The Invisible Movie Review
The Invisible Review

"The Invisible" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : David S. GoyerProducer : Gary Barber,Roger Birnbaum,Neal Edelstein,Jonathan Glickman,Mike Macari
Screenwiter : Mick Davis,Christine Roum
Starring : Justin Chatwin,Margarita Levieva,Marcia Gay Harden,Chris Marquette,Alex O'Loughlin
The trailers for The Invisible ask, "How do you solve a murder when the victim
is you?" This indeed poses several mysteries, but not the ones the
trailer-makers have in mind. First, there's the question of whether the
question is grammatically correct (the answer: maybe, but it sure sounds
awkward). Then there's the mystery not of how to solve said murder, but where
exactly the difficulty lies when you is -- er, are that murder victim.
High-school senior Nick Powell, this film's victim, pretty much "solves" his
murder while he's being killed (or near-killed); he recognizes and even
converses with his assailants. Case closed.
Except that he's dead, of course, but assuming, as The Invisible does, the
existence of a rather flexible netherworld between living and death, filling in
further details isn't a problem either. When Nick wakes up as a sort of
half-ghost, traveling through the land of the living without the ability to be
seen or heard while his body lies on the brink of death, his detective skills
need only to consist of following the murderers around, overhearing their
motivations.
To its credit, The Invisible dispenses with the trailer's bogus notions of
mystery early on. Unfortunately, it spends a great deal of time dwelling on an
additional challenge: How Nick can convey the mystery's solution (and the fact
that his body awaits discovery and urgent medical treatment) to a living world
that is blind to his presence.
Actually, it's not this barrier that's the problem, but rather the film's
repeated dramatizations of Nick's plight. We are treated to countless scenes
where he screams at the people around him, breaks stuff, and generally makes a
noisy struggle to be heard, before whoosh -- the camera pans back to Nick,
revealing that everything is still intact; he's still a ghost and can't
manipulate the world around him. You don't blame him for trying, but you do
kinda blame the filmmakers for showing us what seems like every one of those
tries.
Other than these constant demonstrations, The Invisible's take on its
supernatural conceit -- low-key, not heavily explained -- is refreshing.
Director David S. Goyer is less interested in ghostly machinations than how
Nick is able to use them to investigate and maybe empathize with those
responsible for this death, particularly a troubled classmate named Annie
(Margarita Levieva). Nick doesn't have a loyal posse of crime-solving friends
or a plucky girlfriend to commune with, just a lone best friend (Chris
Marquette) whose spinelessness is frustrating but also probably realistic.
This is one of those movies where teenagers essentially live in their own adult
world already, on a thin line between grown-up weariness and youthful angst.
The token adult in the room is Marcia Gay Harden as Nick's proper, controlling
mother. It's the latest in Harden's long line of prim, uptight types; she
typically infuses these parts not with depth, but cartoonish overacting that
suggests an unfunny version of fellow Oscar-winner Dianne Wiest. To be fair,
none of the performances are exactly electric, though newcomer Levieva has some
quiet, heartbreaking moments.
This is Goyer's second film as a director; he wrote all of the Blade movies and
directed the last one, and had a hand in the screenplays for Dark City and
Batman Begins, among others. He's not credited as a writer for The Invisible,
and maybe the script could've benefited from a hint of his pulpier
sensibilities. The film is stylishly shot and halfway intelligent, but after a
certain point it feels less thrilling than inevitable. At its best, The
Invisible is a supernatural thriller that plays like a legitimate drama. Other
times, though, when the soundtrack is cranked (even blasting some good songs)
and the emotions bleed onto the characters' sleeves, the dramatics are more of
the teenage, CW-approved variety.
I'm not touching you!
Reviewer: Jesse Hassenger



