No One is a play about Marvel who meets an invisible man named Griffin. What Marvel doesn't know is that his encounter with Griffin will turn his life upside down.

At the start of the performance, we are in several interrogation rooms at the police station. They are trying to solve a murder case about a young woman called Mia. After that, they rewind and we join a fantastic story with humor, action and awesome choreography. Some of the scenes are staged very well with lighting, slow motion and live mixed music.

The play also leaves room for interpretation, even though there is an obvious plot and a common thread running through the story, there are several deep meanings you can read into it. Themes such as loneliness and truth emerge strongly in Griffin's story. He has no friends other than Marvel, and can't make any others because he's invisible. In the show, he falls in love with Mia, but he knows he can't be with her because he's invisible, and there's a lot of drama because of that. Griffin lives on the streets, he was thrown out of his previous home and now lives by stealing food from others. He's a good man but has gotten himself into a lot of trouble and it's easy to misunderstand his actions at times which leads some of the other characters into trouble.

We liked it because it had a clear storyline and effects we've never seen before, which helped to keep it exciting throughout the performance. Everyone was good at never looking directly at the invisible man, but looking in the direction of where they thought he was in the room.

Most, if not all, of the actors played multiple roles and changed quickly. It was easy to understand who was who, and even if it was the same actor, it didn't matter because there was a clear distinction between the different characters.

We think that No one is an exciting and fun show, especially for everyone aged 13 and up. The show is probably also exciting for younger people, but it can be difficult for them to understand the plot and jokes.

 The exciting story and the cool action scenes mixed with the possibility of interpretation make the show one of the coolest, perhaps the coolest, show we've ever seen.

Written by Julia, Thormod, Vera and Gaia