Director and producer M. Night Shyamalan's writer has used his original film for about 20 years to attract viewers around the world. His work has a sixth meaning, unreadable, village, happening and so on. He and his wife Dr. Bhavna Shyamalan co-founded M. Night Shyamalan Foundation to help individuals
Director and producer M. Night Shyamalan's writer has used his original film for about 20 years to attract viewers around the world. His movie contains the sixth meaning, undecipherable, village, and happening. He and his wife Dr. Bhavna Shyamalan co-founded M. Night Shyamalan Foundation to help individuals
In addition, M. Night Shyamalan uses windows, eyeglasses and mirrors as a symbol of the theme in most of his movies. For example, in "The Sixth Sense", M. Night Shyamalan won Malcolm's Outstanding Achievement Award with Crowe's wife Anna, using shots and mirrors parallel to one bottle. Sitting in front of the child treatment area fireplace, they ironically evaluate them, and their image is reflected in the glass packaging awards. Shyamalan shows Malcolm and Anna and their reflections with intentional parallel lenses. The mirror image symbolizes Crow 's false reality and soon becomes a reflection of himself.
It can be said that M. Night Shyamalan was a huge success at the 1999 great hit "The Sixth Sense". The narrative structure of a movie can be explained from two different points of view. On the other hand, Malcolm Crowe is a therapist who survived the shooting accident and tried to help Cole Sear, a very young and emotionally introverted child. On the other hand, the strength of the whole story of the film kept the audience suspicious until the end of the movie, revealing that Crowe was murdered. Then the story takes the audience to perfectly different dimensions The existence of Crow is no longer physical since he is roaming the ghost which can only be seen by call. Indeed, it was a young call that understood Malcolm's need to keep a tragic life in the past and remain in the dead. This is a perfect example of how M. Night Shyamalan plays games based on spectator expectations.