A blind girl gets a cornea transplant so that she will be able to see again. She gets more than she bargained for upon realizing she can also see ghosts.A blind girl gets a cornea transplant so that she will be able to see again. She gets more than she bargained for upon realizing she can also see ghosts.A blind girl gets a cornea transplant so that she will be able to see again. She gets more than she bargained for upon realizing she can also see ghosts.
- Awards
- 9 wins & 8 nominations
Angelica Lee
- Wong Kar Mun
- (as Lee Sin-Je)
Mylio Lau
- Wah's Secretary
- (as Miyuki Lau)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe beginning (the operation for a blind girl to see again) and the end of the film are based on true stories the Pang brothers read about in the news.
- GoofsWhile playing the violin solo, Mun's fingers on her left hand never move.
- Quotes
Wong Kar Mun: Are you okay, madam?
Old Lady in the Hospital: I'm freezing...
- Crazy creditsThe credits at the beginning of the film first appear as braile.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Eye 3 (2005)
Featured review
Even the website of this movie gave me the creeps. And it turned out to be one of the scariest movies I've seen in a while.
We follow the touching story of a young Hong Kong girl, blind from her earliest years, who undergoes a cornea transplant. After softening us up with lots of nice sentiment, the horror kicks her new found sight brings its own macabre rewards. Snappy editing and a well-timed score heighten the horrors that pack nanchuka punches to the guts. About a third of the audience was cowering behind their hands for the last half. In an age when American horror flicks are starting to look weary from over-use of CGI special effects or are toned down by self-censorship to reach a wider audience, The Eye comes in as a deftly woven real cardiac-stimulation shocker.
Sadly, the fact that it is subtitled limits the potential audience as many people simply refuse to go and see foreign language films until they have been genuinely moved or terrified by one. If you like horror movies and want to experiment, this is a good chance, and one of the best in the genre since the little shown Audition earlier this year.
We follow the touching story of a young Hong Kong girl, blind from her earliest years, who undergoes a cornea transplant. After softening us up with lots of nice sentiment, the horror kicks her new found sight brings its own macabre rewards. Snappy editing and a well-timed score heighten the horrors that pack nanchuka punches to the guts. About a third of the audience was cowering behind their hands for the last half. In an age when American horror flicks are starting to look weary from over-use of CGI special effects or are toned down by self-censorship to reach a wider audience, The Eye comes in as a deftly woven real cardiac-stimulation shocker.
Sadly, the fact that it is subtitled limits the potential audience as many people simply refuse to go and see foreign language films until they have been genuinely moved or terrified by one. If you like horror movies and want to experiment, this is a good chance, and one of the best in the genre since the little shown Audition earlier this year.
- Chris_Docker
- Nov 2, 2002
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Con Mắt Âm Dương
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- SGD 4,500,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $512,049
- Gross worldwide
- $12,165,016
- Runtime1 hour 39 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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