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View Full Version : REVIEW - The Eye [2002]


JohnShaft
12-07-2002, 07:00 PM
Asian horror cinema seems all the rage at the moment. Besides the Ring (recently remade by Hollywood) and it's sequel and prequel, there has been a veritable wave of lesser known Asian horror flooding the market.
The rights to this film have already been bought out by Tom Cruise's production company (ugh!) so if this got the Hollywood treatment sometime soon I wouldn't bat an eyelid (sorry).
Just please, no Mr Cruise.

The Eye (Jian Gui) is the vision of Hong Kong film directors The Pang Brothers (Danny and Oxide) makers of stylish gangster pic Bangkok Dangerous. A film that showcased the considerable visual and auditory talents of the Brothers Pang. They are still relative newcomers on the scene though, and have perhaps stalled somewhat since BK's release three years ago.
'The Eye' was directed, edited and written by them both while Oxide was also responsible for the excellent sound throughout.
Brother teams in film also follows the recent trend spearheaded by the Wachowski's, Coen's and Hughes'. So with the double dipper of Asian horror, and brothers at the helm, you could bet the farm on it being good. Right?

Lee won a Golden Horse Award for Best Actress for 'The Eye'
The film begins with the opening shot of a young blind woman walking the city streets debating the beauty of the world despite it's ugliness. Cut to the opening titles and the first evidence of the Pang brothers visual style.
What seems essentially a cheap as hell idea - unseen hands making imprints from the other side of a white rubber sheet - is suprisingly effective. The impression is one of a ghostly presence trying to break through into our world.

Angelica Lee is the main character, Mun, a woman blind since the age of two, undergoing an operation to restore her lost sight. The operation at first appears to be a complete success but the gift of Mun's eyesight gradually turns out to be somewhat of a poisoned chalice. Though her vision is blurred she notices dark shapes moving about that others seem oblivious too. Inside of 15 minutes you get a great example of what 'The Eye' has in store for you. And you also realise which recent Hollywood Blockbuster that it bears a striking resemblance too, 'The Sixth Sense'.
It would be difficult to think of a harder act to follow from recent years but perhaps thankfully 'The Eye' doesn't take quite the same route. Whereas T6S invested a lot of energy in fleshing out the two main characters Eye puts it's effort more into the supernatural.

Mun's character is barely explored, which wouldn't be such a bad thing if the time, sans-ghosts, was taken up by something else, like for example an involving story. Sadly the storyline can be sieved down to about three events.
Lee herself though displays an effective performance, particularly when confronted by the spirits, but can only lend so much emotional weight to the character given the script.

It is because of this lack of drama that you are reduced to waiting for the next appearance of the undead. Thankfully when the undead spirits do appear the Pang brothers show their true flair on the screen:
From the look - At first the spirits are seen in the blur of Mung's weak eyesight, and later as partly insubstantial.
To the sound - Unearthly, disembodied voices, moans and shrieks backed by violent, thudding, heartbeat-like percussion and piercing strings.
The film does a fantastic job of making the appearance of the ghosts feel truly tense and creepy. *This* is where the film is at it's strongest, and much more effective than the Sixth Sense, for my money.
Particular mention must go to Oxide Pang's use of sound throughout. Ironically in a film about sight it is the use of sound that catches "the eye" and heightens the tension.
Each supernatural appearance is also markedly different from the proceeding ones, so it never becomes a case of here we go again. More a case of leaving you wondering what the next one will be like...

If I was to say one thing that was missing from The Eye (besides the sparse plotting and character development!) it would be that there is not enough drama milked from Mun's situation. What if, for instance, because she can see the undead spirits and they can see her, they can *hurt* her. In actuality, though Mun may be scared to death frequently, it soon becomes apparent she is in no physical danger. Shame...
And this is what stops The Eye from becoming a true balls-to-the-wall horror film, leaving it falling somewhere between that and the Sixth Sense.

While I was not fully satisfied with 'The Eye' it remains a worthwhile and memorable film, and should be commended for commiting to celluloid some of the creepiest ghosts this side of the afterlife. The Orient without doubt has a far richer tradition of ghosts than the West, and the Pang brothers wring every ounce of life out of it.

For those that like dark (Oriental) ghost stories 'The Eye' is a film that just has to be experienced...

