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More than two decades later, the haunting confession from M. Night Shyamalan's The Sixth Sense, "I see dead people," still resonates because it accomplishes something rare in horror. It terrifies us ...
About midway through “The Sixth Sense,” Bruce Willis’ Malcolm, a compassionate child psychologist, attempts to cheer up Haley Joel Osment’s Cole, a disturbed boy struggling with secrets he ...
About midway through “The Sixth Sense,” Bruce Willis’ Malcolm, a compassionate child psychologist, attempts to cheer up Haley Joel Osment’s Cole, a disturbed boy struggling with secrets he ...
It's been 25 years since Haley Joel Osment uttered that famous phrase.. The Sixth Sense, which premiered on Aug. 6, 1999, starred Bruce Willis as child psychologist Dr. Malcolm Crowe and Osment as ...
After 25 years, 'The Sixth Sense' is still a pleasure to watch — even if you know the big secret ... telling Bruce Willis’ Malcolm Crowe, “I see dead people,” is an iconic moment, ...
The Sixth Sense‘s plot is deceptively simple. It follows Malcolm Crowe (a spellbinding Bruce Willis), a child psychologist, as he begins to work with a new patient, Cole Sear (an effortlessly ...
The central conflict in The Sixth Sense involves people who don’t know how to connect with others. Disillusioned by his failure with Vincent, and separated from Anna, Malcolm sees working with ...
The film follows child psychologist Dr. Malcolm Crowe (Bruce Willis) as he treats Cole Sear (Haley Joel Osment), a nine-year-old who can, as his line indicates, see dead people.
About midway through “The Sixth Sense,” Bruce Willis’ Malcolm, a compassionate child psychologist, attempts to cheer up Haley Joel Osment’s Cole, a disturbed boy struggling with secrets he ...