Diagonaldi
Very well executed
Phonearl
Good start, but then it gets ruined
Quiet Muffin
This movie tries so hard to be funny, yet it falls flat every time. Just another example of recycled ideas repackaged with women in an attempt to appeal to a certain audience.
Jenni Devyn
Worth seeing just to witness how winsome it is.
terasamay
Hollow Man is directed by Paul Verovan- the carefree Dutchman who has made some gems like Starship Troopers, Basic Instinct and Total Recall. His films are heavy on gore and sex and this film has amples of both. Hollow Man is a take on the Invisible Man and contains a maverick performance by Kevin Bacon. Ably supported by the likes of Elisabeth Shue and Josh Brolin. This is a movie which, depending on your taste and moral compass, will appeal accordingly. I think this is a brave attempt by everyone from the leads to the director as many people will surely find the film morally lacking.
Majikat
Hollow man is all about Kevin Bacon's character and what happens if power is in the wrong hands. Some great opportunity affects in this film which allows the the hollow man to become visible, one of Hollywoods cheesy better one's.
sarah jamanez
The film starts out strong, well made with good acting and a solid pace. however half way through the film, it devolves into a mindless action film. The VFX still hold up today, and it just feels like a classic Verhoven / 90's sci fie b-movie. It's enjoyable, and what else can you ask of really. I would recommend checking this film out, especially if you've never seen it, or if you haven't seen it recently.
NateWatchesCoolMovies
Paul Verhoeven's Hollow Man is one of the most scummy, awful, overblown ridiculous turds masquerading as a movie that I've ever had the misfortune to see. It's also entertaining on a level that suffocates you with unpleasantness and knowing stupidity at every turn. Verhoeven has taken what could have been a fascinating and suspenseful premise and turned it into a one note, bottom feeding genre pile of rubbish that is pretty hard to sit through. Scientifically inaccurate (not that that matters in this terrain) relentlessly unpleasant, super awkward and an all round disaster, it's still pretty compelling to witness, like a school bus on fire. It's a wreck to be sure, but there's plenty of glee to be found, if you're feeling masochistic. Kevin Bacon has laid down a path of many asshole characters over the years, but Dr. Sebastian Caine just takes the cake. He's an egotistical, psycho sexual maniac in charge of an underground research lab, working on a brand new cheeseball formula to make the invisible man. He's creepy and possessive with his girlfriend (poor Elizabeth Shue) callous to his lab staff (Josh Brolin included, before his second coming, as well as Kim Dickens) and an all around jerk off. But that's really nothing compared to what happens when the formula works, effectively turning him invisible, with a few nasty side effects. He goes from a nasty dude to an all out monster as he starts to arbitrarily prey and perv out on his co workers in their underground bunker, going full on Lon Chaney with a side of Ted Bundy in a grating performance that is a career sinkhole for Bacon. I read Ebert give golden praise to the special effects in a scene where he teansforms from visible to invisible, but i have no idea what he was smoking that day because they are an abysmal effort. Verhoeven always has a sort of knowing layer of hedonism blanketing his work, but this one takes it to a whole new level. Hey, at least there's a cameo from the always welcome William Devane! The rest is just a vomitorium. There's a sequel floating around out there with Christian Slater, I'm curious but have never have come across a copy.