The Atlantic

This Time, <em>The Invisible Man </em>Is Really About a Woman

Leigh Whannell’s update of the classic horror story follows an abuse survivor being terrorized by her ex.
Source: Universal

The first cinematic adaptation of H. G. Wells’s came in , when the height of special effects involved props dangling from wires and a . Almost 90 years have passed, and (and ) have come and gone, but it’s comforting to see that in Leigh Whannell’s latest take on the horror icon, the simplest bits of camera trickery are still the most effective. This newest iteration of focuses mostly on a woman being victimized by someone

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