Hollow
Man Movie Review:
"Hollow
Man" is not without its pleasures. For one thing, its title
adjective is painfully apropos. But there are also, it can
not be denied, the effects. And terrific effects they are.
The movie begins promisingly enough, with a likable, albeit
familiar, ensemble cast of medical geeks embroiled in a
project that yields stunning visual treats for the audience.
Among the highlights are the very first scene and the visible
spread of the invisibility serum (and its antidote) through
various bodies.
But
there are early warning signs about the flaws which will
multiply and ultimately weigh down this flick. Minor stretches
of logic and laps of cohesion that you're willing to forgive
at the outset end up feeling like foreshadowing for the
groaners to come.
For one thing, it would have been nice, if nothing more,
to have credited "Invisible Man" author H.G. Wells. After
all, whatever new story has been tacked on hardly merits
a new writing credit, anyway.
In fact, the entire scenario is simply all-too familiar.
The amiable crew simmering with a few tensions, primarily
due to their suspiciously ambitious leader - Kevin Bacon,
in the title (but mysteriously second-billed) role. The
early, ignored, forebodings of dark doings to come.
And then, unfortunately, the cliches pile on. The victims-to-be
don't use their full wits or resources. They split up. You
heard right, they split up to go search for the bad guy.
And, in the climactic sequence, when they're trapped with
the now-homicidal Bacon in the lab, they don't use the escape
path available to them until it becomes convenient for the
plot's progression for them to do so.
There
is a nice touch, it must be said, in one character's resourcefulness.
She actually generates magnetic waves by circulating an
electric current around a bar of metal. We can only hope
MacGyver got a cut of the box office.
In fact, the cliches are so egregious, that it seems forgivable
to give away some of the alleged shocks to illustrate their
awfulness. Here's what Kevin Bacon survives in order to
rise again over and over during the final scenes: A full-force
blow to the head with a crowbar; a sustained fire that envelopes
his entire body for a considerable period of time, but for
some reason does not melt the flesh-simulating mask he's
wearing onto his skin; and a powerful electric shock that
results when he jams a metal bar into a fuse box.
Despite all that, he retains the ability to somehow survive
the apocalyptic final explosion and pursue our heroes through
the bitter end of the very last reel.
And for all the power the effects have achieved throughout
the movie, they woefully fail the final scene, rendering
it almost giggle-inducing. "Hollow Man" ends up very much
like that hollow man, or woman, with whom you may have spent
a wayward drunken evening. Fantastic looks, but not much
else going on.
Jonathan
Larsen
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