Hollow Man Movie Review
Hollow Man Review

"Hollow Man" Overview

Rating: R
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Paul VerhoevenProducer : Alan Marshall,Douglas Wick
Screenwiter : Andrew W. Marlowe
Starring : Kevin Bacon,Josh Brolin,Kim Dickens,Greg Grunberg,Mary Jo Randle,Elisabeth Shue,Joey Slotnick
Okay, Kevin Bacon! You're invisible and you can't go back to being visible --
what do you do!?
Well, you spy on some naked chicks, right? That's what I'd do! That's what
every guy would do, right!
Paul Verhoeven's latest homage to Big Acting and overdirection is light on the
naked chicks and heavy on the violence, because, as it turns out, being
invisible makes you insane and clearly Mad With Power. And the chicks just get
in the way of the killing!
I guess I'm getting ahead of myself. The Invisible Man gets a millennial
upgrade to Hollow Man, when a team of government-contracted scientists led by
Kevin Bacon's Sebastian Caine figures out how to "phase shift" (ahem) a person
to become completely invisible. As we are told during one briefing, the phase
shifting is the easy part (of course). It's undoing the process and making
someone visible again that's tricky.
When Caine successfully un-phase shifts a gorilla, he figures, what the hay,
he'll try it on himself. All goes well until, oopsy, the un-shifting doesn't
work on humans! As Caine simmers as an invisible man trying to figure out how
to revisible-ize, stuck at the lab -- located, quite naturally, in a pit dug
hundreds of feet into the earth and with only one exit -- he starts to go crazy.
To be honest, even the most bored observer will see that Caine was crazy to
begin with, and it comes as no surprise when he starts offing his staff, who
are threatening to tattle about the illegal/unethical human trial to their
Pentagon benefactors. Most notable among them is Linda (Elisabeth Shue), an
ex-girlfriend who's now having a fling with another researcher named Matt (Josh
Brolin).... Two guys out of four on staff? Linda must be the trampiest
medical professional on film to date.
For good and for bad, Verhoeven avoids the ambition of grandiose movies like
Starship Troopers, and Hollow Man ends up taking place mostly in the
budget-friendly underground cave -- just like any number of "trapped on a ship"
sea monster movies, only with no water and an invisible monster.
To say that Kevin Bacon is a ham in this film would be insulting to pigs.
(Insert your own "bacon" joke here.) While Shue makes a more credible
scientist here than she did in The Saint, it's still a stretch to see her in a
role that isn't either a prostitute or a babysitter.
But ultimately, Hollow Man is simply a paean to some dazzling special effects,
the sophistication of which I don't think I've ever seen -- mind-bending in
their complexity, blood curdling in their goriness, and almost unthinkable in
their realism. There's water-covered invisible man, burning invisible man, and
blood-spattered invisible man. The capper of course is the phase shift
process, one of the more gruesome events ever put to film, and not merely
because of the prominence of Bacon's skin-stripped male member. Of course,
never mind the ersatz scientific holes (mainly, if you un-phase shift from the
inside-out, why do you phase shift from the outside-in? -- the serum still
starts in your veins and works through the body that way).
Whatever. Hollow Man is disturbing enough to be fun, and utterly dumb enough
to not get in the way of the former. Just like that other Verhoeven classic.
You know: Showgirls.
Shue makes Bacon. Extra-crispy.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





