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Initially, the only remaining snag is reversing the invisibility effect, but when Dr. Wells The Invisible Man.It stars Elisabeth Shue, Kevin Bacon, Kim Dickens, Greg Grunberg, and Josh Brolin as a team of scientists trying to perfect the formula for an invisibility serum for the military. It's very confronting to think about what this archetype is so close to being, and I think maybe that's kind of the point of this whole thing. Hollow Man is a 2000 Science Fiction thriller film directed by Paul Verhoeven, inspired by H.

And this archetype is almost always beloved! "Sure he's a bit cheeky, but that's why he's such a great character". His role is seen almost identically across any number of movies for decades before Hollow Man was released, and one that we honestly still see today. The thing is, he starts this movie a pretty archetypal protagonist. To become the type of prick he always could have been, if only had the power to be so. When his health starts to deteriorate, he goes after the scientists who ruined his life. In the film, a government experiment goes wrong, leaving soldier Michael Griffin (Slater) permanently invisible.

Assuredly, by the end of the movie, it is very clear who our villain is, but given that he starts out such a dick anyway, the intriguing thing is not so much that he necessarily changes, but the idea that his character is maybe just "revealed". Hollow Man 2 is a 2006 American science fiction horror film directed by Claudio Fh and starring Peter Facinelli, Laura Regan and Christian Slater. I don't feel like it's fair to even say that it's a villain's journey. Some pretty impressive effects for the era, and a pretty cool (if not original) core concept, but what's most intriguing about Hollow Man is the hero's journey, or more accurately, the absence of it.
