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词条 Memoirs of an Invisible Man (film)
释义

  1. Plot

  2. Cast

  3. Production

  4. Reception

     Box office  Critical reception 

  5. References

  6. External links

{{Distinguish|The Invisible Man}}{{Infobox film
| name = Memoirs of an Invisible Man
| image = Memoirs of an invisible man.jpg
| caption = Theatrical release poster
| director = John Carpenter
| producer = {{Plainlist|
  • Bruce Bodner
  • Dan Kolsrud

}}
| screenplay = {{Plainlist|
  • Robert Collector
  • Dana Olsen
  • William Goldman

}}
| based on = {{Based on|Memoirs of an Invisible Man|H. F. Saint}}
| starring = {{Plainlist|
  • Chevy Chase
  • Daryl Hannah
  • Sam Neill
  • Michael McKean
  • Stephen Tobolowsky

}}
| music = Shirley Walker
| cinematography = William A. Fraker
| editing = Marion Rothman
| distributor = Warner Bros.
| released = {{Film date|1992|2|28}}
| runtime = 99 minutes
| country = United States
| language = English
| budget = $40 million
| gross = $14.4 million
| production companies = {{Plainlist|
  • Le Studio Canal+
  • Regency Enterprises
  • Alcor Films
  • Cornelius Productions

}}
}}

Memoirs of an Invisible Man is a 1992 American comedy science fiction film directed by John Carpenter and starring Chevy Chase, Daryl Hannah, Sam Neill, Michael McKean and Stephen Tobolowsky. The film is loosely based on Memoirs of an Invisible Man, a 1987 novel by H.F. Saint. According to William Goldman's book Which Lie Did I Tell?, the film was initially developed for director Ivan Reitman; however, this version never came to fruition, due to disagreements between Reitman and Chevy Chase.

Plot

Nick Halloway is a stock analyst who spends most of his life avoiding responsibility and connections with other people. At his favorite bar, the Academy Club, his friend George Talbot introduces him to Alice Monroe, a TV documentary producer. Sharing an instant attraction, Nick and Alice make out in the ladies' room and set a lunch date for Friday.

The following morning, a hungover Nick attends a shareholders' meeting at Magnascopic Laboratories. Unable to endure the droning presentation by Dr. Bernard Wachs, Nick leaves the room for a nap. A lab technician accidentally spills his mug of coffee onto a computer console, causing a meltdown, and the entire building is evacuated. The building seems to explode, but there is no debris. Instead, much of the building is rendered invisible, including Nick.

Shady CIA operative David Jenkins arrives on the scene, and discovers Nick's condition. While they are transferring him to an ambulance, the agents joke about how Nick will spend the rest of his life being studied by scientists. In a panic, Nick flees. Jenkins convinces his supervisor Warren Singleton not to notify CIA headquarters so that they can capture and take credit for Nick, who could become the perfect secret agent.

Nick hides at the Academy Club. He locates Dr. Wachs and asks for his help to reverse his condition. Wachs agrees to help, but Jenkins kills him to keep Nick's invisibility a secret. Jenkins' team gets a hold of Nick's background information but it doesn't prove very useful in finding him. It says that Nick has never been married, his parents are both dead, he has no relatives, a few friends but none that he's real close to and he's not really dedicated to his job as he does it fast and loose. After reviewing Nick's profile, Jenkins says that Nick was an invisible man even before the accident. Nick infiltrates the CIA headquarters to find any information that can be used against them. Jenkins discovers Nick and tries to recruit him, but Nick is disgusted by the idea of him killing people. They have a confrontation, but Nick gets away.

Nick goes to San Francisco and stays in George's remote beach house. George arrives with his wife Ellen, Alice, and another friend, to spend the weekend. Nick phones Alice and tells her to meet him nearby. He reveals his condition to Alice, and she promptly faints. When she revives, Alice decides to stay with Nick and help him. They travel to Mexico, where Nick can start a new life. To make money, he trades stocks using Alice as a proxy. Jenkins tracks them down, and shoots Nick with a tranquillizer gun. Nick falls into a river, revives and escapes. He makes his way to a video store, where he records his memoirs on video tape, including an ultimatum for Jenkins: exchange Alice for the tape, or Nick will give it to the CIA and the press. Jenkins agrees to the exchange.

