Sunday, February 3, 2008

Jessica Alba's Quick Review of "The Eye"

Here is the latest remake of an Asian American cinema's recent blockbuster hits. "The Eye" is directed by David Moreau to take a maiden twisted visions surgical suite at the sight restoration. Sydney Wells (Jessica Alba) is a very famous violinist whose vision has been marked after an accident in childhood. To overcome extreme guilt she feels about her blind sister, Helen Wells (Parker Posey) is organizing in Paris have a life changing transplant surgery cornea. Sydney operation is successful, but before it was able to embrace his sense restored, it is the victim of terrifying images of death and horrible beyond appalling. In order to save his mental health, Sydney decided to discover the identity of its donors and to unlock the mystery behind the appearances frightening it can see.

For the most part, I appreciated that. Eye on because of the nature of the horror, it's nice to be ... well, foolish. Here is the classic dilemma of the pitiful, innocent victim of circumstance: the beautiful blind girl fateful forced outside the realm of normal vision, no matter what she is doing for herself. And even if the story is a little silly, Alba character is strong enough, and it carries a little more convincing and most sincere. And, of course, the face of Alba is so superb that stage fright, it sits beautifully.

I never thought that I write this, but here it goes: "
Jessica Alba is the only person who can act in this film." Even Parker Posey has been so ineffective that I can not imagine what she was thinking when she took this role Sur. The same goes for Alessandro Nivola (Dr. Faulkner), which shows neither sympathy nor Alba around sexual tension, which makes her work essentially worthless to the emotional value of the film. There was really nothing exciting happens between one of the characters in this film. Much of this problem probably refers to a script relatively dry; The Eye is based primarily on visual effects and thus loses its focus when it comes to compel dialogue.

Here's the thing: The Eye is everything it should be, and nothing less than what it promises. Anyone who has seen the film of his first should not know enough to wait another Sixth Sense, The Eye, from the rather gimmicky centers around the fear (and pretty Jessica Alba), the only feeling that you meet is your view . But for what its worth, The Eye is an perfect film on Friday night, the date of his choice and his pleasantly subdued moments cooling history ..

Movie Trailer of "The Eye"


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