Site created 12/15/97. |
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review added: 4/4/00
The Sixth Sense
Collector's
Edition - 1999 (2000) Hollywood Pictures (Buena
Vista)
review by Todd Doogan of
The Digital Bits
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Film
Rating: A
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras):
B+/B+/A
Specs and Features
107 mins, PG-13, letterboxed widescreen (1.85:1), 16x9 enhanced,
single-sided, dual-layered (layer switch at 53.55, in chapter 11),
Amaray keep case packaging, 2 TV spots, trailers for The
Sixth Sense, The 13th Warrior,
From Dusk Til Dawn 3: The Hangman's Daughter, In
Too Deep and Summer of Sam,
storyboard-to-film comparison, interviews with cast and crew
(presented in 6 distinct sections), 3 deleted scenes plus an
extended ending with introductions by writer/director M. Night
Shyamalan, Easter Egg featuring a short film clip by 11-year-old
Shyamalan entitled Nightmare on Old Gulf,
seamless branching for French credits, cast and crew bios,
film-themed menu screens with animation and sounds, scene access (20
chapters), languages: English and French (DD 5.1), subtitles:
English, Closed Captioned |
"I see dead
people."
I had to go for the obvious quote there folks... sorry. So in case
youve been under a rock for a year, heres the story of
The Sixth Sense. A little boy
(Academy Award nominee Haley Joel Osmet) finds himself visited by
ghosts and its driving him nuts. Enter a child psychiatrist in
a bad hairpiece (Bruce Willis), who has unsuccessfully dealt with
this type of trauma before. The two bond, make a discovery and then
presto-chango, we get a huge whammy of an ending. Now, everyone is
talking about "the secret" by saying: "You have to
see this flick before its ruined for you." The great
thing is, the media stayed away. I havent really read a review
or story on this film that gave the film away until recently, as
I've started to read other reviews of this DVD. I have no idea why
some people seem to think its okay to give "the secret"
away, now that The Sixth Sense
is reaching its most widespread medium (home video), but they
are. I wont, because I respect the home theater crowd. Suffice
it to say that the movie is pretty darn good, and if you havent
seen it dont read any reviews of it on the Net. Go out,
watch it and have a good time. Its just a well-made film that
deserves the attention heaped upon it. The least said about it, the
better.
This review is going to focus on the DVD. As for the video quality,
its very good but not first-rate. The framing is 1.85:1
anamorphic, which is nice, but the blacks are not as solid as anyone
would want or expect. Theres lots of picture grain evident and
at times its quite obvious, but this is how the film appeared
in theaters. Skin tones are fine, and the overall contrast is fair.
Its better than VHS, so I guess I cant complain too
much. The English and French tracks are both in Dolby Digital 5.1
and the sound quality for both is generally also very good. The
sound effects all come across in your sound field and the score just
creeps around you. The dialogue is pretty much centered in the
front, with little play in the side fields. I dont think it
absolutely kicks ass, but to the casual enthusiast its just
fine.
Now... let's talk extras. This is a pretty rootin-tootin
special edition from our friends at Disney. Heres what you
get: an extensive behind-the-scenes look featuring interviews with
M. Night Shyamalan (writer/director), Bruce Willis, Toni Collette,
Oliva Williams and Haley Joel Osmet (stars), Frank Marshall and
Barry Mendel (producers), James Newton Howard (composer), Sam Mercer
(executive producer) and Andrew Mondshein (editor). The interviews
take place in different sections of the disc, as labeled in the
menu. Theres Storyboard-to-Film
Comparison, where we look at the restaurant sequence and
hear from Shyamalan about what changed from drawing to filming and
why. Theres The Cast,
where a majority of the cast and crew discuss how this group was so
important in coming together (and everyone pretty much gushes over
Osmet). We look at Music and Sound Design,
and listen in on how Shyamalan and Howard came up with such a
haunting score. We also hear from Shyamalan about how breathing
plays an important part in the film. This section features clips
from the film with nothing but sound cues and the score played while
the crew talks. Reaching the Audience
focuses on the box office of the film and theories about the films
impact. Next up is Rules and Clues,
a look behind-the-scenes on what to look for while watching the film
the second time around. Last up, theres A
Conversation with M. Night Shyamalan, which is just that
- a conversation with a young filmmaker after hes made the
10th highest grossing film of all time. Rounding out the material is
a section containing three deleted scenes (with brief introductions)
and an extended ending for the film. Most of the material lifted
deserved to be lifted, because it would have just slowed the film
down. There is one cut that would have been, at least in part,
welcomed back into the film, because a small piece of it remained in
the final film and sort of just lays there without reason. See if
you can see what Im talking about. The extras are very nice,
informative and generally well done, although much of it is of
lesser video quality. The Bruce Willis interviews, in particular,
look like there were shot with a Fisher-Price Pixelcam and it's
annoying. Thrown in for good measure is a clip from an early short
film by Shyamalan (hidden as an Easter Egg) and seamless branching
for French credits when viewing the film French 5.1 audio.
There is one bad thing about this DVD version of The
Sixth Sense, and it's a problem that's becoming standard
on all of Buena Vista's DVDs - mandatory trailers and commercials at
the beginning of the disc. When you first pop the disc in your
player, even before the menus appear, you're "treated" to
a score of promotional spots for current and upcoming Buena Vista
films and DVDs... and while some people can skip through these with
their player's remote, LOTS of other people apparently can't
(depending on the player). You also can't press Stop or Menu either.
We've gotten TONS of complaints about this problem from our readers.
While we dig having the spots on the DVD - nobody likes sneak peek
trailers more than we do here at the Bits
- having no choice in watching them even before the film itself is
highly irritating. We hope the studio drops this annoying practice
ASAP.
That said, as special editions go, this is a great effort by
Disney. I would have liked a little better picture and sound here,
but if this disc had a commentary track (which would have been an
obvious choice with this film), it would have been a touchdown. But
well take baby steps with Disney. For all you other film
critics out there, please keep "the secret" a secret -
there are still plenty of people out there who havent seen
The Sixth Sense. And if youve
only seen it once, youll be surprised how into this film youll
still be the second time around. Be sure to wait on watching the
extras on this disc until AFTER you've seen the film. Then go
through the extras, and check out all the little clues and hints the
filmmakers put into the film - clues that almost everyone completely
misses the first time. I think you'll be surprised...
Todd Doogan
todddoogan@thedigitalbits.com |
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