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Blindness

  • 2008
  • R
  • 2h 1m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
77K
YOUR RATING
Julianne Moore, Danny Glover, Gael García Bernal, and Mark Ruffalo in Blindness (2008)
This is the second trailer for Blindness, directed by Fernando Meirelles.
Play trailer2:31
6 Videos
87 Photos
DramaMysteryThriller

A city is ravaged by an epidemic of instant white blindness.A city is ravaged by an epidemic of instant white blindness.A city is ravaged by an epidemic of instant white blindness.

  • Director
    • Fernando Meirelles
  • Writers
    • José Saramago
    • Don McKellar
  • Stars
    • Julianne Moore
    • Mark Ruffalo
    • Gael García Bernal
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    77K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Fernando Meirelles
    • Writers
      • José Saramago
      • Don McKellar
    • Stars
      • Julianne Moore
      • Mark Ruffalo
      • Gael García Bernal
    • 367User reviews
    • 208Critic reviews
    • 45Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 16 wins & 21 nominations total

    Videos6

    Blindness: Trailer #2
    Trailer 2:31
    Blindness: Trailer #2
    Blindness: Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 1:33
    Blindness: Teaser Trailer
    Blindness: Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 1:33
    Blindness: Teaser Trailer
    Blindness: Bathroom
    Clip 0:58
    Blindness: Bathroom
    Blindness: The King
    Clip 1:02
    Blindness: The King
    Blindness: Update
    Clip 0:38
    Blindness: Update
    Blindness: Nothing
    Clip 1:15
    Blindness: Nothing

    Photos87

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    + 81
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    Top cast77

    Edit
    Julianne Moore
    Julianne Moore
    • Doctor's Wife
    Mark Ruffalo
    Mark Ruffalo
    • Doctor
    Gael García Bernal
    Gael García Bernal
    • Bartender…
    Yûsuke Iseya
    Yûsuke Iseya
    • First Blind Man
    Jason Bermingham
    • Driver #1
    Eduardo Semerjian
    • Concerned Pedestrian #1
    Danny Glover
    Danny Glover
    • Man with Black Eye Patch
    Don McKellar
    Don McKellar
    • Thief
    Ciça Meirelles
    • Driver #2
    Antônio Fragoso
    • Concerned Pedestrian #2
    Lilian Blanc
    • Concerned Pedestrian #3
    Douglas Silva
    Douglas Silva
    • Onlooker #1
    Daniel Zettel
    • Onlooker #2
    Yoshino Kimura
    Yoshino Kimura
    • First Blind Man's Wife
    Joe Pingue
    Joe Pingue
    • Taxi Driver
    Susan Coyne
    Susan Coyne
    • Receptionist
    Fabiana Gugli
    Fabiana Gugli
    • Mother of the Boy
    Mitchell Nye
    • Boy
    • Director
      • Fernando Meirelles
    • Writers
      • José Saramago
      • Don McKellar
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews367

    6.576.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7sabinabellet

    Good but..

    First I have read the book and couldn't stop my self watching it's movie. Movie is good , liked it but seriously book was better. Even though it will be my recommendation to who wants to watch a dramatically interesting movie.
    6dfranzen70

    Slightly myopic but still enjoyable

    n the land of the blind, only Julianne Moore can see. A weird malady has spread across an unnamed city that causes “white blindness” in the afflicted. Moore plays the wife of an eye doctor (Mark Ruffalo) who fakes having the disease so that she be quarantined with her husband (and the other early sufferers). The patients quickly learn that they’re on their own and that any attempts to leave the facility will result in their being shot to death. As the only sighted person, Moore literally sees the inmates/patients devolve into misery and must somehow lead a small band of them to the presumed safety of the outside world.

    The movie begins rather strongly, as a young man is suddenly blinded while driving on a busy city street. Disoriented, he is helped by a passerby, who takes him home but steals his car. Meanwhile, an ophthalmologist’s office begins to fill up with people experiencing this odd blindness, not one of inky blackness but of complete whiteness. The following morning, the doctor wakes up with the same blindness, and the only way Mrs. Eye Doctor can go with him is by pretending she too has the (apparently) infectious disease.

    The patients are kept in maximum-security barracks and are given sparse amounts of food that they must dole out to each other. But that’s the extent of their outside help; armed guards surround the buildings and shoot to kill anyone who tries to leave. (Lest they, you know, infect normal people.) So it’s not long before the denizens of one section (ward) decide they want more than their share, and anarchy ensues, which is compounded by nearly everyone’s lack of sight. (The doctor’s wife – everyone’s unnamed – keeps her own condition a secret from everyone except her husband.) The movie is a metaphor for the hatred within human beings for one another; it seeks to show that when the chips are down, we are just animals, even if we suffer the same indignities, because each of us wishes to be better than the next, to dominate. We are not, the movie argues, a society built solely on equality. It also seeks to show that there are different kinds of blindness: physical blindness, and the blindness of man to the suffering of his fellows.

    Although the film is exquisitely well shot – from desolate city streets to the unencumbered chaos within the compound’s walls – it’s alternately slow moving and predictable. It’s easy to see what will happen once the victims are quarantined, and it’s even easier to see that the doctor’s wife will be the one to lead some of them out of the morass. Although Moore is excellent as always (as are Ruffalo, Danny Glover as an eye-patch-wearer, and Alice Braga as a blind hooker), her character seems to be less a victim and accidental leader than a chosen heroine, which runs contrary to the theme of everyday people simply trying to survive without sight. Moore’s character, the only character with sight, is presented as being a good person, but she is very slow to stop what are obviously Very Bad Things being done to the blind.

