The Sixth Sense

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
The Sixth Sense
Image:The sixth sense.jpg
U.S. film poster
Directed by M. Night Shyamalan
Produced by Kathleen Kennedy
Frank Marshall
Barry Mendel
Written by M. Night Shyamalan
Starring Bruce Willis
Haley Joel Osment
Toni Collette
Olivia Williams
Cinematography Tak Fujimoto
Editing by Andrew Mondshein
Distributed by Buena Vista Pictures
Release date(s) August 6, 1999
Running time 107 min.
Language English
Budget $55,000,000
Gross revenue $672,806,292
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

The Sixth Sense is a 1999 Academy Award-nominated psychological horror film written and directed by M. Night Shyamalan that tells the story of Cole, a troubled, isolated boy (played by Haley Joel Osment) who claims to be able to see and talk to the dead (the famous line "I see dead people" is from this movie), and an equally troubled child psychologist (played by Bruce Willis) who tries to help him. The film established Shyamalan as a writer and director, and introduced the cinema public to his signatures: his appearance in Hitchcock-like cameos, his liking for twist endings, and his use of the color red as a symbol of strangeness or otherness[citation needed].

Contents

[edit] Plot synopsis

As the film opens, Dr. Malcolm Crowe (Bruce Willis) a prominent child psychologist, returns home one night with his wife from an event in which he was honored for his efforts with children. The two discover they are not alone - a disturbed, nearly naked man named Vincent Grey (Donnie Wahlberg) appears in the doorway of their bathroom with a gun. He says, "I don't want to be afraid anymore." Vincent is upset that Crowe has not helped him, and Crowe realizes that Vincent is a former patient he treated as a child for his hallucinations. He condemns Malcolm for his inability to help him and shoots him in the stomach, and seconds later turns the gun on himself. The scene fades away with Malcolm's wife by his side, aiding him.

Months later, next fall, Malcolm returns to work with another frightened boy, 9-year old Cole Sear (Haley Joel Osment), with a condition similar to Vincent's. Malcolm becomes dedicated to this patient, though he is haunted by doubts over his ability to help him, after his failure with Vincent. Meanwhile, he begins to neglect his wife, with whom his relationship is falling apart. Malcolm earns Cole's trust and Cole ultimately confides in him that he is clairvoyant and can "see dead people." Though Malcolm is naturally skeptical at first, he eventually comes to believe that Cole is telling the truth, and that Vincent may have had the same ability as Cole. He realizes this one night, as he is listening to one of his tapes recorded while he was treating Vincent, and he hears pleading voices of dead people in the background. He suggests to Cole that he try to find a purpose for his gift by communicating with the ghosts, perhaps to aid them in their unfinished business on Earth. Cole is at first skeptical about this advice, as the ghosts terrify him, but soon decides to try it.

Cole communicates with the ghost of one girl who appears in his bedroom and appears to be sick. He finds out where the girl, Kyra Collins (Mischa Barton), lived and goes to her house, where a funeral reception is being held for her. Kyra's ghost gives Cole a videotape (inside a box), which Cole gives to Kyra's father. The tape reveals that when Kyra was bedridden with illness, her mother was poisoning her food, which led to Kyra's death (this behavior has been suggested as Munchausen syndrome by proxy or factitious disorder).[1] Empowered now by his ability to use his gift to positive effect, Cole confesses his ability to his mother, Lynn (Toni Collette). Although his mother is troubled by his story, Cole tells Lynn that her mother (Cole's grandmother) went to see her perform in a dance recital one night when she was a child, though Lynn was not aware of this because her mother stayed in the back of the audience where she could not be seen; he also tells her the answer to a question she asked when alone at her mother's grave. Lynn accepts this as the truth, and her relationship with Cole is strengthened.

His faith in himself now restored as a result of his success with Cole, Malcolm returns to his home, where he finds his wife sleeping on the couch, watching their old wedding video. As she sleeps, Anna's hand releases Malcolm's wedding ring, revealing the twist ending of the film — that Malcolm himself is unwittingly one of Cole's ghosts, having been killed by his ex-patient in the opening scene. Due to Cole's efforts, Malcolm's unfinished business, of rectifying his failure to understand Vincent, is completed. Recalling Cole's advice about talking to his wife while she's asleep, so that she'll have to listen, Malcolm releases her to move on with her life and frees himself to leave behind the world of the living.

All of the clothes Malcolm wears during the movie are items he wore or touched the evening he died, including his overcoat, his blue sweater and the different layers of his suit.