At the arranged time for the exchange, Jenkins puts Alice into a cab and orders his men to surround the phone booth where he thinks Nick is. The man in the phone booth turns out to be George, who is dressed in Nick's concealing clothing. Nick is disguised as the cab driver; he takes Alice away, pursued by Jenkins. They continue the chase on foot into a building still under construction, in the course of which Nick gets covered with concrete dust, outlining his silhouette. At the top, by taking off his jacket (which has the largest amount of dust on it), Nick tricks Jenkins into thinking that he has become desperate enough to commit suicide. Nick holds the jacket out to his side and pretends to begin to fall. Jenkins lunges at the jacket to try to save him, but ends up plunging off the building to his death.

Believing Nick to be dead, Singleton releases Alice. Nick reunites with Alice and they leave for Switzerland. The film ends with shots of Nick's apparently empty clothing skiing down a mountainside towards their chalet, where a pregnant Alice greets him with a hot drink and a kiss.

Cast

  • Chevy Chase as Nick Halloway[1]
  • Daryl Hannah as Alice Monroe[2]
  • Sam Neill as David Jenkins
  • Michael McKean as George Talbot
  • Stephen Tobolowsky as Warren Singleton
  • Jim Norton as Dr. Bernard Wachs
  • Pat Skipper as Morrissey
  • Paul Perri as Gomez
  • Richard Epcar as Tyler
  • Steven Barr as Clellan
  • Gregory Paul Martin as Richard
  • Patricia Heaton as Ellen
  • Barry Kivel as a Drunk businessman
  • Donald Li as a Cab driver
  • Rosalind Chao as Cathy DiTolla
  • Jay Gerber as Roger Whitman
  • Shay Duffin as Patrick, the bartender
  • Edmund L. Shaff as Edward Schneiderman
  • Sam Anderson as Chairman of the House Committee
  • Elaine Corral as News anchor
  • Ellen Albertini Dow as Mrs. Coulson
  • Jonathan Wigan as a Delivery boy
  • I.M. Hobson as Maitre d'
  • Rip Haight as a Helicopter pilot
  • Aaron Lustig as a Technician
* Pseudonym for John Carpenter.

Production

In 1986, Harry F. Saint's Memoirs of an Invisible Man was still unfinished when Hollywood agent William Morris gave it to Chevy Chase to read. The actor instantly got interested, and led to a bidding war among studios.[3] Warner Bros paid $1.35 million for the film rights. William Goldman was assigned to write the screenplay in the mid 1980s, by which time Ivan Reitman was attached to direct.[4]

The project was largely a vanity project shepherded by Chase through the studio (the film is billed as "A Cornelius Production" – Cornelius is Chevy Chase's real first name). He wanted to make a film about the loneliness of invisibility, intending the film to be a bridge into less comedic roles. After two years of pre-production, when Reitman discovered that he would not be directing Chase in a broad comedy, he backed out of the film. Goldman left the project saying "I'm too old and too rich for this shit."[4] He later said that Mark Canton, head of the studio, did not pay the writer for all his work causing Goldman to initiate a lawsuit against them.[5] Chase found Goldman's script too comedic, "Clark Griswold becoming invisible", and sought screenwriters to rework it, reportedly to do something "more serious, with more adventure", eventually approaching Dana Olsen and Robert Collector. Richard Donner was attached to direct for eight months given his experience with visual effects, something that made various potential directors turn down the project. Eventually someone suggested John Carpenter, and Chase approved the idea.[1][6]

Carpenter, who was then in a legal dispute with They Live production company Alive Films regarding his contract, felt reluctant in taking in a big studio project, but accepted partially because he thought he could get a good performance out of Chase. The actor in turn had to convince Warner Bros. that Carpenter, who they still saw as a horror director, could work well for the picture. Carpenter spent eighteen months working along with Olsen and Collector to make the script akin to "North by Northwest meets Starman", developing the love story to give the protagonist Nick a stronger motivation in escaping the villains. During the period, Chase lost 20 pounds knowing production and effects work would be physically straining.[6][1]

