
Film review: Sixth Sense
M Night Shyamalan, 2000
Certificate 15, video on general release
Rating: 4/4
"See... to perceive by the sense seated in the eye; to perceive mentally; to apprehend; to recognise; to understand; to learn."1
This film is about reparation: what
happens when one man gets to retrace his
steps, to see his errors, and to correct or
atone for something he has previously
missed. It shows what transpires when an
item of his clinical work comes to affect the
course of his whole life. It also bears on an
old distinction: that there may be acts of
omission as well as of commission; that what
we fail to do may be as significant as
purposely doing wrong.
 
Cole Sear sees dead people (HOLLYWOOD PICTURES HOME VIDEO)
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Bruce Willis plays Dr Malcolm Crowe, a
child psychologist - and a man whose life
seems to have come together, only for it to
unravel in a most unusual way. As a result, he
comes to meet Cole Sear (played by Haley
Joel Osment), a young boy constantly
terrified by his experiences. Cole sees dead
people, some of whom do not know they are
dead. Labelled as a "freak" at school, Cole is
exposed through this "sixth sense" to a
direct experience of the calamitous events
that have occurred in the buildings he
inhabits. His unpopularity with classmates is
the least of his worries.
What Dr Crowe gradually comes to see
is that he has made assumptions that may
have affected others adversely. He has been
blind. Now he must come to the truth about
himself, and he must "make good" by saving
Cole.
The acting in this film is superbly
executed and, indeed, to appreciate its
subtleties fully, a second viewing is mandatory (hence the advantage of video). Each
scene involving psychologist and patient is
perfectly choreographed. The silences are as
significant as the words; omission equals
commission again.
Ironically, it is Crowe who manifests the
stranger neuropsychology: apparently oriented in the present, he can recall the past
but, fugue-like, his episodes of attempted
therapy with the boy emerge as islands of
subtle revelation. It is Cole Sear who sees the
reality of their situation. In the language of
the film, it is Sear who is the seer.
Sean A Spence senior lecturer in psychiatry,
University of Sheffield
s.a.spence@sheffield.ac.uk
- Chambers concise dictionary. Edinburgh: Chambers, 1997.

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