
Memoirs of an Invisible Man sees Chase play Nick Halloway, a
stock analyst who gets caught in an explosion at a scientific
research
building that renders him completely invisible. CIA Agent
David Jenkins (Sam Neill) is tasked with tracking him down with a
view to turning him into the ultimate assassin. However Nick wants
nothing to be left alone so he enlists the help of Alice Monroe
(Daryl Hannah), a woman he was beginning a relationship with just
prior to the accident, to help him escape to safety.

As I said this was
very much Chase’s vanity project. The script was originally
written much more as a comedy, with Ivan Reitman (Ghostbusters)
set to direct but Chase insisted on it being a more serious film so
he brought in John Carpenter, who had little enthusiasm but was
happy to do it as a
“work-for-hire”. After the film was released
he explained he hadn’t titled it “John Carpenter’s” as he
did his other movies because he knew Warner Brothers was more “in
the business of making audience-friendly, non-challenging movies.”

It’s a shame that
Carpenter dismisses the film so much because there’s actually a lot
to enjoy about it. Firstly, the special effects, though not
spectacular, show a lot of creative thinking. The approach of having
Chase mostly be seen by the audience but invisible to everyone else
on screen is a very clever idea and adds to the comedy of situations.
Seeing assault teams break into his apartment while he just walks
past them is very entertaining.


Carpenter’s direction is solid but
it’s a shame his heart
isn’t in it. There’s some nice homages to James Whales’
original The Invisible Man film from 1933. And he’s clearly
enjoying aping Hitchcock’s thrillers such as North By Northwest
and The 39 Steps. If I’m honest though I love both him and
Chase they shouldn’t have been involved in the same project. Their
sensibilities are too different. Doing this film was a mistake for
Carpenter, he was already disillusioned by working for major studios
after Big Trouble in Little China and he should have come
back to Hollywood with a more personal project.


He was trying to
broaden his
acting range but he’d left it too late. Chase should
have stretched his wings and tried something like this earlier in
his career rather than relying on comedies for the whole previous
decade. Several other 80s comedy actors had a similar dilemma in the
early 90s. Martin Short, John Candy, Dan Aykroyd, Steve Martin. Of
all of them only Bill Murray managed to break free and start a
successful second career as a serio-comic actor (for which he mostly
owes Wes Anderson).


For the next decade and
a half he had a very dry run. It was only when he was cast in the TV
show Community in 2009 that he started to make something of a
comeback. It remains to be seen where his career will go from here.
Rumours are that he’ll likely come back for a reboot of the
Vacation series which would be a nice way to cap his career I
think.