To All Intelligent Cine-Goers 1.2
Movie :: The Sixth Sense (1999)
Starring :: Bruce Willis, Haley Joel Osment, Toni Collette, Olivia Williams, Trevor Morgan
Directed by :: M. Night Shyamalan, Andrew Mondshein
Starring :: Bruce Willis, Haley Joel Osment, Toni Collette, Olivia Williams, Trevor Morgan
Directed by :: M. Night Shyamalan, Andrew Mondshein
First of all I would like to confess some thing.
I am basically a Gujju from a Gujju school with English medium as minorities. Never during in my school days I wanted to watch any Hollywood movie OR any movie except for Bollywood movies, unless they were action packed.
Now, in my post school days I was in Mithibai College, well known for its no compulsory attendance policy. Thus, I used to frequent to my dads shop to aid him (at least, I used to pretend to. :P)
Now, one fine day, I hear that a brown man (an Indian) in the US of A has directed a Hollywood movie! I was pretty exited to hear this, and to my surprise, the movie was being screened in Central Plaza, 5 mins walk from our shop.
So, I decide to watch it in a lunch hour, by my-self, alone, and to my surprise I was alone in the theater too, except for four lucky couples who managed to get the four corners of the balcony and there was no body else in the hall, no kidding...
So, I am there, greatly eating my burger and sipping on my Pepsi when it all begun.
I am not exaggerating when I say that M. Night Shyamalan is the best Indian director I have seen.
If any of you guys watched the movie like I did, I bet it would be really difficult to control not wetting your pants.
Basically, the movie is a horror flick which narrates the story of a kid who can mingle with the people who are in their after-life, aare yaar, of course the ones who have some un-finished business.
It’s about this man, who is a child psychiatrist.
And, believe me, its all about sound and how much you are into the movie. At no point the movie bores one.
This movie opened my mind to the talkative movies, especially the Hollywood ones. Now, at the present date, I have all the M. Night movies collection (except for The Lady in the Water, I don’t want to talk about it) in addition to > 250 movies.
This movie gets the full credit to all my collection and my interest in the Hollywood movies.
It’s a must see. I will never forget that day, the summer of 1999.
Signing off,
~ El Goldman.
I am basically a Gujju from a Gujju school with English medium as minorities. Never during in my school days I wanted to watch any Hollywood movie OR any movie except for Bollywood movies, unless they were action packed.
Now, in my post school days I was in Mithibai College, well known for its no compulsory attendance policy. Thus, I used to frequent to my dads shop to aid him (at least, I used to pretend to. :P)
Now, one fine day, I hear that a brown man (an Indian) in the US of A has directed a Hollywood movie! I was pretty exited to hear this, and to my surprise, the movie was being screened in Central Plaza, 5 mins walk from our shop.
So, I decide to watch it in a lunch hour, by my-self, alone, and to my surprise I was alone in the theater too, except for four lucky couples who managed to get the four corners of the balcony and there was no body else in the hall, no kidding...
So, I am there, greatly eating my burger and sipping on my Pepsi when it all begun.
I am not exaggerating when I say that M. Night Shyamalan is the best Indian director I have seen.
If any of you guys watched the movie like I did, I bet it would be really difficult to control not wetting your pants.
Basically, the movie is a horror flick which narrates the story of a kid who can mingle with the people who are in their after-life, aare yaar, of course the ones who have some un-finished business.
It’s about this man, who is a child psychiatrist.
And, believe me, its all about sound and how much you are into the movie. At no point the movie bores one.
This movie opened my mind to the talkative movies, especially the Hollywood ones. Now, at the present date, I have all the M. Night movies collection (except for The Lady in the Water, I don’t want to talk about it) in addition to > 250 movies.
This movie gets the full credit to all my collection and my interest in the Hollywood movies.
It’s a must see. I will never forget that day, the summer of 1999.
Signing off,
~ El Goldman.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home