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The Eye

Original title: Gin gwai
  • 2002
  • R
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
31K
YOUR RATING
The Eye (2002)
Home Video Trailer from Palm Pictures
Play trailer1:48
2 Videos
22 Photos
Body HorrorSupernatural HorrorHorrorMysteryThriller

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.

  • Directors
    • Danny Pang
    • Oxide Chun Pang
  • Writers
    • Yuet-Jan Hui
    • Danny Pang
    • Oxide Chun Pang
  • Stars
    • Angelica Lee
    • Chutcha Rujinanon
    • Lawrence Chou
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    31K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Danny Pang
      • Oxide Chun Pang
    • Writers
      • Yuet-Jan Hui
      • Danny Pang
      • Oxide Chun Pang
    • Stars
      • Angelica Lee
      • Chutcha Rujinanon
      • Lawrence Chou
    • 238User reviews
    • 94Critic reviews
    • 66Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 9 wins & 8 nominations total

    Videos2

    The Eye
    Trailer 1:48
    The Eye
    The Eye
    Trailer 1:48
    The Eye
    The Eye
    Trailer 1:48
    The Eye

    Photos22

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    Top cast43

    Edit
    Angelica Lee
    Angelica Lee
    • Wong Kar Mun
    • (as Lee Sin-Je)
    Chutcha Rujinanon
    • Ling
    Lawrence Chou
    • Dr. Wah
    Jinda Duangtoy
    • Old Lady in the Hospital
    Yut Lai So
    • Yingying
    Candy Lo
    Candy Lo
    • Yee (Mun's Sister)
    Edmund Chen
    Edmund Chen
    • Dr. Lo
    Yin Ping Ko
    • Mun's grandmother
    Wisarup Annuar
    • Dark Figure
    Yuet Siu Wong
    • Ghost in the Hospital
    Wing-Wai Chin
    Wing-Wai Chin
    • Hospital Caretaker
    Tao Leung
    • Ghost on the Highway
    Mylio Lau
    • Wah's Secretary
    • (as Miyuki Lau)
    Ousinthorn Chotphan
    • Mun as a Little Girl
    Dampongongtrakul Sawadee
    • Yee as a Little Girl
    Ming Poon
    • Boy with Cap
    Ben Yuen
    Ben Yuen
    • Mr. Ching
    Wasarat Thrasarchoti
    • Mr. Ching's Assistant
    • Directors
      • Danny Pang
      • Oxide Chun Pang
    • Writers
      • Yuet-Jan Hui
      • Danny Pang
      • Oxide Chun Pang
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews238

    6.630.7K
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    Featured reviews

    8Chris_Docker

    One of the year's best horror movies, though the subtitles will sadly put many people off

    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.
    SteveRaccoon

    Another Excellent Alternative to Mainstream Cinema

    There are already several comments left, but what the hey, I liked this movie and I'm gonna have my 10p worth.

    Before I mention the movie itself, I'd better comment on modern Asian movies that reach Western shores, and the fact that they have different pacing, priorities and styles to what you would see at the cinema. The fact that a lot of people don't 'get' the parts of this film which seem to have no relevance is probably as much due to the difference in culture more than any wrongdoing on the production team's behalf. The same can be said for a lot of Hong Kong comedies, the 'humour' which would probably illicit a wry laugh back home flies miles over everybody else's head.

    In that sort of circumstance, I've developed a good trick, I switch-off trying to figure out what all these little hints and gestures mean and concentrate on the character interactions and the scares. I've had a lot of practice, Western cinema in recent years has been guilty of 'rambling', and they've got no such excuse as 'cultural differences' ;)

    Anyway, the movie! (good grief!), the plot's already been explained and probed, so I won't go into that. What this film has is a constant 'pressure', a claustrophobic atmosphere which persists regardless of the location. Clever camera work afoot! The palpable distance which the heroine feels from her family and the people around her (perhaps a symptom of not being able to communicate non-verbally with them so long? Perhaps not, but it's there) is always there too. You get the impression that she could be surrounded by a crowd and still walk alone from one side of a city to the other.

    The smaller roles are played out very nicely, great acting considering the film concentrates almost solely on the two main characters.

    The ending is a little bit of a let-down, predictable and not entirely 'working'. But, BUT, it isn't a catastrophe which ruins the film, which I'm sure you'll know what I mean. The ending of a film is what you're left with when you switch off the TV, and if it's bad, then so is the film.

    This movie is the only one in recent years which actually gave me a start, and that's something. Real horror isn't about dripping guts and hooks with heads on them, it's about the unexpected, it's about being confronted with something terrifying, something which makes you wish the character was elsewhere. In order to achieve that, you need to give a damn about the character in the first place, which is where 90% of cheap horrors fall down. Not here, the characters are likable and have a little childlike innocence about them, you want to get in there and slap the more unpleasant visitors :P

    All in all, I very much enjoyed watching this film, and intend to buy it when I find it for a pittance (almost all DVDs can be found for the right price at one time or another, shop around and ask people where they get their bargains). I would heartily recommend renting before buying, however. As several have mentioned already, there are several elements of this film which seem to have been deliberately copied from recent films such as Sixth Sense. If that prospect leaves a sour taste, I'd look elsewhere, but everyone else who hasn't had enough of all that yet should certainly have a look :D

    Thanks for reading.
    6FilmOtaku

    Not so much a Scare Fest than a decent thriller

    About three months ago, I was paging through cable and found a film that looked intriguing. After watching for about five minutes I had the pants scared off of me, so, being the complete wuss I am, I turned it off. Curiosity made me want to go back to it, of course, so about twenty minutes later I got up the guts to turn it back on. After about two minutes, I was full on terrified, and turned it off for good. I told some friends about this film, and all seemed intrigued, mainly because of the scare factor, so this weekend we got around to finally watching it. That movie of course, was the Pang Brothers' "The Eye", a film that ended up being something completely different than what I was expecting.

