After the horrible attack he has on the hands of Annie, a cunning and violent girl, Nick Powell, a young smart and hardworking guy, who prepares for traveling to London, struggles against finding himself invisible to people, the thing that challenges him.
Director David S. Goyer doesn't get half the skin-crawling mileage out of the ghost factor that he could. As a result, The Invisible really isn't worth seeing.
Reel Film Reviews
November 03, 2007
...has been designed to appeal solely to the coveted "tween" demographic...
Director David S. Goyer turned the familiar sights of our fair city into a seething battleground for vampires in 2004's Blade: Trinity, but his latest Vancouver-shot supernatural flick doesn't have nearly as much bite.