18 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :- Great show!, 2 November 2002
Author:
lonewolf89 from USA
This is one of the few shows I've seen where I liked all of the
characters.
Fawkes and Hobbs were great together, I loved how they would finish each
others sentences, and how they always seem to be thinking the same thing.
The Keeper was a interesting character too, I liked the episodes that
explored her personality. It's a shame the show was canceled, it had a
good
plot and solid actors.
15 out of 15 people found the following comment useful :- Surprisingly well done and fun series, 6 September 2000
Author:
aegm from Arlington, VA
This is one show I hope won't be disappearing anytime soon. I originally
didn't think I would be interested in it at all. It's an old idea and I
kept getting Vincent Ventresca's character from Boston Commons in my head
when I saw the promos. What happened? A friend sat me down and told me I
had to watch at least one episode. I am incredibly grateful. I went from
that one episode to watching it devotedly.
I've had to reappraise Vincent Ventresca. I'd seen him in Boston Commons
and Friends but never really put them together as being the same actor. He
is quite good at being a variety of very different people. Darien is
nothing like good time bobby or the snooty professor from Boston Commons.
Ventresca has quite the job for him in this role. Darien is a fun loving,
good guy with a past in theft and a cloudy future. The same Quicksilver
gland that allows him to go invisible can also drive him
insane.
No superhero is complete without his sidekick and so we have Paul Ben-Victor
as Bobby Hobbes. I thought this was brilliant. Bobby Hobbes is a blast. I
love the idea of assigning a paranoid agent a partner who can turn
invisible. Bobby grows on you. Some people think the character is a little... annoying but he's a great guy and he's good at what he does despite
being fired from several government agencies. Paul Ben-Victor does an
excellent job with this character. His performance is a good part of why
I'm watching. He's made Bobby into a very lovable character.
The supporting cast is good but we don't get as much of them as we do the
main two. There are also well done special effects and some truly fun plot
lines. If you want to watch something good on Friday night, this is
it.
12 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :- Best Sci-Fi show I have ever loved, 24 October 2002
Author:
nbitters (nbitters@yahoo.com) from navarre, florida
I-Man is the best show that Sci-Fi had every undertaken. It was not only
inventive, taking a well used story (of course H.G. Wells fabulous novel,
and the many movies) and taking it to a whole new level. Who would have
ever thought that a story about: an awful (though awfully cute) cat
burglar
who got caught "molesting an elderly man" who became a oh-so top secrect
government agent, that no one besides his boss, partner and keeper, even
know about him; would turn into a smash hit. The show had so much
further
to go, that it is a shame that Sigh-Fi didn't see it.
Take the lead: Vincent Ventresca. Vinny (to the throngs of loyal fans)
declared himself the king of the pilot (not an exact quote, but close).
He
has yet to find the show that EVERYONE (and I do mean everyone) sees as
he
perfect role. If you never saw I-Man, find it somewhere. Vinny is
perfect
as Darien Fawkes. No one could do they role any better. It is like
taking
Fun Bobby (of course Vinny) (who anyone who watches Friends remembers)
and
sending him through rehab, personality classes, and then major sci-fi
brain
surgery and seeing what you come up with.
I am running out of room, but I have to say, Paul, Shannon, Mike (who I
can't wait to see again), Eddie, Spencer, Joel and everyone else that was
on
the show was wonderful. Look them up here, they have been in so many
other
things that you wouldn't believe that you had actually seen them before
till
after you learn to love them.
The show was a gem, a diamond in the rough, that sigh-fi was oblivious to
because of the blinding glare they created for other shows, that were
I-Man's equal. It was a shame that they didn't support this show as much
as
it should have been. It would be on a major network by now, with a major
motion picture (oh keep your fingers crossed...there are still rumors)
coming out soon.
14 out of 16 people found the following comment useful :- Excellent series, 9 June 2000
Author:
Op_Prime from Ardmore, PA
The new Invisible Man series is excellent. The premise is very unique.
Rather than the main character (Darien Fawkes, played by Vincent
Ventresca)
being turned invisible by a freak lab accident, it's really due to the
Quicksilver gland put in his body. It has some interesting plot points to
it. This series has great potential to be something great.
