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Hollow Man (2000)
![]() Kevin Bacon, Elisabeth Shue |
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If and when we daydream about being miraculously endowed with
super-powers, how many of us fantasize about using our new abilities to help our fellow
man? The typical Marvel comics superhero receives his power through some terrible accident
(usually involving radiation) and regards it as a curse rather than a gift, but ends up
using his super-strength or heat vision or stretching ability for the greater good anyway.
"With great power comes great responsibility" is Spider-Man's mantra, but let's
get real here. If you woke up invisible tomorrow morning, would you use your new power to
sneak up on muggers in dark alleys, or to watch your sexy neighbor take a shower?
Paul Verhoeven's unsettling new thriller Hollow Man starts with
a typical comic book premise. Scientist Sebastian Caine (Kevin Bacon) and his team are at
work on a top secret government project. They have been able to render primates invisible
and Sebastian has just hit upon the key to making them visible again. Without waiting for
approval from the Pentagon, Sebastian rushes into human testing, with himself as the
subject. He disappears successfully, but the re-visibility formula that worked for
gorillas proves ineffective at bringing Sebastian back into view. He now must face the
possibility of life as an invisible man.
In a Marvel comic, Sebastian would whine about his plight, then set
about fighting for truth, justice and the American Way. But Verhoeven gives us a
protagonist who is already a little corrupt, then doses him with absolute power and
watches as it corrupts him absolutely. When we meet Sebastian Caine, he's a bit arrogant,
slightly jealous that his co-worker and ex-girlfriend Linda (Elisabeth Shue) is dating
someone new, and even something of a voyeur. His apartment has a Rear
Window view of an attractive woman's bedroom across the street, and in between
bouts of fiddling with DNA structures on his computer, Sebastian likes to peer between the
blinds and try to get a glimpse of her undressing. Once he becomes invisible, his
inhibitions disappear as well, and his inner Slim Shady is free to run wild. Sebastian
flees the underground lab where Linda and the rest of the team (including Sebastian's
rival and Linda's new lover Matt Kensington, played by Josh Brolin) are working on the
reversal serum, and pays an unseen visit to his attractive neighbor. He peers in Linda's
window late one night and learns that she is sleeping with his adversary. And when
Sebastian's Pentagon supervisor learns of his unauthorized self-testing and threatens to
shut down the project, the hollow man is pushed beyond the point of no return.
For its first hour or so, Hollow Man is a genuinely creepy nail-biter. It's
a given that the special effects are impressive. (Though ironic, in a way - what special
effect could be easier to convey than invisibility?) When an angry gorilla gradually
re-materializes from the inside out - first we see its blood vessels appear out of
nowhere, then the skeleton, muscles, skin and fur gradually emerge from the ether - the
visual is eye-popping enough that we don't mind sitting through it again in reverse when
Sebastian undergoes the treatment. The filmmakers also come up with inventive ways of
overcoming the major stumbling block inherent in making your star invisible, which is that
(all together now) you can't see him. Heat-vision goggles, latex masks, water, steam and
blood all come into play to keep Bacon in the picture. Besides the technical wizardry, the
picture is alive with jittery "is-he-there-or-is-he-not" tension, and milks the
voyeuristic thrills of its premise for all they're worth. Master of sleaze Verhoeven (the
visionary behind Basic
Instinct and Showgirls)
finds his ideal leading man in Kevin Bacon, whose affinity for seedy characters apparently
knows no bounds, and for a while it's all good, icky fun.
Too bad the final third of the movie is so dreadful. Watching Hollow
Man devolve into Alien
with an invisible bad guy, enjoyment of the picture vanishes faster than Sebastian Caine's
pet chimp. It's astounding how quickly the action becomes utterly routine and predictable,
with Sebastian knocking off the cast in ascending order of billing, fireballs racing up
elevator shafts, and the requisite seventeen false endings. Elisabeth Shue's giggly
sorority girl performance doesn't aid the suspense much (she and the rest of the research
team all appear to be graduates of the GQ Institute of Molecular Biology), and the always
shaky science of the invisibility project grows ever more ludicrous. Not only do Verhoeven
and screenwriters Gary Scott Thompson and Andrew W. Marlowe take the path of least
resistance, but their movie reeks of last minute re-editing. One development about midway
through Hollow Man is left hanging, never to be returned to or mentioned again. It
feels like a failure of nerve, an unwillingness to push into the darkest corners the
material has to offer. By the end, the movie has much in common with its protagonist: you
can see right through it, and there's nothing there.
-
Scott Von Doviak