    In "The Eye", Wong Kar Mun (Lee) is a young blind woman who gets a corneal transplant. Soon after her operation, as her eyes are adjusting, she begins to see some pretty scary images; shadowy black figures hanging around people who later die, dead people themselves, and her room keeps doing a pesky trick where it changes on her as she's looking at it, furniture and all. Her doctor, Dr. Lo (a really young looking Edmund Chen) doesn't believe her at first, but then realizes that there may be some merit to her claims, so they go in search of the donor in order to find out what history her eyes' previous owner had, and what kind of baggage Wong Kar Mun has to deal with now.

    Based on my first impressions of the film, I was actually expecting a big scare fest like "The Grudge"; short on story, big on scares. What I actually realized is that the two parts that I briefly watched were actually two out of the three genuinely scary parts of the film. (The elevator scene was enough to make me take the stairs today at work, seriously.) The rest of the film is certifiably creepy, but there is actually a decent story to support those creepy parts. "The Eye" has no doubt been compared to "The Sixth Sense" in terms of theme, but it is also similar in substance as well. Even without the scares, the film would be able to stand on its other merits. Some of the special effects in "The Eye" were kind of cheesy (basically Sci-Fi channel made-for-cable television caliber) and in typical Chinese film fashion, the music was horrible, but all told, it is a decent film.

    After doing a little reading on the film, I saw that Tom Cruise's production company bought the rights to the film and are planning a remake. I'm not very educated on Asian horror films and their American remakes, (yet) but I think I would see it just out of mere curiosity, because I would imagine that they would take this relatively small film and mess with it to make it "bigger". "The Eye" is definitely worth checking out because while it definitely scared the pants off of me a couple of times, the rest of the film was really was worth sticking around to see how it all would end. 6/10 --Shelly
    9hitchcockthelegend

    Don't dare blink as you may miss something.

    Wong Kar Mun went blind at the age of two, 18 years later she undergoes a cornea transplant that appears to be a success. Unfortunately that success comes with a terrifying side-effect; the ability to see unhappy ghosts.

    Gin Gwai (The Eye) is directed by the Pang brothers Oxide and Danny and stars Angelica Lee (Mun) and Lawrence Chou (Dr.Wah) as the two main principals.

    No matter what source of reference you use for film reviews, one thing that can be guaranteed as regards Gin Gwai is how divided people are on it. One of the few things that most tend to agree on though is that it's visual flourishes are nothing short of fantastic. And they are. Blended with the editing, music, sound, camera-work and the effects, it therefore fuels the fire of those calling it style over substance. It's also fair to drop onside with those folk decrying the over familiarity with its central themes. If you have seen Irvin Kershner's The Eyes Of Laura Mars, Michael Apted's Blink and M. Night Shyamalan's The Sixth Sense, well you wont be watching anything thematically new here. But the Pang brothers have crafted a thoroughly engrossing, menacing and nerve gnawer of a film, one that delivers chills and scares for the discerning horror sub-genre fan.

    Here's the crux of the matter with Gin Gwai, it is the opposite side of the Asian horror coin to the likes of the blood letting Audition. This is pure and simply for those not in need of murder death kill to fulfil their horror needs. I was creeped out immensely by this film because the ghost and supernatural side of horror is what really works for me, as long as it is done effectively. To which Gin Gwai most assuredly is. The various scenes shift from ethereal unease to hold your breath terror, from classrooms to lifts, to hospital wards, the brothers Pang, with beautiful technical expertise, held me over a precipice of dread. Even the opening credits are inventive and have the ability to send a cautionary shiver down ones spine. There's a barely formed, and pointless, romantic angle that marks it down a point, but as the blistering (literally) last quarter assaults the senses and so does the time for reflection arrive. Gin Gwai ends up being one of this decades best horror pictures. Well to me at least. 9/10
    9HumanoidOfFlesh

    Very creepy horror film.

    "The Eye"(2002)has to be one of the creepiest horror movies I have seen this year.The "transplant gone awry" concept has been done before-just check out "Body Parts"(1991)or the third story in the horror anthology "Body Bags"(1993),but the Pang Brothers created extremely eerie psychological horror with plenty of genuine scares.Angelica Lee is excellent as a young girl named Mun.Her numerous and extremely creepy encounters with the spirits Mun sees are filled with excellent use of sound.The conclusion is amazing and totally unexpected.The film is very scary and uncanny-it actually reminds me a bit Japanese horror hit "Ringu"(1998).Check it out,if you dare.9 out of 10.The elevator scene blew me away!

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    Related interests

    Jeff Goldblum in The Fly (1986)
    Body Horror
    Daveigh Chase in The Ring (2002)
    Supernatural Horror
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The 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.
    • Goofs
      While 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 credits
      The credits at the beginning of the film first appear as braile.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Eye 3 (2005)

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    FAQ26

    • How long is The Eye?Powered by Alexa
    • Is 'The Eye' based on a novel?
    • What is 'The Eye' about?
    • In what language is 'The Eye'?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 9, 2002 (Hong Kong)
    • Countries of origin
      • Hong Kong
      • Singapore
      • Thailand
      • United Kingdom
      • Netherlands
    • Official site
      • Palm Pictures (United States)
    • Languages
      • Cantonese
      • Thai
      • Mandarin
      • English
      • Hakka
    • Also known as
      • Con Mắt Âm Dương
    • Filming locations
      • Hong Kong, China
    • Production companies
      • Film Workshop
      • Applause Pictures
      • Mediacorp Raintree Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • SGD 4,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $512,049
    • Gross worldwide
      • $12,165,016
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 39m(99 min)
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital EX
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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