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Filmmaker Szász poses three riddles to the viewer in only thirty minutes
including what’s wrong with this scene? And then there are three more
posed to us, but three that will basically give away what this has to
offer. Almost in the manner of Shyamalan, Szász starts the film on a soft note and then builds for
a rather surprising albeit predictable climax that worked in the end,
and that’s due to the rather excellent performances throughout the short
film. Szász’s film is a solid utterly wrenching supernatural drama
that tests not only the audience, but the perceptions of our views into
grief, and isolation after grief.
Can isolation be healthy for you? We can never be
sure, but we know it’s had a significant effect on the couple here. And
we wonder, and decipher, and we wait for the pay off, and Szász’s
delivery worked because he can truly alleviate the drama with the taut
tension. Mom stays home to talk on the phone and shoos away her son,
while Dad returns from the lab. He’s just come a step closer to
perfecting a chemical that can make people invisible, and he’s
triumphant in his own mind. When he returns, suddenly their son
disappears, and Szász unveils the mystery at hand. What happened to him?
And then, like an onion, Szász slowly unravels the film’s meaning, and
the message of moving on and learning to be alone leaves an after taste
that many viewers will relate to.
Szász’s own
passion
for colors becomes his downfall, and when “Now You See Me”
should be focusing on story progression, there we are looking at silent
montage upon montage of imagery that’s supposed to mean something, but
eventually we tend to lose patient. “Now You See Me” relies too heavily
on symbolism and silent imagery, thus we’re left wondering where it’s
all going. Not in the way that we’re filled with anticipation, but more
in the anxious impatient urgency just waiting for the pay off to come
already. And while Szász’s own skill is evident, his experience in
directing commercials becomes much too resonant in the message of the
story. Constantly, we’re subjected to close-ups, and wide shots that
could easily have a product logo fade on-screen, and we wouldn’t be able
to tell the difference. Szász can never really draw away from the
imagery of an advertisement, thus the film could never feel enough like
a thriller.
In spite of relying much too heavily on symbolism and montages, "Now You
See Me, Now You Don't," is a well paced, wonderfully directed, heart
wrenching supernatural drama with great performances and a sad message.

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