42nd Street Freak
01-08-2003, 03:05 PM
This had some great moments (and a nice DTS soundtrack) but also thought it was overrated.

**SPOILERS**

We sadly never learn anything much about the ghosts...the full story of the Child is rather confused. He threw himself out of a window because he lost his report card and no one would beleive him..Hmmmm..Seems a bit of an excessive idea!
And why was he saying he was hungry and eating a candle?

The ghosts of the lady and son at the food bar is also left dangling. Why the bizarre (and effectively freaky) tongue waving? Why can the waitress see the ghosts?

The lift ghost..was he mudered..a fall..what punched in his face?
why was the ghost at the writing school so angry..

It would have been nice to have some backstory on the ghosts she at least met in her apartment building.

The Taoist Priest was also a strangely mysterious and unexplained character..he's filmed like he's going to have some important part to play, but he appears and then finally vanishes with no explanations.
And why is the Grandma and Muns Sister so secretive about the whole thing?

And the supposed revelation about what they have to do to give the Donor girl piece, because she is cursed to repeat her suicide..was already given away by the Priest when he talks about the Boy who jumped to his death, cursed to repeat it over and over.

Also the 'Dead Collectors'were somehow not as creepy as they should have been..they looked more like those annoying Mimes you used to get in parks!

And the basic idea is really just a retread of 'The 6th Sense' and 'Ghost', with the figures that come to collect the Souls.

PLUS POINTS: Lots of em! DTS soundtrack..good, bombastic stuff and the music and sound effects are great.
Some excellent CGI as well....I agree the leaping ghost at the writing class is a superbly executed effect.
The burning bodies at the end (especially the man who is still alive and burning) were genuinely unnerving and even sad...a still photo of them would look like many of the war photos you see of corpses.
The ghost sequences were superbly planned and executed. The old woman in the Hospital delivered a nice jump when she whizzed around Num.
Their faces were also good..all grey and, er..well...deathly!
The elevator ghost was highly memorable, as was that creepy waving tongue on the food bar ghost.

The end, although I think we all knew the tanker would explode, was also powerful...the carnage was brutal and the explosions perfectly created....the arrival of the legion of 'Soul Collectors' was highly unnerving...the finale itself was a perfect mix of sadness and hope.

Good stuff..but some big plot faults.

JohnShaft
01-08-2003, 03:49 PM
The Eye I have to say I was pretty impressed with. As a self contained film it didn't blow me away but I think some parts of it were done really well.

I can understand some of your points though.

** SPOILERS **

I think the main reason we learn little or nothing about the ghosts is so that they remain distant and therefore more disturbing. If we had come to know them then it may have taken away some of their effect.
The child throwing himself out of the window does seem a little excessive, but then I don't know, maybe in Hong Kong that's a big deal!
Maybe he was hungry because being dead he couldn't eat. So he 'lives' day to day without any food, when we are all programmed from birth to near constantly desire food. The hunger aspect also cropped up once more as you mentioned with the lady at the food bar, so I guess they are making a point about the ghosts hunger.
Perhaps it echoes an emotional/spiritual hunger which they cannot satisfy as they trapped in their individual cycles.

The freaky tongue waving I think was just for effect. Ghosts in Eastern mythology are often seen as being human but with some bizarre differences. It certainly looked disturbing as hell!

I agree on the woman in the restaurant (who could see the ghosts) though. If I was Mun and thinking I was going crazy seeing these bizarre (dead?) figures I sure as hell would have chased after her shouting
"You can see them too?!!? I thought I was going mad!!!"
It just didn't make sense that Mun did not follow this up.

Her Grandma and Mun's sister where strange characters, I couldn't really get a handle on them. I think that was the really big failing of the film, you never got to understand ANY of the characters, not even Mun!!

I still think it would have been a little more interesting if the ghosts had been able to hurt her too. If she was in fear for her life it would have heightened the tension considerably. Imagine an enemy who can hurt you, but who you cannot touch! That would be a truly terrifying situation.

I do like The Eye, I just echo your thoughts that it's ultimately a case of what the film COULD have been rather than what it is...

JohnnyAlucard
02-01-2003, 04:02 PM
Well I was persuded by Mr John Shaft to buy this film on a recent trip to the Boro who said it was simply the best film of all time! Hehe only jokin John!