13 out of 15 people found the following comment useful :- Quite excellent, 2 July 2001
Author:
TheWraith
The Invisible Man is a demonstration of a great show built on a classic
foundation. Wonderful characters, humor, plot, atmosphere, the works. It
and
the Sci-Fi Channel's other top series, Farscape, are great examples of how
SF is at it's core about telling good stories, some old some new, with the
twists of imagination only sci-fi can bring.
12 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :- Excellent show - too bad it was canceled, 18 June 2003
Author:
Blade_Le_Flambeur
For some anonymous reason, the sci- fi channel decided to stop airing new
episodes of their hit series "the invisible man", but that's not the point
of this review. Turning invisible had always been a bit of a childish
fantasy of mine and I was excited to see how they would work out the show.
It turned it to be a superb job. The cast, especially Darian is great doing
exceptional dark and sarcastic humor. Also, the narration by the main
character sums up things quite well. The writers have out- done themselves
by not creating a show simply about the ability but other things as well
such as government conspiracy as well as sometimes romantic sub- plots. The
show feels real, and instead of resorting to a cheap unbelievable gimmick
for the protagonist to survive, it still stays true to realism. One other
great thing is the special effects, once Darian turns invisible he has black
and white vision but it's extremely cool to see things through his eyes. In
some ways, it looks like the alien's vision from the 1998 movie "Pitch
Black". Some minor flaws include too boring episodes or episodes that simply
repeat, but everything else is exceptional. 9.5/10
9 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- The original, innovative and witty show that never should have been cancelled., 3 March 2002
Author:
Darien's Muse from Nebraska (exhchange student from The Netherlands)
The Invisible Man. When you see the title, you would never expect it to be
a
great show. But it is. I have never fallen in love with a tv show like
I've
fallen in love with I-Man.
The core of it is of course the purest science fiction. But what makes it
so
great is the reality and honesty of the characters. They're not perfect,
in
fact, they're far from it. Darien Fawkes, the Invisible Man himself
(Vincent
Ventresca), is an ex-con, a thief. His partner, Bobby Hobbes (Paul
Ben-Victor), is an ex-FBI agent who suffers from paranoia. And the list
goes
on, every character beautifully flawed in their own unique
way.
And the cast has such excellent chemistry. From the hilarious
boss-and-yes-man relationship between The Official (Eddie Jones) and
Eberts
(Mike McCafferty), to the budding romantic triangle between Darien,
Hobbes,
and The Keeper (Shannon Kenny), to the excessive banter and joking between
the two main characters, a great part of which is ad-libbed. Of course the
writers have been an important part of the show as well, with their great,
innovative, and witty stories and dialogue. And special kudos goes to
Craig
Silverstein, who has written 11 episodes, every single one a gem. If
you're
only ever going to watch one episode, be sure to make it one of
Craig's.
It's a story about invisiblity, but like you've never seen before. A major
part of the story is the fact that the substance that makes Darien
invisible
also acts as a cerebral disinhibitor, effectively driving him insane. This
puts a severe price on the usage of invisibility, not to mention the fact
that it is a perfect way to control him, since the only thing that stops
him
from going insane is a special counteragent, which only the agency Darien
works for possesses. So The Official holds his sanity hostage,
blackmailing
him into performing missions for the agency only known as The
Agency.
Another thing that is unusual is the hero-sidekick relationship between
Darien and Hobbes. You'd think that Darien as the invisible man is always
the hero and Hobbes is only second best. But that's not true. In fact, it
is
usually Hobbes, as the more experienced agent, who takes the lead and
tells
Darien what to do. And Darien is often the one who gets himself injured or
captured. Of course, the fact that many people are interested in getting
their hands on the invisibility gland does have something to do with
that.
All in all, this show is very, very good. Unfortunately, it's also very
cancelled. The unofficial fanclub, the Imaniacs, of which I am a member,
have been campaigning for its return from the moment they heard this news.
Their latest effort is Operation: Visible Ink, a full-scale media campaign
to attract as much attention as possible to the wonderful little show that
could, but never got a chance.
This is a show that never should have been cancelled.
~Muse
10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- Smarter and funnier than it has any right to be, 29 November 2003
Author:
mightyfastpig from Vancouver BC
Somebody finally perfected the "guy with superpowers working for the
government" premise. This is a near perfect blend of humor and action,
with
well-realized characters, sharp dialogue and intelligent plots. This is
the
show "Jake 2.0" and a bunch of others try to be, and it might have
developed
a bigger audience on a network.
