Halloween Review– The Sixth Sense

I see dead people.

Cast, Crew, and Other Info:

Director.Writer: M. Night Shyamalan

Features: Bruce Willis…Malcolm Crowe
Haley Joel Osment…Cole Sear
Toni Collette…Lynn Sear
Olivia Williams…Anna Crowe
Micha Barton…Barfy Girl (okay, actually credited as “Kyra Collins”).

Available at Amazon.com and Amazon. ca

Premise:

After the suicide of a patient he could not help, a psychiatrist counsels a troubled boy who claims he sees visions of dead people.

High Points:

1. The ending. For once, the Shyamalan premise works in its entirety. I had the good fortune to see this with a friend when it first came out, before I’d heard anything about it, and long before the expectation that every Shyamalan film will have some twist. We both should have seen it coming (I’ve guessed more difficult solutions to mysteries), and neither of us did. I saw it soon after with my wife; she had the same reaction. More importantly, the film holds up to repeated viewings, even after (or if) you know where it is going.

2. “Silence, Village Idiot!”

Low Point:

The pacing drags in places.

The Scores:

Originality: 4/6 This premise has been used before, though Sixth Sense uses it well.

Effects: 5/6.

Story: 6/6:

Acting: 5/6: .

Production: 6/6

Emotional Response: 6/6

Overall: 6/6.

In total, The Sixth Sense receives 38/42.

Halloween Countdown to date

8 replies on “Halloween Review– The Sixth Sense”

    • Re: No detailed breakdown

      What happened to the more detailed reviews? :(

      Different authors have different styles. Tomorrow’s
      review will be one of the longer ones.

      • Re: No detailed breakdown

        What happened to the more detailed reviews? :(

        Glad to know people read them. Yeah, this is by far the shortest of my reviews for our Halloween countdown.

  1. Originality

    This premise has been used before…

    I’m interested in knowing where it has been used previously. Can you give specifics?

    • Re: Originality, and spoileresque stuff

      This premise has been used before…

      I cannot recall the title of the story; I read it more than 20 years ago. It’s one example of what is called (when used well, as it is in The Sixth Sense) “concealed reality,” and when it is used poorly, called (at least by the Turkey City Lexicon) a “Jar of Tang.” If you attended writers’ workshops prior to the release of Sixth Sense, it was commonplace for someone to use a variation of this twist(as were “Brain in a Jar” stories before The Matrix popularized the premise). Heck, a play I workshopped with teens in the 90s began with a monologue that had the same twist. Typically, however, we’re getting a narrative perspective that only truly makes sense when we learn that the person narrating shares Bruce Willis’s circumstances in Sixth Sense. This film had him interacting with another character. There is an ep of M.A.S.H wherein Klinger interacts with a soldier in this situation (Klinger is injured, and for some reason can see/speak with him), but we figure it out fairly quickly; only the soldier and Klinger remain in the dark for long.

      In the end, I think our rating system over-values originality, though SF/fantasy fans do prize it.

    • Re: Originality

      I’m interested in knowing where it has been used previously. Can you give specifics?

      There’s a great Lovecraft story told from the point of view of a character in a similar situation.

    • Re: Originality

      This premise has been used before…
      I’m
      interested in knowing where it has been used
      previously. Can you give specifics?

      The movie “Jacob’s Ladder“.
      I had a friend who loved that flick and was FURIOUS that it was ripped off. He
      hated the 6th sense with a passion. Personally, I enjoyed the nice creepy
      ghostly bits in 6th. Like the kid that goes “wanna see my dad’s gun?” and
      such.

  2. It had me from the beginning to end
    I figured it out when the ring hit the floor in the last minute. Had me going
    the entire time.

    Saw it close to the release time with my wife and some of my family. My
    brother claimed he saw it but it was such a findmuck I would have thought
    his personality wouldn’t have let him keep his mouth shut.

    I love the movie. Haley Joel did a wonderful job and it was an emotional
    roller coaster.

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