Seriously though, Mr Shaft has sang this films praises so I though it was time to check it out.

Now 'The Sixth Sense' is one of my favorite films of all time and rightly or wrongly I was always going to compare 'The Eye' to this film, being that they are very similar.

**SPOILERS**

Overall I will say that I was slightly dissapointed with the film in the sense that I didn't find it as atmospheric or scary as SS. I agreee with the above comments about not finding enough information about the ghosts. i.e the boy who has lost his report card!

The best 'ghostly moments' for me are in the hospital scene where the old lady seems to have gone then suddenly appears again. (Made me jump even though I had caught a preview on Shafts PC), and the ghost that rushes at Mun in the caligraphy class. The ending with the burnt bodies was also very well filmed.

All in all though, I was expecting scarier ghosts. I had been told that visually, the ghosts were far superior to the ones in the SS. I was expecting terrifying looking aparitions but didn't get them (apart from the aformentioned rushing ghost at the class, which was very impressive). Maybe I went into the film expecting too much, which I was warned about!

All in all I don't think its a bad film by any means, it held my attention certainly but I would take SS over it every time!

JohnShaft
02-01-2003, 04:51 PM
I told you about not going into the film (hell ANY film) expecting too much!! :D

It's a while since I've seen SS but surely the ghost appearances in The Eye are way more atmospheric and creepy?!

Sadly it's the rest of the film that lets it down. The story isn't a patch on SS and can be basically boiled down to a couple of ideas as I said in my review. There is no character exploration either.
I really did think the ghosts made up for a lot though.

*** SPOILERS ***
The Calligraphy ghost I thought was good, but it was over too quickly for me.
The Lift (elevator to you Yanks!) ghost was much creepier. It build up a sense of approaching dread superbly with the slow moving (but inexorable) ghost and the crescendo of drums. I great case of "will she get out of the lift before it gets to her". Which brings up my point that I think The Eye would have been a much more effective horror film if Mun had suffered physical hurt from the ghosts.
The old woman in the hospital I thought was the perfect introduction. It was more a case of suggestion and your imagination filling in the blanks.
And the restaurant scene (with the woman with the long tongue) worked well and really conjured up images of Eastern hells and eternal torment.

Personally I didn't really want to know much about the ghosts. It isn't really about them, and as I've said, to explain their story would have made them *less* not more scary.

And as for you expecting terryifying looking appartions I really thought they were done as well as I can conceive of. They weren't just ordinary looking transparent Western ghosts. Each one had it's own perculiar appearance (except maybe the boy) to individualise it. Their deaths (and lives) affected how they manifested.
What were you expecting? I'd be interested if anyone has any thoughts on what they think are the most effective ghosts in cinema history.

Once more I think my point should be writ large
Don't go into ANY film expecting TOO much! :P

Maybe all is not lost if you're dissapointed though. Take it back, do a bit of blagging, and exchange it for Dark City! ;)

JohnnyAlucard
02-01-2003, 05:47 PM
:D :D hehe I *do* think it's a good film. I certainly won't be taking it back as its a worthy addition to any horror collection.

I guess I maybe was expecting 'zombie' like ghosts, but thinking about this that would have taken away from the atmosphere. And I do think the film has atmosphere, just not as much as SS.

I think I will watch it again. Will probably see it from a different perspective
:D

JohnShaft
02-01-2003, 06:05 PM
:lol:
Don't let me persuade you!
I do think it is a film that will hold up well on repeat viewings though.
I've watched the individual ghost sequences a number of times and, despite the fact that the initial "what the hell's going to happen here?" factor is gone they are still highly effective.

I defintely learnt to appreciate the film more after seeing Dark Water. I realised then how good a job they had done with the supernatural side. Even if they had come up short everywhere else. Thinking about it though, the effort they put into the ghosts and atmosphere, may be why the rest of it is lacking...

JohnnyAlucard
02-05-2003, 02:06 PM
I definatley don't need to be persueded to watch it again I want to watch it again!

I like the film, but I like SS better :)


Later that night......

Have just watched the film a second time. I definatley found the ghosts sequences to be much better second time around! I think the elevator one is particularly effective.

Overall I'll take SS over The Eye but watching a second time the film has definatley grown on me :D

I think you should borrow SS off me and watch it again Shafty :D