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IMDb > Gin gwai (2002)
Gin gwai
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Photos (see all 7 | slideshow) Videos (see all 2)
Open-ended Trailer from Palm Pictures
Open-ended Trailer from Palm Pictures

Overview

User Rating:
6.9/10   10,141 votes
Writers:
Jo Jo Yuet-chun Hui (written by) and
Danny Pang (written by) ...
more
Release Date:
9 May 2002 (Hong Kong) more
Genre:
Drama | Horror | Thriller more
Tagline:
What if the reflection you see is not yours more
Plot:
A blind girl gets a cornea transplant so that she would be able to see again. However, she got more... more | add synopsis
Awards:
8 wins & 5 nominations more
User Comments:
Good and scary!!! more

Cast

 (Credited cast)
Angelica Lee ... Wong Kar Mun (as Lee Sin-Je)
Lawrence Chou ... Dr. Wah
Chutcha Rujinanon ... Ling
Yut Lai So ... Yingying
Candy Lo ... Yee (Mun's Sister)
Yin Ping Ko ... Mun's grandmother
Pierre Png ... Dr. Eak

Edmund Chen ... Dr. Lo
Wai-Ho Yung ... Mr. Ching
Wilson Yip ... Taoist
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Kanta Aeamsamang ... Young Mother
Wisarup Annuar ... Dark Figure
Cub Chin ... Boy's Father
Wing-Wai Chin ... Hospital Caretaker
Ousinthorn Chotphan ... Mun as a Little Girl
Sungwen Cummee ... Ghost in the Elevator
Damrongwiseeatpanich ... Ling (Age 8)
Jinda Duangtoy ... Old Lady in the Hospital
Sopol Duriensuk ... Traffic Policeman
Pornchai Hongrattanaporn ... Bride
Si Won Ho ... Ghost in the Restaurant
Panpimol Jeamsakol ... Thai Nurse 2
Pui Ho Jim ... Boy in the Car Accident
Narongsak Junjiamrat ... Young Father
Wirasinee Kuntipan ... Groom
Mylio Lau ... Wah's Secretary
Yuk Ha Lau ... Waitress
Hing Kim Lee ... Restaurant Owener
Somchai Leelanukul ... Thai Mini-Bus Driver
Tao Leung ... Ghost on the Highway
Vuanna Mahachanok ... Thai Mini-Cab Driver
Tassanana Nuntasapee ... Ling (Age 4)
Ming Poon ... Boy with Cap
Dampongongtrakul Sawadee ... Yee as a Little Girl
Nonlaporn Sombatruksasuk ... Boy's Mother
Nittaya Suthornrat ... Ghost in the Classroom
Busarn Thongtiw ... Thai Nurse 1
Wasarat Thrasarchoti ... Mr. Ching's Assistant
Sue Yuen Wang ... Ling's Mother
Yuet Siu Wong ... Ghost in the Hospital
Florence Wu ... Nurse
Tian Nan Wu ... Calligraphy Teacher
Ben Yuen ... Mr. Ching
more
Create a character page for: ?

Additional Details

Also Known As:
The Eye (International: English title) (UK)
Jian gui (Hong Kong: Mandarin title)
Seeing Ghosts (literal English title)
more
MPAA:
Rated R for some disturbing images.
Runtime:
99 min | Argentina:110 min (Mar del Plata Film Festival) | Canada:94 min (DVD) | Sweden:94 min (DVD)
Aspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Dolby Digital EX
Filming Locations:
Hong Kong, China more
MOVIEmeter: ?
^ 16% since last week why?

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
The dark/black figure/person that constantly appears in the film when the characters die is the Daoist (Chinese religion) form of the Grim Reaper. In Daoist belief, there are two Grim Reapers, the White and Black "Wu Chang". The Black Reaper is the one that escorts the newly dead to the "other world" of "afterlife". more
Goofs:
Continuity: When Mun is in Dr. Lo's office explaining her visions, her bangs hang down over alternate sides of her face. more
Movie Connections:
Referenced in Deadly Visions (2004) (TV) more

FAQ

Why did the boy next door jump out of the window?
Is this movie based on a novel?
A NOTE REGARDING SPOILERS
more
32 out of 40 people found the following comment useful:-
Good and scary!!!, 23 July 2004
9/10
Author: Gafke from United States

Of all the horror movie genres in existence, ghost stories have always been my personal favorites. The Haunting, Ju-On, The Innocents, Ringu, The Shining...all nice, moody, creepy ghost tales. The Eye now finds itself at the top of my list along with the aforementioned as one of the best and creepiest ghost stories of all time.

Mun, blind since the age of 2, receives the gift of a cornea transplant at the age of twenty. Her restored vision comes with a price, however. She can no longer play with the all blind symphony that she once found solace within, she cannot read or write, having had no reason to learn, and she has no words for visible objects, having always identified them by touch. She's also seeing things that nobody else can see...terrifying things. A little boy looking for his lost report card plagues her daily. An old woman wanders the hospital corridors, complaining of the cold. Shadowy forms come to escort the recently deceased away to parts unknown, and Mun's own bedroom flickers in the darkness, changing into another room that once belonged to another girl, in another country. Mun knows that the things she sees are not normal, but no one seems to believe her, not even, at first, the cute doctor who is trying to help her. Mun finds herself alone in a frightening world filled with things she never wanted to see. When Mun and the cute doctor finally learn the identity of the donor whose corneas Mun has received, they also learn of her frightening abilities, her sad death and a terrible tragedy which is destined to repeat itself.

The Eye is an original and innovative film and yet it is also a perfect mixture of plot points and elements drawn from such previous films as The Sixth Sense, The Mothman Prophecies and Blink, all of which are very good films in their own right. The Eye knows exactly how to scare you, and does so without a drop of blood or a hint of gore. A scene in a calligraphy class provides a truly frightening shock, while a scene in an elevator is an exercise in slow, building dread which grows more excruciating by the second. The performances are all wonderful, and the feelings of loss, alienation, fear and determination are genuine and powerful. Fans of the aforementioned films would do well to seek this one out, as would ghost enthusiasts and Asian Horror aficionados. It's rare these days that a film will actually make me jump, gasp and check the corners of my bedroom for boogeymen, but this one spooked me very well indeed - and I watched it in the middle of a bright, sunny day. The Eye tells a good story and tells it well, with strong characters and genuine scares. It is never dull or cheap or overly dramatic.

Highly HIGHLY recommended!!!

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