Diary entries forThe Invisible Man
The Invisible Man
Elisabeth Moss is fighting for her life while we’re all yelling at furniture
The Invisible Man
as she should! fuck men
The Invisible Man
Ok
The Invisible Man
You are (not) safe
The Invisible Man
Tá sendo incrível ver os filmes do Leigh Whanell, ele e o James wan são esses diretores que fazem filmes de gênero em uma indústria extremamente engessada e vazia de emoção. O Homem Invisível usa da premissa do que um homem faria se torna-se invisível e ainda aproveita pra investir nesse texto sobre relacionamento abusivo, sem se tornar verborragico ou moralista. A performance de Elisabeth Moss escancara esse abuso de forma que sua personagem mergulha em um poço de paranóia, onde todos dúvida de sua integridade mental e quando algo mais sério acontece... Ela é desmoralizada ainda mais. Gosto como filme trabalha com essa ideia de que existe algo em tela o tempo todo, a câmera que passeia pelos ambientes te levam a crer que em algum momento algo vai surgir, não é algo que vai saltar na tela, mas algo que já está lá e aguardamos ansioso pra como e se ele vai aparecer. Gosto que o filme vende uma "lógica" pra explicar seu vilão, mas os códigos, os símbolos e até a caracterização abraça uma vertente sobrenatural e que flerta com o Sci-Fy, o trecho no manicômio só me fez lembrar de Exterminador 2, o jogo de caça e caçador que se inverte é incrível e o final verdadeiramente surpreendente é bom demais, ele desvia de uma moralidade rasteira e maniqueísta. Bom demais!
The Invisible Man
C'est pas SI bon que ça mais c'est vraiment très cool je change pas la note mais c'est plus un 3.5/5
The Invisible Man
I really liked the puppets in this one. They are imperfect in a very endearing way, with visible ball joints and broken limbs for movement. The fuzzy, texturally and tonally different backgrounds were also a very interesting idea. They took my attention away from the weak story.
The Invisible Man
Holy fuck "Best of the Invisible franchise" doesn't begin to describe it. The high expectations I've had since the first trailer premiered were still blown away. The One moment of hesitation I had before even entering the theater for this was seeing the runtime confirmed as two hours four minutes long; it flies by, don't worry The Invisible Man (2020) immediately feels more rewatchable than 99% of the other releases this year. Every scene has lingering doubt or tension right up through the penultimate scene, and not even a quarter of them were given away by long camera shots designed to make you notice some of the obvious ones Early performance of the year has to go to Elisabeth Moss here, who makes every sleepless night her character experiences feel longer, is made to question her sanity throughout, and never stops looking to expose the truth behind her ex's "suicide" being a charade just so he can abuse her more effectively in ways she can't try to escape this time. The ending wasn't just well-done, it felt cathartic and earned Upgrade was fun. But with The Invisible Man, I think director Leigh Whannell finally has his masterpiece Now someone please let Elisabeth Moss be in a Normal healthy relationship on-screen. Her Smell to Us to The Kitchen to Invisible Man back-to-back-to-back-to-back, I've seen trials that aren't this much of an emotional gauntlet
The Invisible Man
An invisible man can rule the world. Nobody will see him come, nobody will see him go. He can hear every secret. He can rob, rape and kill! So says Claude Raines during his own invisible reign of terror in the 30's, and here we are almost one hundred years later. (Wow!) The mystique of the thing hasn't diffused at all, and the fictional fuckers who've been granted this ability have only managed to get worse. Truly horrific setup here, made all the more so by a real world basis where invisibility is hardly a requirement. The action/special effects-oriented scenes are... not great, but that almost doesn't matter in the face of Moss' gutting and nearly wall-to-wall film presence.
The Invisible Man
for that ending alone 5 stars!!!