64
Metascore
35 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 80L.A. WeeklyJohn PattersonL.A. WeeklyJohn PattersonWriter-director M. Night Shyamalan lets the tension rise slowly, leads you everywhere you don't expect, doesn't rip you off and totally freaks you out -- all without stale effects or gore.
- 80Film.comTom KeoghFilm.comTom KeoghChalk this film up as an unusually intelligent thriller about that which scares us the most: accepting our accidents of fate.
- 80Film.comPeter BrunetteFilm.comPeter BrunetteIt's far more loquacious and cerebral than your average run-of-the-mill thriller, but boy, when the relatively infrequent scares do come, they will pull you out of your seat and raise the hair on your arms.
- 75San Francisco ExaminerWesley MorrisSan Francisco ExaminerWesley MorrisUltimately affecting mix 'n' match weeper.
- 75Portland OregonianDiana Abu-JaberPortland OregonianDiana Abu-JaberSometimes verges on silliness.
- 70SlateDavid EdelsteinSlateDavid EdelsteinUltimately, it has less in common with "Blair Witch" than with such quivering lumps of sentiment as "Ghost" and Field of Dreams."
- 60VarietyTodd McCarthyVarietyTodd McCarthyBorderline dull to sit through, The Sixth Sense is actually rather interesting to think about afterward because of the revelation of its ending.
- 50Village VoiceMichael AtkinsonVillage VoiceMichael AtkinsonComplain all you want about Willis's posturing and the rabbit-in-the-hat ending (predicated as it is on a vast plothole), the film is still a rarity, a studio horror movie focused on a child's traumatic stress.
- 50The Globe and Mail (Toronto)The Globe and Mail (Toronto)At least tries to disturb us, rather than shock us or gross us out, and that is admirable. But it doesn't pull it off, and the movie is indicative of the trouble Hollywood has these days making that most frightening kind of movie -- the kind that lets the audience frighten itself.
- 30SalonCharles TaylorSalonCharles TaylorBecause the movie never fully engages us, it never quite manages to allay our queasiness about watching the boy's distress.