The Eye Movie Review
The Eye Review
"The Eye" Overview

Rating: NR
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Oxide Pang Chun,Danny PangProducer : Peter Chan,Lawrence Cheng
Screenwiter : Jo Jo Yuet-chun Hui,Oxide Pang Chun,Danny Pang
Starring : Angelica Lee,Lawrence Chou,Chutcha Rujinanon,Yut Lai So,Candy Lo,Yin Ping Ko,Pierre Png,Edmund Chen
Of all the horror films that spring to mind while watching the Pang brothers’
stylish if only sporadically frightening The Eye, none is more amusing than
Body Parts. That moronic vehicle for B-movie heartthrob Jeff Fahey concerned a
man whose decapitated arm is replaced by the appendage of a serial killer on
death row, and which eventually turns out to still be controlled by said
killer, who wants his arm back! It was one of the 1990s' most inane “it’s so
awful that it’s come back around to being good again” guilty pleasures, and
features a truly inspired performance by Fahey’s arm, which flails about wildly
under the possessed guidance of its original owner. Even in some quarters
today, unexpectedly smacking someone next to you can easily be explained by the
simple phrase, “Sorry, it was my serial killer arm.”
But I digress. Like Fahey’s insipidly entertaining film, The Eye is about
transplanted body parts that can’t seem to shake the influence of their former
hosts. Mun (Angelica Lee) has been blind since the age of two, but a recent
cornea transplant has miraculously given her the gift of sight. The only
problem is that, along with sight, Mun seems to have gained a “second sight” as
well: She can see sinewy, indistinct figures (apparently death’s bureaucratic
minions) taking people away right before they die, and even sees a mysterious
stranger’s face when she looks in the mirror. This prescience is confounding
and terrifying for Mun, and she seeks the counsel of a psychotherapist named
Dr. Wah (Lawrence Chou) to help her escape this terrible curse. In typical
ghost story fashion, what both learn is that these spirits are hanging around
their former haunts because they have unfinished business in the real world,
and that it’s up to Mun to help them complete their last earthly tasks and send
them safely on their way to happy dead-person land.
Visually, the Pang brothers’ (Bangkok Dangerous) latest is both sleekly ominous
and hopelessly derivative, with every ghoul a mere rehash of The Sixth Sense’s
wandering dead and everything else – the film’s bland female heroine and
useless male sidekick, washed-out steel grey color palette, jarring musical
cues, and hopelessly familiar story involving a dead witch whose spirit
continues to haunt the living – blatantly lifted from Ringu (remade for U.S.
audiences last year as The Ring). But if the film’s lack of originality is its
most problematic aspect, The Eye’s ultimate failure is simply a dearth of
genuinely startling moments. Edited with razor-sharp precision, the film
elicits most of its scares from delightfully sudden and discomforting changes
in perspective, and a few of the ghosts – most notably one haunting the
calligraphy school Mun attends – manage to provide a jolt. Yet it’s
disappointing to find the film’s most deliciously terrifying surprise occurs
during the film’s opening credits.
One could make the case that Mun’s plight reveals the futility (or at least
imperfection) of sight, and the Pang Brothers do seem interested in rebuking
the notion that physical (or extrasensory) sight somehow grants people greater
knowledge of, or control over, the world around them. With a film like The Eye,
however, the primary objective is to terrify the pants off of moviegoers as
frequently as possible, and, despite a few bone-rattling shocks, those looking
for a really good ocular-themed scare are still better off picking up a copy of
Luis Buñuel’s surrealist masterpiece Un Chien Andalou.
Aka Jian gui.
Reviewer: Nicholas Schager



