Unbreakable (2000)

Movie · 2000 · Thriller, Drama, Mystery · 1h 46m · PG-13 · English

Curator score: 5.5/10 (959.6K ratings)

Are you ready for the truth?

Overview

An ordinary man makes an extraordinary discovery when a train accident leaves his fellow passengers dead — and him unscathed. The answer to this mystery could lie with the mysterious Elijah Price, a man who suffers from a disease that renders his bones as fragile as glass.

Ratings

Director

M. Night Shyamalan

Production

Barry Mendel Productions, Blinding Edge Pictures, Touchstone Pictures

Cast

Bruce Willis, Samuel L. Jackson, Robin Wright, Spencer Treat Clark, Charlayne Woodard, Eamonn Walker, Leslie Stefanson, Johnny Hiram Jamison, Michaelia Carroll, Bostin Christopher, Elizabeth Lawrence, Davis Duffield, Laura Regan, Chance Kelly, Michael Kelly, Firdous Bamji, Johanna Day, James Handy, Sally Parrish, Richard Council

Curator Review

Verdict

A moody, unusually restrained superhero origin story that plays like a psychological thriller first and a comic-book movie second. Its slow-burn mystery, visual symbolism, and quiet emotional stakes make it a standout for viewers who like genre films with an auteur’s touch.

Best for

  • fans of twisty, atmospheric thrillers
  • viewers interested in deconstructed superhero stories
  • people who like character-driven mystery dramas
  • audiences who enjoy symbolic, formally precise filmmaking

Skip if

  • you want fast-paced action or constant spectacle
  • you dislike deliberate, minimal dialogue-driven storytelling
  • you prefer mysteries that explain everything plainly
  • you are not in the mood for a somber, brooding tone

Overview

Unbreakable is one of the most distinctive mainstream thrillers of its era: a superhero story stripped of spectacle and rebuilt as a hushed, ominous character study. It turns ordinary spaces into places of dread and revelation, using color, framing, and repetition to suggest that destiny may be hiding in plain sight.

Worth noting

What makes it endure is how seriously it takes its own mythology. The film is less interested in powers than in identity, purpose, and the fragile line between belief and delusion. Bruce Willis plays the central mystery with a calm, almost haunted stillness, while Samuel L. Jackson gives the film its intellectual and emotional voltage.

Bottom line

It’s not a crowd-pleasing genre exercise in the usual sense; it’s patient, controlled, and sometimes deliberately withholding. But for viewers who respond to atmosphere, symbolism, and the idea of a comic book movie as a modern myth, it remains one of the most rewarding examples of the form.

Top Letterboxd reviews

Matt Singer (4★) · 2146 likes

So thematically on point most of the shots of Bruce Willis are long unbroken takes.

SilentDawn (5★) · 1863 likes

100 Watching this for the umpteenth viewing, I couldn't help but focus on how every scene, set-up, narrative development, choice of color and mood and music, feels fresh. Even the most rudimentary moments are captured by M. Night Shyamalan's determination of form. Just take a look at the opening, with the birth of Mr. Glass, as Shyamalan captures the disorientation and confusion with the help of two mirrors and a floaty handheld long-take. Following that, the camera moving back and… more

Taylor Williams (5★) · 1787 likes

I love how uninterested this film is in keeping its symbolism subliminal. Shoot Glass through glass in every scene, give the everyday superhero an everyday uniform with a big SECURITY logo on the back, make it a poncho to block water after establishing his weakness as water, compose your shot like a comic panel and deliver a line like “life doesn’t have to fit into little boxes that were drawn for it” before moving the camera in a way that… more I love how uninterested this film is in keeping its symbolism subliminal. Shoot Glass through glass in every scene, give the everyday superhero an everyday uniform with a big SECURITY logo on the back, make it a poncho to block water after establishing his weakness as water, compose your shot like a comic panel and deliver a line like “life doesn’t have to fit into little boxes that were drawn for it” before moving the camera in a way that… more

˗ˏˋ suspirliam ˊˎ˗ (3.5★) · 1764 likes

"not all heroes wear capes" you're right, fashion legend david dunn wears a Poncho™️

liam f (3.5★) · 1558 likes

if Bruce Willis is unbreakable in this film, would it mean that if he were to die, he would, in fact, die hard?

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Topics

psychological thriller, superhero deconstruction, slow burn, atmospheric, symbolic imagery, early 2000s, mystery drama, brooding tone, comic-book myth, auteur cinema

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