Filming rolled for 84 days between April and June 1991.[1] Parts of the film were shot in Snowbird, Utah.[7] Carpenter said due to the effects work by Industrial Light & Magic "we essentially had to shoot the same movie twice", as after normal takes the effects team would set up their bulky VistaVision motion control cameras to film the same elements again while gathering digital data for the computer-generated imagery.[6] According to visual effects supervisor Bruce Nicholson, "Success in this movie was showing invisibility in detail". During nine months of preparation, Nicholson studied four previous films on the subject, The Invisible Man - which receives a tribute in the scene where Nick is shown to have his head wrapped in bandages and is wearing large dark goggles - and its sequel The Invisible Man Returns, Bedknobs and Broomsticks and Ghost. Chase would wear a blue bodysuit below his clothing, so that computer artists would erase his body through chroma key and match the clothes with computer-generated replicas so that even the inside of the clothing could be seen, along with other touches such as erasing the shadow made by Chase's body. A particularly elaborate effect had Nick's invisible face being covered in flesh-colored make-up. The make-up was applied to Chase as his head was covered in viscous blue cosmetic, tongue and teeth coated with blue food coloring, and the cornea of each eye covered with blue contact lenses, an uncomfortable makeover made worse by the June heat and heavy studio lighting.[1][8]

Near the end of the film, Nick wonders aloud what his children with Alice will look like. John Carpenter did shoot an alternate ending showing this birth, but the film only shows Alice in the later stages of pregnancy.[9]

John Carpenter would go on to say that the production of the film was very troubling and vigorous. While also battling studio executives, Carpenter claimed Chase and Hannah were "the stuff of nightmares" and "impossible to direct". In particular, Chase would often refuse to wear his special effects makeup and would remove it prematurely, ruining a days-worth of filming.

This is one of the few John Carpenter films not scored by the director, with Shirley Walker composing the music instead. Unlike prior collaborators Ennio Morricone on The Thing and Jack Nitzsche on Starman, Walker would re-team with Carpenter – the two co-scored the subsequent Escape From L.A..

Reception

Box office

The film debuted at No. 2.[10] It went on to gross $14,358,033 USD.[11]

Critical reception

The film received mostly negative responses from critics.[12] It has a 23% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 30 reviews with an average rating of 4.6/10. The website's critical consensus reads: "It boasts an intriguing cast and the special effects were groundbreaking, but they can't compensate for Memoirs of an Invisible Man{{'}}s sadly pedestrian script".[13] Metacritic gives the film a weighted average score of 48 out of 100, based on 19 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[14]

Roger Ebert wrote of the film, "The plot is lazy and conventional. What is good about the movie involves Chase and Hannah, who have to work out between them the logistical problems of their strange relationship."[15] Reviewing the movie for The Washington Post, Desson Howe mused, "Memoirs of an Invisible Man isn't a movie. It's an identity crisis. The previews would have you believe it's a zany comedy. But the jokes are too far and few between. And if it's a comedy, why is John Carpenter directing it? This is the man who did Halloween...if Memoirs wants to get serious, why is Chevy Chase in the lead? This is the man who starred in National Lampoon's European Vacation."[16]

While reviewing the DVD release of the film for Film Freak Central, Bill Chambers wrote that Carpenter's use of effects makes the film worth seeing. He feels that the scene where Nick's body is outlined by raindrops is more effectively imagined than an identical scene in Daredevil.[9]

A new blu ray release from distributor Shout! Factory was from a new 2K scan of the original film elements.

