| Film Title: The Child's Eye | Year Released: 2011 | |
| Reviewed By: Horror Bob | ||
| Movie Website: Click Here |
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| Overall Stars: *1/2 | Scare Factor: ** | |
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Usually when you hear of the Pang
Brother you automatically think great Asian Horror Directors. I
think of my favorite Asian horror film, and one of the best films I
have ever seen, The Eye. The brothers are known for their
excellence in horror. However, as of late they have been in decline,
as some of their films have not been all that great. I expected this
one, The Child’s Eye to be awesome, because it is kind of a
sequel to The Eye. However, what I got was a lackluster film
with some bad acting and a ghost story that offer nothing new to the
genre. The
Child’s Eye is about six young people on
vacation in Bangkok that find themselves stranded at an airport due
to a riot. They go to the Chung Tai Hotel, run by Chuen (Lam Ka-tung),
where Rainie sees a female ghost and Ling finds a hovering hand
trying to grab her. While at dinner the three men disappear. Rainie
leads the girls with the aid of Man-man and her ghost-seeing dog
Little Huang as they try and find them in the hotel's underground
passages where they encounter the female ghost and a strange monster
which is actually a dog human hybrid. This film was
originally shot in 3-D and was one of the first 3-D Hong Kong horror
films. You can see in the film that scenes involving some kind of
giant bug and tear gas canister are all done with the 3-D technology
as are some of the ghosts. The film lacks in a lot of areas the
script reads like a long boring talkie and the action, (besides a
few moving chairs) gets off to a slow start. The acting is nothing
special either as it seemed that the lead actors in the film
struggled to grasp hold of their characters. Sure it had a few good
scares here and there but I didn’t think the film was anywhere near
as great as The Eye was. The DVD has a few
features such as a behind the scenes interview with the Cast & Crew
as well as a Trailer Gallery. The DVD also offers the film in
Cantonese and English 5.1 Dolby Digital Audio as well as optional
English and Spanish subtitles. Overall, I was
impressed by the style of the film but not with the story, the
acting and yes even the hokey effects. There is also something about
a ghost seeing dog that just brings up the thought of that dog in
the original Hills Have Eyes 2. What’s with these psychic
dogs in movies? It just does not work for me. - Horror Bob
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