Aided by elemental forces, her exquisitely wealthy boyfriend’s Silicon
Valley house blanketed by the deafening crash of ocean waves, Cecilia
(Elisabeth Moss) softly pads her way out of bed, through the high-tech
laboratory, escaping over the wall of his compound and into the car of
her sister (Harriet Dyer). We wonder: Why would she run like this if she
weren’t abused? Why would she have a secret compartment in their closet
where she can stow an away bag? Then Cecilia’s boyfriend appears next
to the car and punches in its window. His name is Adrian Griffin (Oliver
Jackson-Cohen), and according to Cecilia, Adrian made a fortune as a
leading figure in “optics” (OPTICS!) meeting the self-described
“suburban girl” at a party a few years before. Never one to be subtle
with his themes, Leigh Whannell has his villain be a genius in the
technology of “seeing,” in how we see, to update James Whale’s
1933 Universal Monster film—and H.G. Wells’ story—to embrace digital
technology as our primary mode of modern sight. Surveillance cameras
limn every inch of Adrian’s home; later he’ll use a simple email to ruin
Cecilia’s relationship with her sister. He has the money and resources
to peer into any corner of Cecilia’s life. His gaze is unbroken. Cecilia
knows that Adrian will always find her, and The Invisible Man is
rife with the abject terror of such vulnerability. Whannell and
cinematographer Stefan Duscio have a knack for letting their frames
linger with space, drawing our attention to where we, and Cecilia, know
an unseen danger lurks. Of course, we’re always betrayed: Corners of
rooms and silhouette-less doorways aren’t empty, aren’t negative,
but pregnant with assumption—until they aren’t, the invisible man never
precisely where we expect him to be. We begin to doubt ourselves; we’re
punished by tension, and we feel like we deserve it. It’s all pretty
marvelous stuff, as much a well-oiled genre machine as it is yet another
showcase for Elisabeth Moss’s herculean prowess. —Dom Sinacola
Release: February 28, 2020
Director: Leigh Whannell
Stars: Elisabeth Moss, Oliver Jackson-Cohen, Harriet Dyer, Aldis Hodge, Storm Reid, Michael Dorman
Genre: Horror, Mystery & Suspense, Science Fiction & Fantasy
Rating: R
Runtime: 110 minutes
Director: Leigh Whannell
Stars: Elisabeth Moss, Oliver Jackson-Cohen, Harriet Dyer, Aldis Hodge, Storm Reid, Michael Dorman
Genre: Horror, Mystery & Suspense, Science Fiction & Fantasy
Rating: R
Runtime: 110 minutes

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