A thief with a conscience tries to get out of life in prison by
volunteering
for an experiment. He winds up with the power to turn invisible and a
dependency on a drug that keeps him from going psychotic. A low-rent
government agency partners him with a guy who keeps a copy of "Lithium
and
You" in his van.
This show had me when the agents got their briefings through "tri
dimensional data viewers", which turn out to be ViewMasters. There's even
a
reasonably plausible explanation for invisibility that also creates a
cool
visual effect. (Think about it: how do you make a guy turning invisible
look
interesting?)
9 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :- The Greatest Show You've Never Seen!, 30 June 2002
Author:
Invisableone1058 from United States
I am rarely won over so quickly as I was with I-Man. It is not only
intelligent but also very entertaining. Consider Hobbes & Darien. When
first
we meet their characters, we think "These guys are going to kill each
other!" by the end of the third episode you think, "I wish I had a
friendship like those guys have."
The actors work so well off of each other, you can really believe
that what you're seeing is real.
With the entertaining, you also get the heart-warming. Darien's
struggle with the loss of his brother, for example. Check out the episodes
"Johnny Apocalypse," and "Ralph," for some of the more touching
stories.
Besides the excellent writing, stellar cast (Brandy Ledford not
included, though you get to like her character but never to love her as you
do Hobbes or Darien), great chemistry and a generally great show, you also
have the more aesthetic pleasures. You have the lovely Misses Kenney and
Ledford, and the gorgeous Misters Ventresca & Ben-Victor (If you like bald
men, Ben-Victor is your man!). Plus the more humorously aesthetic "Eberts"
and "Borden (a.k.a. "The Fat Man")."
Definitely check this show out. It's running on syndication and every
Friday at 5/4c on Sci-Fi.
~J.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- You Gotta Love This!!, 11 January 2006
Author:
jimcamue from utrecht
The Invisible man is a show everybody s gotta love! It reminds me of
the old school 80's series(a-team,airwolf,knightrider) The special
effects are small but very effective!! but what is most important is
the fun they had shooting this series. It really shows! the entire cast
fit perfect in there roles and it looks like they can do whatever they
want!! especially Paul Ben Victor and Vincent Ventresca. Ventresca
really shines in this one! for me its unbelievable that an actor with
so much sarcasm is his acting style Doesn't get a shot in a big movie
(mr Tarantino this was the show you should have directed! instead of
that major boring grave danger(c.s.i)) Get this show if you can. well
worth it!!!
Free on IMDb

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18 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :-
Great show!, 2 November 2002
Author: lonewolf89 from USA
This is one of the few shows I've seen where I liked all of the characters. Fawkes and Hobbs were great together, I loved how they would finish each others sentences, and how they always seem to be thinking the same thing. The Keeper was a interesting character too, I liked the episodes that explored her personality. It's a shame the show was canceled, it had a good plot and solid actors.
15 out of 15 people found the following comment useful :-
Surprisingly well done and fun series, 6 September 2000
Author: aegm from Arlington, VA
This is one show I hope won't be disappearing anytime soon. I originally didn't think I would be interested in it at all. It's an old idea and I kept getting Vincent Ventresca's character from Boston Commons in my head when I saw the promos. What happened? A friend sat me down and told me I had to watch at least one episode. I am incredibly grateful. I went from that one episode to watching it devotedly.
I've had to reappraise Vincent Ventresca. I'd seen him in Boston Commons and Friends but never really put them together as being the same actor. He is quite good at being a variety of very different people. Darien is nothing like good time bobby or the snooty professor from Boston Commons. Ventresca has quite the job for him in this role. Darien is a fun loving, good guy with a past in theft and a cloudy future. The same Quicksilver gland that allows him to go invisible can also drive him insane.
No superhero is complete without his sidekick and so we have Paul Ben-Victor as Bobby Hobbes. I thought this was brilliant. Bobby Hobbes is a blast. I love the idea of assigning a paranoid agent a partner who can turn invisible. Bobby grows on you. Some people think the character is a little... annoying but he's a great guy and he's good at what he does despite being fired from several government agencies. Paul Ben-Victor does an excellent job with this character. His performance is a good part of why I'm watching. He's made Bobby into a very lovable character.
The supporting cast is good but we don't get as much of them as we do the main two. There are also well done special effects and some truly fun plot lines. If you want to watch something good on Friday night, this is it.
