Mr. Superinvisible (1970) Poster

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4/10
Mr Superinvisible - the second film I saw at the ABC Cheltenham
matthew-hyatt31 January 2011
I remember seeing Mr Superinvisible at the old ABC in Cheltenham in Spring/Summer 1975, near Royal Well Bus Station (which sadly closed in the early 1980's). It was partnered with another sci-fi film with space rockets and a fiery red planet - one of the rockets crashed on the planet's surface and was swallowed up. Sadly, I cannot remember the second film's title - does anyone else remember this film? Approaching eight years old, I enjoyed watching Mr Superinvisible, as well as the other film, but it probably does not stand the test of time nowadays. Don't know if I want to see it again - but I'd certainly like to see the other film again, if only I could remember the title.
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"How could I possibly tell him . . . I'm invisible!"
ShellyShock15 October 2002
Painfully Italian with many wacky sound effects and small automobiles, Mr. Superinvisible is one of the best schlocky import movies I have ever seen. The music is obnoxiously swinging and the sets are comprised of horrible Mod Italian 1960's décor with pseudo-science minimalism. It all ads to the charm! The plot involves exploding eggs, Indian invisibility potion, really simple special effects and multiple defects for the viewer's enjoyment. This is one of the best movies to make fun of or watch under varying states of sobriety. One can never go wrong when a movie includes an invisible monkey.
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2/10
No no no more Dean Jones
BandSAboutMovies4 May 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Antonio Margheriti - the man who directed And God Said to Cain and Yor: Hunter from the Future - also made a Dean Jones Invisible Man movie, which blows what's left of my mind. Want me to go even further? This was released in U. S. theaters by K-Tel.

Yes, it's a Disney superhero movie, basically, but made in Italian and therefore things like an actor doing Peter Lorre for 1970s kids years past that being something they'd get it is exactly what I expect. And yes, that actor doing it is Luciano Pigozzi, Pag from Yor.

K-Tel started playing this in U. S. theaters in 1973 and kept pushing it past 1975 in matinees that offered the chance to win the dog - a stuffed one - if you attended. I can't even imagine how much 1973 parents hated their kids to drop them off and be assaulted by this.

Jones is Peter Denwell, trying to solve the mystery of why people get a cold, when his research is stolen and he must use an Indian formula to turn invisible. There are also moments where this formula stops working and Jones is naked. This is, again, a movie for children.

The same year Jones' co-star Ingeborg Schöner made this, she'd also be in Mark of the Devil, which is really the kind of juxtaposition I can get behind.
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2/10
Margheriti's worst?
Leofwine_draca4 November 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I'm a big fan of director Antonio Margheriti, he's made some of my favourite cult Italian action films, but MR. SUPERINVISIBLE has to be one of his poorest works. It's a mindless sci-fi comedy in the Disney mould, as mild-mannered Dean Jones accidentally takes an invisibility serum and ends up being chased by a gang of crooks who want the formula for themselves. I love the invisibility genre but this is a wasted premise with tired, excruciating gags and mugging actors. Even a canny dog in the cast can't make up for the stupidity of the script and story.
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8/10
Slapstick fun, Italian style
inkblot1117 February 2015
Peter (Dean Jones)is the proverbial absent minded professor. In his lab, he is working on a cure for the common cold and he believes he is close to discovery. Naturally, others want such a formula and will try to steal it. Also, the building where Peter works is owned by a stuffy businessman who just happens to have one beautiful girlfriend. In the elevator, Peter makes known his admiration for this lady and she smiles. Perhaps, there is hope. Yet, things go awry. The formula might cure the cold but it also renders the "taker" invisible. Accidentally, Peter drinks it and must rely on his faithful dog to help him go places. This creates some funny happenings as police believe the dog is driving the car! Sensing an opportunity, Peter also makes havoc in a restaurant where Mr. Stuffy has taken Miss Beautiful. This includes spilled beverages, falls off chairs and so on. Will Peter find an antidote, become wealthy, and get the girl? You bet! This Italian film features one American actor, Jones, surrounded by Europeans. Even so, it is in English, making it fun for USA audiences as well as those the world over. After all, humor and plenty of it is what all viewers love. Candidly, the film does look like one from the seventies, with costumes and sets from the capabilities of the times. But, just as silent films are still enjoyed, this one will be entertaining in a classical way. Fans of Jones and anyone who wants to get some belly laughs will be smart to find Mr. Superinvisible wherever possible.
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Should have disappeared before being released
CommandoCody5 January 2003
If 500 monkeys typed on 500 typewriters for 500 years one of them might produce Hamlet. In two weeks, 12 of them would produce Mr. Superinvisible. This was a European attempt to duplicate Disney's successful family comedy format. They thought that by placing Dean Jones, a veteran of Disney films, in a starring role combined with the gimmick of invisibility they would produce a hit. Unfortunately, they were WRONG. Instead, they produced an idiotic, mind-numbing waste of time. Jones plays a scientist who receives a mysterious potion in the mail that bestows temporary invisibility upon whomever drinks it. When a gang of inept criminals learn of Jones' invisibility serum, naturally they go after him. There's a ridiculous chase scene and the climax is almost unbearably silly. Bad writing and overacting plague the film. It's the type of movie that gives the invisible man genre a bad name.
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