9 / 10
The Sixth Sense is M. Night Shyamalan’s 1999 American supernatural-thriller film depicting a child psychologist working with a Philadelphia boy who claims to see dead people, with the closing-reel revelation that the psychologist has been dead throughout the film’s running time. Bruce Willis plays Dr. Malcolm Crowe. Haley Joel Osment plays Cole Sear. Toni Collette plays Lynn Sear. Olivia Williams plays Anna Crowe. Donnie Wahlberg plays Vincent Gray. The screenplay was written by M. Night Shyamalan, his third feature production after Wide Awake (1998) and the limited-release Praying with Anger (1992). Hollywood Pictures distributed the film for theatrical release in August 1999 to enormous commercial success that established Shyamalan as a major commercial director.
The Sixth Sense is one of the most commercially successful horror-adjacent films ever produced and the foundational document of the late-1990s twist-ending revival in mainstream cinema. The film’s closing-reel revelation about Dr. Malcolm Crowe’s status has become permanent cultural reference, with subsequent twist-ending productions across all genres operating in dialogue with Shyamalan’s specific structural achievement. Haley Joel Osment’s child-protagonist performance was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, an unusual recognition for a child performer that confirmed the serious dramatic weight of the role. The film grossed over six hundred seventy million dollars worldwide and set up Shyamalan’s wide subsequent commercial profile.
Haley Joel Osment’s Performance
Haley Joel Osment was ten years old during production and his Cole Sear is one of the most distinctive child performances in modern cinema. The character must operate as genuinely traumatized child carrying the burden of constant supernatural visitation while maintaining ordinary fourth-grader social interactions, with Osment tracking both registers across the running time without breaking either.
Osment’s certain verbal cadence, the careful enunciation that conveys both intelligence and emotional containment, the careful eye-direction that signals supernatural perception to the audience, the sustained terror that breaks through in particular scenes, all combine to produce a performance that earned the Academy Award nomination. The ‘I see dead people’ line delivery has become permanent cultural reference, with subsequent productions repeatedly imitating Osment’s distinct timing.
For Writers
Child performances in supernatural-thriller productions depend on the actor’s capacity to track simultaneous ordinary-child behavior and supernatural-burden interior life. Osment’s Cole demonstrates the technique across the full running time.
The Closing-Reel Revelation
The film’s closing-reel revelation that Dr. Malcolm Crowe has been dead throughout the running time after Vincent Gray shot him in the opening sequence represents one of the most successful twist endings in modern cinema. The revelation works because the preceding two-hour structure has carefully maintained dual-reading possibility, with the audience’s initial reading remaining plausible until the revelation forces reconsideration.
Shyamalan’s screenplay structures the entire film to support both readings simultaneously. Crowe’s interactions with characters can be interpreted as ordinary professional consultation or as ghost-visitation depending on the viewer’s awareness of his status. The wedding-anniversary dinner with Anna, the running gag about restaurants, the limited contact with Cole’s other adults, all carry double-meaning that the revelation activates. The structural achievement has not been matched by subsequent twist-ending productions despite extensive imitation.
For Writers
Twist-ending productions work when the surrounding screenplay maintains dual-reading possibility throughout rather than concealing the twist through information withholding. Shyamalan’s particular architecture supports both readings simultaneously rather than hiding the truth from view.
Bruce Willis’s Restrained Performance
Bruce Willis plays Dr. Malcolm Crowe with genuine restraint that distinguishes the performance from his contemporary action-star register. The character requires sustained dramatic seriousness, careful emotional containment, and the gradual recognition across the running time that something is wrong with his marriage and his life. Willis tracks the character’s emotional trajectory without falling into action-star register.
The restrained performance is essential to the closing-reel revelation’s success. If Willis had played the role with action-star energy, the audience would have expected typical Willis-protagonist agency that the supernatural-thriller framework cannot accommodate. The certain restraint creates audience identification with Crowe’s professional limitations while supporting the dual-reading structure that the screenplay requires.
For Writers
Star-vehicle productions in genre material benefit from actors deliberately restraining their built performance registers to support the distinct screenplay requirements. Willis’s restraint in The Sixth Sense demonstrates the technique.
Craft Note
Shyamalan was twenty-eight when production began, with long career stakes riding on the film’s reception. The production cost approximately forty million dollars and grossed over six hundred seventy million worldwide, one of the most successful horror-adjacent commercial productions in cinema history. James Newton Howard composed the score with real restraint that supports the film’s dramatic register. The Sixth Sense received six Academy Award nominations including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, Best Supporting Actor (Osment), Best Supporting Actress (Collette), and Best Film Editing, winning none.
Verdict
The Sixth Sense is one of the most successful supernatural-thriller productions ever made and a foundational document of contemporary twist-ending filmmaking. Haley Joel Osment’s child performance, the closing-reel revelation’s structural achievement, and Bruce Willis’s restrained lead work combine to produce a film whose cultural influence has been substantial across two decades. Strongly recommended.
FAQ
Who directed The Sixth Sense?
M. Night Shyamalan directed the film and wrote the screenplay. It was his third feature production and the launch of his major commercial directorial career.
Did The Sixth Sense win Academy Awards?
The film received six Academy Award nominations including Best Picture and Best Director but won no competitive Awards.
How old was Haley Joel Osment in The Sixth Sense?
Osment was ten years old during the film’s production. He received the Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor.
Is the twist ending obvious on rewatching?
Multiple particular details support both readings throughout the film’s running time. Subsequent viewers have noted that Dr. Crowe never speaks directly to anyone other than Cole after the opening sequence, and his apparent interactions with other adults are screenplay construction supporting the dual reading.
How did The Sixth Sense perform commercially?
The film grossed over six hundred seventy million dollars worldwide on a forty-million budget, one of the most successful horror-adjacent commercial productions in cinema history.
Where was The Sixth Sense filmed?
Primarily in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Shyamalan has consistently used Philadelphia and surrounding Pennsylvania locations across his subsequent filmography.
What is the film’s rating?
The Sixth Sense is rated PG-13 for intense thematic material and violent images.