell. “They just had to roll with it. Because there’s a certain sense of impostor syndrome that happens if you’re writing a story about a woman’s point of view [as a man]. And I didn’t really start feeling comfortabl­e with it until Lizzie and I had all these conversati­ons. She gave the film authority ... and it felt like a true collaborat­ion.” Though the script required Moss to stretch her imaginatio­n by fighting against an invisible adversary multiple times, the actress says the biggest challenge of all was the amount of running the role demanded.

“Let’s just say I underestim­ated it,” she said. “And the speed at which Mr. Whannell would require me to run, which was basically faster and faster and faster. I am not a particular­ly physical person, I do not really work out. And I got there and was like, ‘I’ve made a terrible mistake. I absolutely should have gone to the gym.’ ”

“Remember a lot of times you’d be like, ‘I feel like we got the shot?’ ” said Whannell with a laugh. “You’d be like, ‘I really feel like that one worked.’ And I’d be like, ‘One more!’ ”

“I should have perhaps trained a little bit,” she said. “And then once I got there I quickly ordered an elliptical machine for my apartment. Warming up before takes is different for me. I don’t usually do the plank before a take on ‘Handmaid’s Tale.’ So that was a whole new thing, but it was fun. I felt like I was Jason Bourne, basically.”

But not all of the physical stunts were grueling. Thanks to her background in dance, the choreograp­hed fight scenes were a lot less arduous, Moss said.

“It was so much fun. We had such a great stunt team, and they took really good care of me and made sure things were safe. Leigh called me when I was in Toronto shooting Season 3 [of ‘Handmaid’s Tale’] and said, ‘Look, I want to talk to you about the stunts and I would like you to do as much of it as possible.’ And I basically was like, ‘I want to do as much as I can. We should just always decide by what looks best on camera.’ ”

“It’s very mechanical,” said

Whannell. “A lot of the fight scenes that Lizzie had to do were almost like dance choreograp­hy. This disembodie­d voice would be booming over the set counting out the motion control camera like, ‘And one and two and ...’ and Lizzie knows that on three, she has to be here. And I remember thinking, ‘God, I couldn’t do that.’ ”

“I thought it was so fun, the idea of having to follow the counts,” said Moss. “For my brain, that’s perfect.” Whannell’s earliest memory involving the Invisible Man dates back to elementary school when he played hooky one day to watch the 1967 stop-motion animation “Mad Monster Party.”

“I guess it speaks to the fact that these characters have been around so long,” he said. “They’re so ubiquitous in popular culture that they’re not even scary anymore. Like when I think of Frankenste­in, I think of ‘The Munsters.’ But when that book first came out, it was [considered] terrifying. And so the idea with this movie was, can I take this character back to his roots and make him scary again?”

One of Whannell’s key strategies for upping the scares was to ground the means of invisibili­ty in reality. This invisible man has a technologi­cal explanatio­n rather than a supernatur­al or fantastica­l one.

“When I came up with the idea, I was like, ‘Is this plausible?’ ” said Whannell. “And we talked to a bunch of scientists and they were all like, ‘Oh, yeah, this is possible.’ Tech is like that now. I feel like things that used to be sci-fi when we were kids are now ubiquitous. Like my daughter thinks nothing of walking into the kitchen and being like, ‘Alexa, play Taylor Swift’s greatest hits’ and having a disembodie­d voice say, ‘Yes, I will.’ So I wanted to get away from the serum [trope] like, ‘Ah, it’s alive!’ I needed it to be something that you could see an Elon Musk or a Mark Zuckerberg launching on the world.”

Following “Upgrade,” about a quadripleg­ic who gets a computer chip implant that allows him to walk again and spurs a bloody quest for revenge, that low-humming anxiety many of us feel about the encroachin­g tech evolution has become a common theme in Whannell’s work.

“They put this stuff out into the world at an accelerate­d rate without really testing it,” he said. “And then the aftershock is measured later. The push towards easiness isn’t always a good thing. Other technologi­cal innovation­s have had to crawl before they could walk. It wasn’t like the car rolled off the production line and it was like, ‘Bang! We’re in cars now.’ But tech today has a much faster rollout. The world can change tomorrow.”

“The Invisible Man” marks the first release in Universal’s new planfor rebooting its classic movie monsters. After 2017’s Tom Cruisetopl­ined update of “The Mummy” bombed at the box office, the studio quickly pivoted away from the idea of a shared movie universe á la Marvel to a series of “filmmakerf­irst” stand-alone stories.

“Of course you feel a great responsibi­lity because this was the beginning in some ways of horror cinema,” said Jason Blum of taking on the iconic property. “So you carry the weight of that on your shoulders.” But that weight also feels familiar to Blum, whose production company is ushering in a revival of horror classics one reboot or remake at a time.

“The Invisible Man” arrives in theaters two weeks after the release of “Fantasy Island,” a Sony reimaginin­g of the ’70s television series. And in October, the production house will release the second film in its rebooted “Halloween” series with Universal.

“I like the challenge of it,” said Blum of his attraction to previously loved IP. “People are skeptical about it so the expectatio­ns are low. I like surprising people. And more often than not, we’ve [succeeded].”

Though he’s not yet attached to any of the other Universal monster titles, Blum says he would like to be. As for Whannell, who created both the “Saw” and “Insidious” franchises with filmmaker James Wan, the director says he’s just hoping audiences respond to this film before considerin­g any followups.

“A sequel is a champagne problem created by the success of a movie,” he said. “I’m so superstiti­ous when it comes to movies because it’s so much gambling. You have all this control but then when you release it, it’s out of your hands. So I don’t want to jinx the whole process by thinking about a sequel before it’s warranted.”

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? “I FEEL LIKE the film became stronger because we were like copilots,” says “Invisible Man” writer-director Leigh Whannell of teaming with star Elisabeth Moss.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times “I FEEL LIKE the film became stronger because we were like copilots,” says “Invisible Man” writer-director Leigh Whannell of teaming with star Elisabeth Moss.
 ?? Photograph­s by Mark Rogers Universal Pictures ?? ELISABETH MOSS plays a woman trying to escape an abusive ex and fighting to be believed in the horror film “The Invisible Man.”
Photograph­s by Mark Rogers Universal Pictures ELISABETH MOSS plays a woman trying to escape an abusive ex and fighting to be believed in the horror film “The Invisible Man.”
 ??  ?? DIRECTOR Leigh Whannell relied heavily on Moss to give his film a genuine female perspectiv­e.
DIRECTOR Leigh Whannell relied heavily on Moss to give his film a genuine female perspectiv­e.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States