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The Sixth Sense,
written and directed by M Night Shyamalan, has in distribution
been classified as a horror/thriller (rated PG13), while some
reviewers also call it a drama. (1) It is the story of a nine-year-old,
Cole Sears, coming to terms with visitations by ghosts needing
his help with unfinished business among the living. He is
aided by a child psychologist, Malcolm Crowe, who has been
shot by a former patient with a pathology similar to Cole's.
Crowe redeems his earlier failure by helping Cole and return
receives Cole's advice on how to communicate with his wife/widow.
The much-discussed and closely guarded secret "twist"
of the film lies in that the story point of Malcolm's death
is not completely disclosed until the final scene.
Standards of suspense
From the first flickering light of the yellow bulb in the
Crowe basement, reminiscent of the early thrillers' gas lights,
over many a filmmaker's favorite the open staircase (2), to
the final fade of Crowe's face into bright light, traditionally
symbolizing a soul's transition Beyond, The Sixth Sense is
a sampler of the horror/thriller's classical suspense-creating
techniques. Actual gore-and-splatter apparitions of victims
of violent death are judiciously inserted into a haunting,
evocative setting where whispery sound effects, plaintive
violins and oboes, appearance of visible breath, unattributed
point-of-view shots and expressionist weather effects combine
to tell the audience that Something Weird Is Afoot. (2a)
"A cultural
phenomenon"
M Night Shyamalan has obviously been to film school and done
his homework. In fact, the film is so much of a catalog of
classical genre conventions as to invite comparison with Pulp
Fiction. Even the title is generic: as Pulp Fiction openly
declares its allegiance, so does The Sixth Sense, telling
the audience that this is a story of the supernatural securely
rooted in its genre. (3)
The Sixth Sense does not have Pulp Fiction's basic spirit
of ironical distance: such traits, however appealing to the
cineaste and the more adventurous or "cool" segments
of the public, are not the stuff genuine blockbusters are
made of. Shyamalan's self-professed ambition has been to generate
a "cultural phenomenon" comparable to James Cameron's
Titanic, and he proudly notes that The Sixth Sense appeals
both to young boys and older women. (4)
In spite of relatively modest advance marketing, the film
has broken a number of box office records, grossing in its
first six months more than the double of Pulp Fiction's total
gross to-date. (5) (6) (6a)
Ghostly realism?
Another goal of Shyamalan's when creating The Sixth Sense
was to make it feel "real". In comments and interviews
he describes at considerable length the rules that apply in
his ghost world, and the care that has been taken in following
them, to make the film credible and coherent. (7) (7a)
In the actual film, the ambition fails miserably. The script
is riddled with holes, nonsensical premises and ad-hoc solutions,
the most blatant of these being the concepts of dead people
"not knowing that they are dead" and "seeing
only what they want to see". Noticing that one no longer
needs to eat, for example, is simply not a matter of choice.
(8) (9)
One potential method of reducing the demands on logic and
realism, namely humor, is conspicuous by its absence, as is
appropriate in a true-to-type thriller. Humor tends to de-fuse
suspense, while a thriller survives on its suspense-building
qualities.
A better option might have been admitting the possibility
that Cole was delusional. A deluded mind can imagine anything,
no logic required - but a widely acceptable Hollywood thriller
can not be open-ended. Thus the ending asserts unambiguously
that ghosts _are_ an objective reality and Cole is _not_ just
seeing things in his mind, and all illusion of reality crumbles.
Yet a great majority of the audience, along with various experienced
professional critics, gladly suspend their disbelief, gaining
the compensation of emotional satisfaction. (10)
A critical landslide
The film has been received with almost unanimous enthusiasm
by critics and the moviegoing public, both US and international.
(11) Of the limited number of negative comments, several are
due to the reviewers' personal aversion to the actor Bruce
Willis (in the role of Malcolm Crowe), and only a few are
concerned with actual flaws in the film's fabric. (12)
The favorable reviews frequently focus on the movie's emotional
impact, qualifying it either as "suspenseful, thrilling",
or "gripping, heart-rendering". Others call it "subtle,
intelligent, original, new, fresh". Several point out
the refreshing absence of cursing and nudity.