    Aside from the blindness angle, there isn’t much here to separate this film from other personal-disaster films (to differentiate them from natural-disaster films, which would include earthquakes, tidal waves, and tornados), such as movies about plagues (28 Days Later), zombies (Dawn of the Dead), or infectious diseases (Outbreak). The idea that people would turn on each other even though they suffer together is not new; neither is the idea of a society (in this case, an entire city) abandoning those who all have some sort of disease. And because these ideas aren’t new, Blindness isn’t as compelling as it ought to be; the characters are generally one dimensional and unlikeable, so this isn’t even much of a feel-good movie. To tell the truth, it’s a bit of a lifeless downer, although the ending makes up for it a little.

    A final note: The American Council of the Blind said, in deploring the movie, that “blind people do not behave like uncivilized, animalized creatures.” That’s simply a silly statement. Anyone can behave as an uncivilized, animalized creature, particularly if they are treated as animals and quarantined from “normal” society (which was the point of the director, Fernando Meirelles); to believe that blind people are not susceptible to anger, despair, and revenge is to believe that blindness somehow connotes angelic heroism, which is unfair toward blind people as well.
    tedg

    Tosca

    Sometimes I wonder. At times, it seems that we all have some shared cinematic values — that some art can reach us all. Sure, we usually sacrifice depth in the process, but that's a small enough occasional price for the joy of laughing with a crowd. It is no small part of the experience, that shared dark room with no remote control.

    So when I see a movie like this, I wonder why it doesn't fit the niche. It is extraordinarily well done. The eye is used to convey not only narrative movement — as usually is desired — but situated group emotion as well. It does this in a straightforward, effective way. It is high cinema, but not requiring deciphering. Some visual episodes here simply took my breath away. They worked, all of them that I got, because Julianne understood what they were and how to support them.

    The story has allegorical elements about society and family, humanness and knowing. I would have preferred that they be more subtle, more Chinese. But they worked. You could see the balance, the perfect weighing of values, the texture from a Nobel-level writer.

    So this should have been embraced by everyone. High visual art with accessible vocabulary and visceral effect. Obvious allegory, but with rich immediate motion. Several unexpected turns. But for some reason it wasn't. As I knew this going in, it became a sort of parallel context that was carried along. This was absolutely pummeled by the newspaper writers, not critics really; just reporters of a supposed banal zeitgeist.

    Viewers on IMDb were not so savage, but this, like "Children of Men" did not get the exposure it deserved. The business about goodness grown from being forced to live on the periphery of dangerous tribe simply did not carry from "City of God" to here, though the similarities are striking.

    So I wonder whether it is me that is blind here, in celebrating this, or the other way.

    Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
    cengizozder

    only for the adults

    The movie I watched was actually taken with a very loyal mind to original José Saramago's book. When we look at the lower IMDb score that movie have taken, we realize that it is not often overlooked that this film deserved by the viewer. Sad but we are not surprised. Because it's a literary adaptation. Blindness is not suitable for young minds waiting for the story of post-civilization apocalyptic worlds like 'Mad Max' 'Waterworld' and 'God of Flies'. This is not the action that this generation expects, but the dark desperate world that goes bumpy in the feces is something beyond the comfort standards even for young people. I advice people to read the book first and than watch Julianne Moore acting.
    6SnoopyStyle

    provocative but problematic logic

    There is a contagious blindness disease. The optometrist (Mark Ruffalo) who treats the first case also gets it. The authorities round up the sick under quarantine. The doctor's wife (Julianne Moore) doesn't get the blindness but she stays by his side. Soon the sick are left on their own and the strong starts taking advantage of the weak. Doctor's wife keeps her sight a secret as the prison descend into hell.

    The start is pretty slow and I don't think it's necessary. My main problem is that there are a few unbelievable things in this movie. A minor problem is how quickly the quarantine is imposed. For such a weird sickness, the authorities seem unusually brilliant. The main problem is the unwillingness of the wife to use her sight. The plot seems to be bending over backwards to get to its points. There is a very provocative plot here. I wish it could be done more naturally.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery
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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      José Saramago, the author of the novel upon which the film is based, wanted to attend the premiere of the film at the Cannes Film Festival. His doctors didn't allow him to travel, so Fernando Meirelles flew to Lisbon, Portugal, to show him the film.

      Saramago was ultimately enthusiastic about the film. He cried afterwards and told Meirelles that watching the film made him as happy as the day he finished the book.
    • Goofs
      When the first blind man arrives home, he says he lives on the 14th floor. After his wife arrives you can see some trees through the kitchen window. Those trees should not be there.
    • Quotes

      King of Ward 3: I will not forget your voice!

      Doctor's Wife: And I won't forget your face!

    • Connections
      Featured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Movie Outbreaks (2014)
    • Soundtracks
      Sambolero
      Written by Luiz Bonfá

      Bonfá Music

      Performed by Luiz Bonfá

      From the recording entitled "Solo in Rio" SF 40483, provided courtesy of Smithsonian Folkways Recordings (c) 2005,

      Used by permission

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    FAQ30

    • How long is Blindness?Powered by Alexa
    • What is "Blindness" about?
    • Is "Blindness" based on a book?
    • Is this another of those "escaped virus" horror movies?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 3, 2008 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Brazil
      • Canada
      • Japan
      • United Kingdom
      • Italy
    • Official sites
      • arabuloku.com
      • Official Facebook
    • Languages
      • English
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Đại Dịch Mù Lòa
    • Filming locations
      • Guelph, Ontario, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Rhombus Media
      • O2 Filmes
      • Bee Vine Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $25,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $3,351,751
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $1,950,260
      • Oct 5, 2008
    • Gross worldwide
      • $19,844,979
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 1m(121 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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