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The Invisible
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Directed by David S. Goyer.
A severely beaten teenager, trapped in a walking purgatory between life and death, must help authorities to the location of his broken body before it's too late, in this remake of the 2002 Swedish thriller Den Osynlige. Graduating senior Nick Powell (Justin Chatwin) has plans to attend a prestigious writing workshop in London, despite the protests of his widowed mother (Marcia Gay Harden). In the days before his departure, he gets into a cafeteria brawl with a delinquent classmate, Annie Newton (Margarita Levieva), while defending his friend from her extortion attempts. Annie and her crew track Nick down on the night he's planning to leave, mistakenly thinking he ratted her out to the police regarding a smash-and-grab burglary committed the night before. When the subsequent beating goes too far, the assailants dump the body in the woods in a panicked attempt to dispose of it. Only, Nick isn't dead -- he's walking invisible among his classmates, friends and family, desperately trying to alert them that he's still alive. Robbed of the traditional forms of communication, Nick must figure out supernatural methods of manipulating his environment -- and he soon realizes the very girl who attacked him may be the only one who has the power to save him. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
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fb2fb2 The Invisible
by fb2 in FB2 Movie Blog
lost interest.
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"I liked the premise, but hated the execution. Too emo. " [More]
tjl30tjl30 The Invisible
by tjl30 in tjl30 Blog
loved it.
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"I thought this movie was very well done. The way the movie played out was fusterating at times, and maybe some of the events that happened were not realistic (at all) but it was still a very powerful drama. Although the ending was sad, I think it was very good. Defiantly worth seeing. " [More]
GradysGhostGradysGhost Re: Directors who have yet to m ...
by GradysGhost in Directors
hasn't rated it.
"I think that everybody's going to have a different idea of what a masterpiece is and isn't. I'm a perfect example. I hate The Godfather. I can't stand it. It's boring. But nobody else thinks that.If David Fincher has made a masterpiece, I think it's Seven. I like Fight Club, but I can't watch it start to finish anymore. I know what's coming. I've seen it too many times. I can quote the whole damn thing. Sticking feathers up your butt doesn't make you a chicken.Arie Posin's The Chumscrubber is a masterpiece to me. I think of it as a perfect story, a Shakespearian comedy of errors. Many people say the acting sucks, namely that of Justin Chatwin (War of the Worlds, The Invisible). A lot of folks think the story is highly unbelievable (which I think is the point of the movie).Big Fish is Tim Burton's masterwork.If Wes Anderson has one, it's Bottle Rocket, because every other movie I've ever seen of his (and I haven ... " [More]
HazelHazel Enjoyable
by Hazel in Hazel Blog
liked it.
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"I immediately became biased in a favorable way towards this movie because of its opening songs.  The dark and heavy music immediately pulled me in.  In terms of storyline, as long you don't go into this movie with high hopes then you won't be disappointed.  You know for the most part how it's going to end up, but you aren't sure how the movie is going to take you there.  I appreciated the lead male character's sense of sarcastic humor towards his situation.  I'm not sure I would've stayed interested in the movie if it weren't for his snarky comments. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
The Invisible is a promising thriller that gets undone by its teen genre trappings and a general lack of narrative momentum. This last is especially surprising, since its director, David S. Goyer, is a veteran of the comic book world, which relies on constant stimulation to hold the reader's interest. But once he's beaten to within an inch of his life, Justin Chatwin's Nick also gets a giant shove into passivity, forced by his ghostly limitations to pout around and watch the action for most of the movie. This isn't Chatwin's fault. The young actor shows what made him such a commanding presence as Tom Cruise's son in War of the Worlds, doing his best to intensify a poorly conceived character, who helps dig his own grave by egging on his assailant. But Nick doesn't get to have the same interaction with his environment as Patrick Swayze had in Ghost (an undeniable source of inspiration), and by the time he does start effecting change, there's little explanation for how the phenomenon works. Another significant problem is Margarita Levieva's Annie, who is way too beautiful to be this kind of brooding outsider, even if she does stuff her flowing brown locks underneath a variety of hoodlum caps. The Russian-born actress has gotten down a flawless American accent, and lends her own additional credibility through a tough performance. But both she and Nick feel like constructs more than real people, ciphers set in motion to occupy the glossy visual space and lend weight to the angst-ridden alternative soundtrack. All this is too bad, because The Invisible does put forth a couple interesting existential concepts, fleshed out by some nifty trick camerawork. There's a lot to see in The Invisible, but ultimately, its substance is transparent. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 



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howser2007
howser2007
loved it.
tjl30
tjl30
loved it.
Ateballin
Ateballin
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achance42
achance42
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bendi
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