Hollow Man
Hollow Man

Hollow Man

2000Movie112 minEnglish

Cocky researcher Sebastian Caine is working on a project to make living creatures invisible. Determined to achieve the ultimate breakthrough, Caine pushes his team to move to the next phase — using himself as the subject. The test is a success, but when the process can't be reversed and Caine seems doomed to future without flesh, he starts to turn increasingly dangerous.

Read Reviews

Insights

IMDb6.0/10
Rotten Tomatoes27%
Metacritic37/100
Google Users54%
Director: Paul VerhoevenGenres: Sci-Fi, Thriller, Horror

Plot Summary

A brilliant but arrogant scientist, Sebastian Caine, develops a serum that can render living beings invisible. He volunteers himself as the first human test subject, hoping for fame and recognition. However, the invisibility process proves to be irreversible, trapping him in a disembodied state. Isolated and increasingly unstable, Caine begins to use his newfound power for increasingly malicious and violent purposes, turning on his colleagues who fear his descent into madness.

Critical Reception

Hollow Man was met with mixed to negative reviews from critics, who largely criticized its excessive gore, predictable plot, and underdeveloped characters, despite some acknowledging its innovative visual effects. Audiences had a similarly divided reception, with some appreciating the suspense and horror elements, while others found the film gratuitous and lacking substance.

What Reviewers Say

  • Praised for its groundbreaking visual effects, particularly the practical effects used to show the invisibility process.
  • Criticized for its gratuitous violence, weak character development, and reliance on horror tropes.
  • Seen as a visually impressive but ultimately hollow thriller that prioritizes shock value over substance.

Google audience: Audiences found the film to be a decent thriller with impressive special effects, though many felt the story was predictable and the characters unlikable. Some viewers enjoyed the suspense and gore, while others found it to be a disappointment due to its lack of depth.

Awards & Accolades

Nominated for one Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film. Received no major awards.

Fun Fact

The iconic scene where Sebastian Caine's body is revealed layer by layer was achieved through a painstaking process involving actors, prosthetics, and extensive CGI, with Kevin Bacon himself undergoing multiple stages of makeup and digital manipulation.

AI-generated overview · Verify ratings on official sources

My Review

TMDB Reviews

6 reviews
CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

Kevin Bacon ("Sebastian Caine") leads a team of scientists looking for ways to make living things invisible. When he decides to be the ultimate guinea pig, it all starts to go a bit wonky - they can make him disappear ok, but they cannot qu...
Andre Gonzales

Andre Gonzales

Loved this movie. I never seen a concept for a movie like this. I wouldn't hate being invisible at all. I can also see how it would be frustrating to not be able to become normal again too.
Kamurai

Kamurai

Great watch, will watch again, and can definitely recommend. This has a fantastic premise of what happens when humans discover a process to "invisible-lize" and "visible-lize" organic life forms. For a 2000 movie, this has a high produc...
Gimly

Gimly

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. The inverse of it. I don't feel like i...
John Chard

John Chard

It's amazing what you can do... when you don't have to look at yourself in the mirror any more. It was the film that convinced director Paul Verhoeven to leave Hollywood and take a break from film making. His reasoning being that any Hol...
Per Gunnar Jonsson

Per Gunnar Jonss...

I have been unusually lucky with my SyFy-channel movie watching lately. I had no idea what this movie was really but there was nothing else on last night and I also noticed that it was directed by Paul Verhoeven which have directed quite a ...