Bruce Willis, who is left-handed, learned to write with his right hand for the film to hide from the audience that Crowe was no longer wearing his wedding ring.[2] Though the filmmakers were careful about such clues of Malcolm's state, the camera zooms slowly towards Crowe's face when Cole says he sees dead people. In a DVD special feature, the filmmakers mention that they initially feared this shot would be a dead giveaway, but they decided to leave it in. The color red is intentionally absent from most of the film, but is used prominently (and only) in a few isolated shots scattered throughout the movie, in situations where the dead are present: such as the color of the balloon and Cole's sweater at the birthday party, the tent in which he first encounters Kyra, the numbers on Crowe's tape player, the doorknob to the locked closet and the grieving mother's dress. Shyamalan's film The Village similarly portrayed the color red as having connotations with evil and the supernatural — specifically, the mysterious monsters that inhabit the woods surrounding the village.

[edit] Cast

[edit] Production

M. Night Shyamalan said that the "The Tale of the Dream Girl" episode of Nickelodeon's television series Are You Afraid of the Dark? directed by David Winning was inspiration for the film.[3]

According to the book DisneyWar, Disney's David Vogel read Shyamalan's speculative script and instantly loved it. Without obtaining approval from his boss, Vogel bought the rights to the script, despite the high price of US$2 million and the stipulation that Shyamalan could direct the film. Disney later stripped Vogel of the title of President of Walt Disney Pictures, and Vogel left the company. Disney, apparently in a show of little confidence in the film, sold the distribution rights to Spyglass Entertainment, and kept only a 12.5 percent distribution fee for itself.

[edit] Reception

The film had a production budget of approximately $40 million (plus a $25 million prints and advertising budget). It grossed $26.6 million in its opening weekend and spent five weeks as the #1 movie at the U.S. box office.[4] It earned $293,501,675 in the United States and a worldwide gross of $672,806,292, ranking it 25th on the list of box-office money earners in the U.S. as of June 2007.[5]

The film was nominated for six Academy Awards: Best Picture, Best Director and Best Original Screenplay (M. Night Shyamalan), Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Haley Joel Osment), Best Actress in a Supporting Role (Toni Collette, who played Osment's mother), and Best Editing (Andrew Mondshein). The Sixth Sense is one of only five horror films that have been nominated for a Best Picture Academy Award. The others are The Exorcist, Jaws, A Clockwork Orange and The Silence of the Lambs. The Silence of the Lambs is the only winner of the award.

By vote of the members of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, The Sixth Sense was awarded the Nebula Award for Best Script in 1999.

This film was #71 on Bravo's 100 Scariest Movie Moments. It was recently named the 89th Best Film of all time by the American Film Institute in 2007.

[edit] In popular culture

  • The line "I see dead people" became a popular catchphrase after the film's release, reaching #44 on AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies Quote List.
  • It also captured the 60th place in AFI's 100 Years... 100 Thrills, honoring America's most heart pounding movies of all-time.
  • Several television shows and movies make reference to the twist ending, usually with someone finding out how it ends before they finish watching it. For instance, in the television show Scrubs, the Janitor holds a grudge against Dr. Cox for telling him the ending of the movie before he finished watching it. Also, in 50 First Dates has Drew Barrymore's character repeating the same day over and over, including watching The Sixth Sense for "the first time".
  • In the episode entitled "Torn Between Two Hannahs" on Disney's hit show Hannah Montana, Lilly (played by Emily Osment, Haley Joel Osment's younger sister) responds to Miley's lament about her cousin being evil by saying, "Oh, please. Next you're going to be saying "she sees dead people!", in a clear reference to her brother's famous line.
  • Legally Blonde (the musical) has the character Paulette say "I see dead people!" upon seeing the ghostly apparitions of Serena, Margot and Pilar.
  • Scrubs episode My Screw Up was a direct homage to the film, with Dr. Cox's best friend dying shortly into the episode,but only to be revealed to be dead at the end, while attending his funeral.

[edit] References

Philadelphia Portal


[edit] External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
The Sixth Sense
Preceded by
Runaway Bride
Box office number-one films of 1999 (USA)
August 8 - September 5, 1999
Succeeded by
Stigmata
ar:الحاسة السادسة

bs:Šesto čulo (film) de:The Sixth Sense es:El sexto sentido fr:Sixième Sens (1999) gl:O sexto sentido it:Il sesto senso he:החוש השישי (סרט) nl:The Sixth Sense ja:シックス・センス pl:Szósty zmysł pt:The Sixth Sense ru:Шестое чувство (фильм) sk:Šiesty zmysel fi:Kuudes aisti (elokuva) sv:Sjätte sinnet th:ซิกซ์เซ้นส์...สัมผัสสยอง vi:Giác quan thứ sáu (phim)

Views
Personal tools

Toolbox