All of these reactions cannot be dismissed by blaming them
on the prevailing youth (i.e. lack of cinematic experience)
of the audience. (13) Successful even among adults (13a),
The Sixth Sense strikes a fortunate balance, drawing on some
aspects of modernism (14) while maintaining various classical
traits (14a), to yield an accessible yet interesting product,
distinctive among the surrounding multitude of high concept
movies. (15)
User-friendly form
Where form is concerned, Shyamalan takes good care of his
audience, as the many tributes to the film's intelligence
and subtlety indicate. Not simply a classical linear narrative-driven
film, The Sixth Sense has just enough convolution to make
Jane and Joe Moviegoer feel clever. (16) The color red symbolizes
supernatural occurrences, giving the audience a chance to
feel "just like an art movie, and I get it, ain't I smart".
The film introduces a series of clues that lead up to the
final "twist" with just the right degree of obviousness,
the audience plays along, cheerfully competing as to how soon
everyone figured it out, and the occasional critic admits
coyly to "being blind-sided by the ending". (17)
And finally a series of flashbacks gives everyone a chance
to catch up in tying up the loose ends. In this way the public
makes a certain intellectual investment in the film and is
immediately rewarded by receiving confirmation of their cleverness,
an almost sure-fire way of making a human feel good.
The feelgood ghost
story
In its content, The Sixth Sense also appears to possess some
important trait that satisfies a deeply felt psychological
need among a wide audience. (18) The secret lies in the resolution
of the film's basic conflict.
The typical conflict in a horror/thriller is constituted by
some threatening entity invading what is perceived as a world
of secure normalcy, "normality as threatened by the Monster".
(19) The threat may take the shape of a mentally divergent
individual, a corrupted, "neurotic" aspect of nature,
or some representation of the supernatural. The classical
solution lies in the annihilation of the Monster by more-or-less
violent means: exorcising the ghost, killing the rogue shark
or the murdering psychopath.
Not so in The Sixth Sense. Shyamalan chooses a solution that
is a fixture in European folk tales, but rather uncommon in
current Hollywood film: that of making peace with the ghosts
by helping them achieve their goals. On a thriller market
saturated with splatter and gore to the point of boredom (as
described by various critics and members of the audience),
he introduces an innovative hybrid: the feelgood ghost story.
In ideological terms, it is a case of repressive tolerance
(20): the Monster is neutralized, not by violent exorcism,
but through warm fuzzies and togetherness.
A religious experience
Several reviewers, commentators from the audience, but also
members of the cast and crew, describe the film as something
of a religious experience, one that makes death seem less
horrifying. (21) Thus it certainly addresses a deep, general
human need, that of coming to terms with mortality - other
people's and one's own. And a Hollywood movie with its popular,
familiar form is, in fact, an extremely suitable, efficient
means of addressing this need. In our civilization the pictorial
narrative (television, film) has effectively replaced the
printed and spoken text as the central medium of public discourse,
so a mass-market movie, speaking directly to the audience's
instincts and emotions, succeeds where philosophical essays
have very limited impact. (22) Receiving reassurance on the
subject of death is equally satisfying for the intellectual
and the shopping-mall audience, regardless of age, gender
and ethnicity. The absence of sexuality in the movie reinforces
its innocuous feelgood effect while opening the film to larger
potential audiences.
Disneyfying death
A phenomenon sometimes referred to as Disneyfication has been
associated with the total victory of the entertaining moving
picture story over reasoning and analysis. (23) Disney's animated
versions of classical legends and literary works turn out
shallow, innocuous, pretty, with a rubber-stamped happy ending
- as in The Hunchback of Notre-Dame or The Little Mermaid.
By a similar process, any issue, no matter how potentially
profound and serious, can be reduced to a nice, reassuring,
simple answer, like a warm, fluffy blanket to cuddle up with.
This is precisely what happens towards the end of The Sixth
Sense. Cole hugs his mother and tells her that "Granny
says Hi!" from the other side. The feelgood ghost story
leads up to the assertion that the dead are all around us,
and they are okay people. Being dead is no big deal, really.
The Sixth Sense treats a major universal human issue in an
attractive manner, familiar yet complex enough to keep a broad
audience interested, and presents a pleasing, reassuring
conclusion. Thanks to Mr Shyamalan, even death itself has
been Disneyfied.
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