The Invisible

A teenager must try to unravel his own death in David Goyer’s The Invisible, an enervated but for the most part artful tone piece of teen estrangement. Decently sketched and acted, the film’s chief problem is that the race-against-time elements aren’t always quite galvanizing enough to elicit and hold the attention and appreciation of younger audiences wanting or expecting a goosing supernatural thriller. This is much more a character-rooted, sustained mood piece than a commercially geared film, but since it’s about and chiefly marketed toward teenagers, well… it faces an uphill climb in wooing its target demographic, on DVD as much as it did in theaters.

Margarita Levieva). Sullen and troubled by her own unhappy home life, Annie lives out of control, committing smash-and-grab robberies with her older boyfriend, ex-con Marcus (Alex O’Loughlin). Believing Nick to have already left town for a writer’s program abroad, Pete feeds Annie Nick’s name in an attempt to extricate himself from a sticky situation. In a fit of rage, Annie then beats Nick, apparently to death, and hides his body in the woods.

Caught in a state of bodily limbo, Nick reappears in ethereal form, able to see all those around him but powerless to affect their actions. While Detective Brian Larson (Callum Keith Rennie) searches for answers, Nick — instead of consulting The Ghost Whisperer — tries in parallel fashion to lead authorities to his body, and finds himself learning more about Annie in the process.

An evocatively gloomy, elliptical drama of redemption that pretty nicely captures the palpable disconnection of youth, The Invisible has a nice anchor in Chatwin, who has now showcased varying degrees of hot and cold in War of the Worlds and The Chumscrubber. With his icy glare, Chatwin conveys a quiet intensity that is in smart lockstep with Goyer’s tone, which convincingly digs into the loneliness and despair of adolescence. The Invisible also refreshingly uses uninterrupted takes and in-camera editing tricks to convey Nick’s frustrated attempts to unsuccessfully communicate with those around him. Emo soundtrack tunes by Snow Patrol, Death Cab For Cutie and Mellowdrone, meanwhile, further feed the movie’s tone of wistful plaintiveness.

Housed in a regular Amray case, the movie’s DVD presentation features a 2.35:1 widescreen transfer, enhanced for 16×9 televisions, and a Dolby digital 5.1 surround sound track, in English, French and Spanish. Two feature-length audio commentary tracks — one from Goyer and co-writer Christine Roum, the other from originating co-writer Mick Davis — offer up a mix of anecdote and thematic analysis, complementing music videos from 30 Seconds to Mars (“The Kill”) and Sparta (“Taking Back Control”). The real highlight, though, comes via 13 minutes of deleted scenes, which offer further parallel tidbits of Nick’s home life and Annie’s fractured domestic situation. B (Movie) B (Disc)