Development In March 2004,
Warner Bros. Pictures hired
David Kajganich to write a script that would serve as a remake of the 1956 science fiction film
Invasion of the Body Snatchers. In July 2005,
Oliver Hirschbiegel was attached to direct, with production to begin in
Edgemere, Maryland. The following August, Nicole Kidman was cast to star in the film, then titled
Invasion, receiving a salary of close to $17 million.
Invasion was based on the script by Kajganich, originally intended as a remake of
Invasion of the Body Snatchers, but Kajganich crafted a different enough story for the studio to see the project as an original conception. Despite this, the end credits of the film still state "Based on the novel
The Body Snatchers by Jack Finney". Kajganich described the story to reflect contemporary times, saying, "You just have to look around our world today to see that power inspires nothing more than the desire to retain it and to eliminate anything that threatens it." The screenwriter said that the story was set in Washington, D.C. to reflect the theme. In August, Daniel Craig was cast opposite Kidman in the lead. The film, whose original title
Invasion of the Body Snatchers was shortened to
Invasion due to Kajganich's different concept, was changed once more to
The Visiting so it would not be confused with
ABC's TV series
Invasion. In October 2006, the title was changed from
The Visiting to
The Invasion, due to the cancellation of the ABC TV series.
Filming Filming began on September 26, 2005, in
Baltimore and lasted 45 days. Filming also took place in Washington, D.C., including in the
Cleveland Park Metro station, outside the
Foggy Bottom–GWU Metro station, and in
Dupont Circle. The film had minimal visual effects, with no need for
greenscreen work. Instead, the director shot from odd camera angles and claustrophobic spaces to increase tension in the film.
Re-shoots Warner Bros. was unhappy with Hirschbiegel's results and hired
The Wachowskis to rewrite the film and assist with additional shooting. The studio later hired director
James McTeigue to perform re-shoots that would cost $10 million, After 13 months of inactivity, re-shoots took place in January 2007 to increase action scenes and add a
twist ending. The re-shoot lasted for 17 days in Los Angeles. Kidman broke several ribs, but she was able to get back to work soon after being hospitalized.
Musical score In May 2007, composer
John Ottman recorded the musical score for
The Invasion, using heavy synthesizers combined with a 77-piece orchestra intended to create "otherworldly foreboding and tension". The music was also designed to have an
avant-garde postmodern style, with atmospheric and thrilling action elements. ==Promotion==