12 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :-
Best Sci-Fi show I have ever loved, 24 October 2002
Author: nbitters (nbitters@yahoo.com) from navarre, florida
I-Man is the best show that Sci-Fi had every undertaken. It was not only inventive, taking a well used story (of course H.G. Wells fabulous novel, and the many movies) and taking it to a whole new level. Who would have ever thought that a story about: an awful (though awfully cute) cat burglar who got caught "molesting an elderly man" who became a oh-so top secrect government agent, that no one besides his boss, partner and keeper, even know about him; would turn into a smash hit. The show had so much further to go, that it is a shame that Sigh-Fi didn't see it.
Take the lead: Vincent Ventresca. Vinny (to the throngs of loyal fans) declared himself the king of the pilot (not an exact quote, but close). He has yet to find the show that EVERYONE (and I do mean everyone) sees as he perfect role. If you never saw I-Man, find it somewhere. Vinny is perfect as Darien Fawkes. No one could do they role any better. It is like taking Fun Bobby (of course Vinny) (who anyone who watches Friends remembers) and sending him through rehab, personality classes, and then major sci-fi brain surgery and seeing what you come up with.
I am running out of room, but I have to say, Paul, Shannon, Mike (who I can't wait to see again), Eddie, Spencer, Joel and everyone else that was on the show was wonderful. Look them up here, they have been in so many other things that you wouldn't believe that you had actually seen them before till after you learn to love them.
The show was a gem, a diamond in the rough, that sigh-fi was oblivious to because of the blinding glare they created for other shows, that were I-Man's equal. It was a shame that they didn't support this show as much as it should have been. It would be on a major network by now, with a major motion picture (oh keep your fingers crossed...there are still rumors) coming out soon.
14 out of 16 people found the following comment useful :-
Excellent series, 9 June 2000
Author: Op_Prime from Ardmore, PA
The new Invisible Man series is excellent. The premise is very unique. Rather than the main character (Darien Fawkes, played by Vincent Ventresca) being turned invisible by a freak lab accident, it's really due to the Quicksilver gland put in his body. It has some interesting plot points to it. This series has great potential to be something great.
13 out of 15 people found the following comment useful :-
Quite excellent, 2 July 2001
Author: TheWraith
The Invisible Man is a demonstration of a great show built on a classic foundation. Wonderful characters, humor, plot, atmosphere, the works. It and the Sci-Fi Channel's other top series, Farscape, are great examples of how SF is at it's core about telling good stories, some old some new, with the twists of imagination only sci-fi can bring.
12 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :-
Excellent show - too bad it was canceled, 18 June 2003
Author: Blade_Le_Flambeur
For some anonymous reason, the sci- fi channel decided to stop airing new episodes of their hit series "the invisible man", but that's not the point of this review. Turning invisible had always been a bit of a childish fantasy of mine and I was excited to see how they would work out the show. It turned it to be a superb job. The cast, especially Darian is great doing exceptional dark and sarcastic humor. Also, the narration by the main character sums up things quite well. The writers have out- done themselves by not creating a show simply about the ability but other things as well such as government conspiracy as well as sometimes romantic sub- plots. The show feels real, and instead of resorting to a cheap unbelievable gimmick for the protagonist to survive, it still stays true to realism. One other great thing is the special effects, once Darian turns invisible he has black and white vision but it's extremely cool to see things through his eyes. In some ways, it looks like the alien's vision from the 1998 movie "Pitch Black". Some minor flaws include too boring episodes or episodes that simply repeat, but everything else is exceptional. 9.5/10
9 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-
The original, innovative and witty show that never should have been cancelled., 3 March 2002
Author: Darien's Muse from Nebraska (exhchange student from The Netherlands)
The Invisible Man. When you see the title, you would never expect it to be a great show. But it is. I have never fallen in love with a tv show like I've fallen in love with I-Man.
The core of it is of course the purest science fiction. But what makes it so great is the reality and honesty of the characters. They're not perfect, in fact, they're far from it. Darien Fawkes, the Invisible Man himself (Vincent Ventresca), is an ex-con, a thief. His partner, Bobby Hobbes (Paul Ben-Victor), is an ex-FBI agent who suffers from paranoia. And the list goes on, every character beautifully flawed in their own unique way.
