THE SIXTH SENSE ****1/2 (out of five stars) A review by Jamey Hughton
Starring-Bruce Willis, Haley Joel Osment, Toni Collette and Olivia Williams Director-M. Night Shyamalan Rated 14A Released August 1999 Hollywood
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The Sixth Sense is a genuine, unexpected treasure in a summer plagued with severe disappointments (The Haunting, Deep Blue Sea). It manages to be creepy, unsettling, heart-felt and emotionally satisfying all at the same time.
Is there a minimum age required for an Oscar nomination? If not, an early suggestion would be Haley Joel Osment for his amazing performance in this film. Osment, from Bogus and Forrest Gump, is the most talented and credible child actor to grace the good screen in years. His tears of sadness and despair are so frighteningly real it will give you goosebumps. The mediocrity of a younger actor's performance often downplays the overall effect of a film like this, but The Sixth Sense is definitely not the case.
Bruce Willis, in a welcome change of pace, plays child psychologist Malcolm Crowe. Crowe has been praised for his efforts for helping the city's children, and awarded with a framed commendation plaque from the mayor. On the celebration night, he and his wife (Olivia Williams) are breaking out the champagne when they discover an intruder has entered their home. It's a former patient (played by Donnie Wahlberg), who is blaming Crowe that he was of no help to him during the sessions they had years ago. Despite attempts to calm him down, the frightened man shoots the good doctor and then turns the gun on himself.
Skip to `Next Fall', where Crowe is now a shadow of his former self. His new patient is eight-year old Cole Sear (Osment), a social outcast who is haunted by something he can't explain. His mother (Toni Collette) is seriously concerned about the strange bruises and cuts forming on Cole's wrists and back, but she too is totally unaware of the boy's serious condition. After a few sessions discussing his parents' divorce, the boy begins to feel more secure with Dr. Crowe. And so Cole works up the courage to tell him his secret: `I see dead people,' he says. `Walking around like regular people.'
The Sixth Sense is not a traditional thriller by any means. Director M. Night Shyamalan (who directed another film with a spiritual angle called Wide Awake) has crafted a sensational little drama that will chill your spine and warm your heart both at once. The emotional maturity that Shyamalan displays in the second half is wonderful and surprising. There are frightening moments and shocking images, but the overall emotions displayed here will have you uplifted while leaving the theater
This is Bruce Willis' best performance.... well, ever. The actor displays incredible power and realism with his character that comes as an unexpected fulfillment. The scenes between Willis and young Osment strike the perfect tone. The lines are perfectly delivered, the emotions are played perfectly, and their relationship is marvelously realized and never artificial. Actually, it seems as if the adult actors are given new opportunities to shine whenever around the extraordinary Osment. The relationship between Cole and his mother is also touching and well-balanced, and never altered by any kind of emotional fakery. The directions The Sixth Sense will take you are unexpected and extremely effective right until the end (and I do mean the very end).
The Sixth Sense is probably the best movie I've seen all year. It's an amazing, unparalleled and fulfilling experience. The performances are virtually flawless, the screenplay is consistently well-written, the dialogue is totally absorbing, and the direction leaves little margin for error. The final twist of the film is so clever and unexpected that you will ponder it for weeks afterward. On closer inspection, it may contain certain flaws, but it remains the most marvelous and surprising finale I've seen in years. This is a movie that you simply can't miss.
(C) 1999, Jamey Hughton
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