References

1. ^{{cite news|title= Cover Story: Memories of a Too-Visible Man: Tired of being identified with comedy, Chevy Chase has worked hard to reveal his serious side in 'Memoirs of an Invisible Man' |work= Los Angeles Times|date=February 23, 1992|url= http://articles.latimes.com/1992-02-23/entertainment/ca-4954_1_invisible-man|accessdate=November 18, 2010|first=Ric|last=Gentry}}
2. ^{{cite news|title= WHISTLE-STOP: Fans who gawked at Chevy Chase and Daryl Hannah |work=Los Angeles Times|date=February 23, 1992|url= http://articles.latimes.com/1992-02-28/news/mn-3121_1_rain-man|accessdate=November 18, 2010|first1=Kristina|last1=Lindgren|first2=Susan|last2=Christian|first3=Terry|last3=Spencer}}
3. ^{{cite news|url=http://articles.latimes.com/1986-07-31/entertainment/ca-20253_1_movie-rights |title=A Sad Tale For Books As Movies |first=David T. |last=Friendly |work=Los Angeles Times |date=July 31, 1986 |accessdate=July 16, 2018}}
4. ^{{cite news|title=Exit Line|work=Los Angeles Times |date=June 12, 1988 |page=K33}}
5. ^{{cite book|last=Goldman|first=William|title=Which Lie Did I Tell?: More Adventures in the Screen Trade |publisher=Bloomsbury |location=London |year=2000 |page=10-16 |isbn=9780747553175}}
6. ^{{cite magazine|last=Swires|first=Steve|title=John Carpenter's Guide to Hollywood (In)Visibility|journal=Starlog|volume=177|date=April 1992|url=https://archive.org/stream/starlog_magazine-177/177#page/n27/mode/2up|pages=27-33|accessdate=July 16, 2018}}
7. ^{{cite book|last1=D'Arc|first1=James V.|title=When Hollywood Came to Town: The History of Moviemaking in Utah|date=2010|publisher=Gibbs Smith|location=Layton|isbn=9781423605874|edition=1st}}
8. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1992/02/23/movies/film-invisibility-is-more-than-meets-the-eye.html |title=FILM; Invisibility Is More Than Meets the Eye |work=The New York Times|publisher=The New York Times Company|first=Julie|last=Lew|date=February 23, 1992|accessdate=July 16, 2018}}
9. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.filmfreakcentral.net/ffc/2012/10/memoirs-of-an-invisible-man-john-carpenter-the-prince-of-darkness.html|title=Memoirs of an Invisible Man (1992) - DVD + John Carpenter: The Prince of Darkness - Books|last=Chambers|first=Bill|date=August 17, 2003|work=Film Freak Central|accessdate=July 16, 2018}}
10. ^{{cite news|title= Weekend Box Office 'Wayne's World' Keeps Partyin' On |work= Los Angeles Times|date=March 3, 1992|url= http://articles.latimes.com/1992-03-03/entertainment/ca-3323_1_weekend-box-office|accessdate=November 18, 2010|first=David J.|last=Fox}}
11. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=memoirsofaninvisibleman.htm |title=Memoirs of an Invisible Man |work=Box Office Mojo |publisher=IMDb |accessdate=January 10, 2015}}
12. ^{{cite news|title= MOVIE REVIEW : 'Invisible Man' Fails to Master the Possibilities |work= Los Angeles Times|date=February 28, 1992|url= http://articles.latimes.com/1992-02-28/entertainment/ca-2856_1_invisible-man|accessdate=November 18, 2010|first=Peter|last=Rainer}}
13. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/memoirs_of_an_invisible_man|title=Memoirs of an Invisible Man (1992)|work=Rotten Tomatoes|publisher=Fandango Media|accessdate=July 16, 2018}}
14. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.metacritic.com/movie/memoirs-of-an-invisible-man|title=Memoirs of an Invisible Man Reviews|work=Metacritic|publisher=CBS Interactive|accessdate=July 16, 2018}}
15. ^{{cite news|title=Memoirs of an Invisible Man|url=https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/memoirs-of-an-invisible-man-1992 | work=RogerEbert.com |first=Roger |last=Ebert |date=February 28, 1992 |accessdate=July 16, 2018 |publisher=Ebert Digital LLC}}
16. ^{{cite news|title='Memoirs of an Invisible Man' (PG-13)|first=Desson |last=Howe|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/movies/videos/memoirsofaninvisiblemanpg13howe_a0aea8.htm | work=The Washington Post |publisher=The Washington Post Company| date=February 28, 1992|accessdate=July 16, 2018}}

External links

  • {{IMDb title|0104850}}
  • {{Mojo title|memoirsofaninvisibleman}}
  • {{Allrovi movie|32134}}
  • {{rotten-tomatoes|memoirs_of_an_invisible_man}}
{{The Invisible Man}}{{John Carpenter}}{{William Goldman}}{{Portal bar|Film}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Memoirs Of An Invisible Man (Film)}}

16 : 1992 films|1990s comedy films|American films|American comedy science fiction films|English-language films|Films based on science fiction novels|Films based on American novels|Films directed by John Carpenter|Screenplays by William Goldman|Regency Enterprises films|StudioCanal films|Films set in San Francisco|Films set in the San Francisco Bay Area|Films shot in San Francisco|Films scored by Shirley Walker|Films shot in Utah

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