And the cast has such excellent chemistry. From the hilarious boss-and-yes-man relationship between The Official (Eddie Jones) and Eberts (Mike McCafferty), to the budding romantic triangle between Darien, Hobbes, and The Keeper (Shannon Kenny), to the excessive banter and joking between the two main characters, a great part of which is ad-libbed. Of course the writers have been an important part of the show as well, with their great, innovative, and witty stories and dialogue. And special kudos goes to Craig Silverstein, who has written 11 episodes, every single one a gem. If you're only ever going to watch one episode, be sure to make it one of Craig's.
It's a story about invisiblity, but like you've never seen before. A major part of the story is the fact that the substance that makes Darien invisible also acts as a cerebral disinhibitor, effectively driving him insane. This puts a severe price on the usage of invisibility, not to mention the fact that it is a perfect way to control him, since the only thing that stops him from going insane is a special counteragent, which only the agency Darien works for possesses. So The Official holds his sanity hostage, blackmailing him into performing missions for the agency only known as The Agency.
Another thing that is unusual is the hero-sidekick relationship between Darien and Hobbes. You'd think that Darien as the invisible man is always the hero and Hobbes is only second best. But that's not true. In fact, it is usually Hobbes, as the more experienced agent, who takes the lead and tells Darien what to do. And Darien is often the one who gets himself injured or captured. Of course, the fact that many people are interested in getting their hands on the invisibility gland does have something to do with that.
All in all, this show is very, very good. Unfortunately, it's also very cancelled. The unofficial fanclub, the Imaniacs, of which I am a member, have been campaigning for its return from the moment they heard this news. Their latest effort is Operation: Visible Ink, a full-scale media campaign to attract as much attention as possible to the wonderful little show that could, but never got a chance.
This is a show that never should have been cancelled.
~Muse
10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-
Smarter and funnier than it has any right to be, 29 November 2003
Author: mightyfastpig from Vancouver BC
Somebody finally perfected the "guy with superpowers working for the government" premise. This is a near perfect blend of humor and action, with well-realized characters, sharp dialogue and intelligent plots. This is the show "Jake 2.0" and a bunch of others try to be, and it might have developed a bigger audience on a network.
A thief with a conscience tries to get out of life in prison by volunteering for an experiment. He winds up with the power to turn invisible and a dependency on a drug that keeps him from going psychotic. A low-rent government agency partners him with a guy who keeps a copy of "Lithium and You" in his van.
This show had me when the agents got their briefings through "tri dimensional data viewers", which turn out to be ViewMasters. There's even a reasonably plausible explanation for invisibility that also creates a cool visual effect. (Think about it: how do you make a guy turning invisible look interesting?)
9 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :-
The Greatest Show You've Never Seen!, 30 June 2002
Author: Invisableone1058 from United States
I am rarely won over so quickly as I was with I-Man. It is not only intelligent but also very entertaining. Consider Hobbes & Darien. When first we meet their characters, we think "These guys are going to kill each other!" by the end of the third episode you think, "I wish I had a friendship like those guys have."
The actors work so well off of each other, you can really believe that what you're seeing is real.
With the entertaining, you also get the heart-warming. Darien's struggle with the loss of his brother, for example. Check out the episodes "Johnny Apocalypse," and "Ralph," for some of the more touching stories.
Besides the excellent writing, stellar cast (Brandy Ledford not included, though you get to like her character but never to love her as you do Hobbes or Darien), great chemistry and a generally great show, you also have the more aesthetic pleasures. You have the lovely Misses Kenney and Ledford, and the gorgeous Misters Ventresca & Ben-Victor (If you like bald men, Ben-Victor is your man!). Plus the more humorously aesthetic "Eberts" and "Borden (a.k.a. "The Fat Man")."
Definitely check this show out. It's running on syndication and every Friday at 5/4c on Sci-Fi.
~J.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

You Gotta Love This!!, 11 January 2006
Author: jimcamue from utrecht
The Invisible man is a show everybody s gotta love! It reminds me of the old school 80's series(a-team,airwolf,knightrider) The special effects are small but very effective!! but what is most important is the fun they had shooting this series. It really shows! the entire cast fit perfect in there roles and it looks like they can do whatever they want!! especially Paul Ben Victor and Vincent Ventresca. Ventresca really shines in this one! for me its unbelievable that an actor with so much sarcasm is his acting style Doesn't get a shot in a big movie (mr Tarantino this was the show you should have directed! instead of that major boring grave danger(c.s.i)) Get this show if you can. well worth it!!!
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