Synopsis
An obsessive love story.
A blind woman's relationship with her husband changes when she regains her sight and discovers disturbing details about themselves.
A blind woman's relationship with her husband changes when she regains her sight and discovers disturbing details about themselves.
Blake Lively Jason Clarke Ahna O'Reilly Miquel Fernández Xavi Sánchez Yvonne Strahovski Wes Chatham Danny Huston Kaitlin Orem Cindy Sirinya Bishop Bonnie Zellerbach Sahajak Boonthanakit Johanna Wallmeier Paula Allen Lucy Lummis Stephan Wiks Carmen Flores Jordi Llovet Suman C. Tharan Sornchai Chatwiriyachai Jarunun Phantachat Pongsakorn Daengsri Artem Kuzmin Cristina Tuscano Jasp Sanpere Oscar Foronda Mehdi Tabar Jonathan Samson Raweeporn Jungmeier Show All…
2DUX² SC Films International Wing and a Prayer Pictures LINK Entertainment SC Films Thailand Co. Universal Pictures
Näen vaid sind, Por trás dos seus olhos, Je ne vois que toi, Chiudi gli occhi, Dame tus ojos, Só te vejo a ti, Ти си всичко, което виждам, Вижу лишь тебя, Widzę tylko ciebie, Tek Gördüğüm Sensin, 我所看到的都是你, 올 아이 씨 이즈 유, 盲女驚心, Vidím jenom tebe, Só Te Vejo a Ti, רואה רק אותך, Μόνο Εσένα Βλέπω, Por Trás dos Seus Olhos, Es redzu vienīgi tevi, Matau tik tave, Csak téged látlak, 婚裂誘惑, Бачу лише тебе, รัก ลวง ตา, მხოლოდ შენ გხედავ, Tu ești tot ceea ce văd, Све што видим си ти
imagine being blind and regaining your sight to find out you look like blake lively
Why do James (Jason Clarke) and his visually impaired wife Gina (Blake Lively) live in Bangkok? It’s a question that hangs over “All I See Is You,” begging to be asked. We know that James does insurance work somewhere in the Thai capital, but the way he brings it up in conversation makes it sound like an alibi. Usually film characters take jobs in far-flung destinations towards the end of the story, not before it starts. In truth the answer couldn’t be more obvious; it’s there the whole time, right in front of our faces, visible to everyone but Gina. Or maybe she sees it too, and — like us — simply doesn’t want to accept the fact that her doting husband moved her to a foreign city because of her debilitating blindness, and not in spite of it.
Despite my overwhelming lust for Blake Lively, I wasn't planning on checking this one out until I read the great Emily Yoshida over at Vulture describe it as "something like a Lifetime movie directed by Gaspar Noé."
She sold me. And yeah, it's pretty great. Imagine being blind and then getting your sight back to discover you looked like Blake fuckin' Lively. Talk about winning the lottery twice.
I loved it! You either love it or hate it and I truly loved this beautiful mess.
This film is strongly divided into 3 stages.
In the first one we are introduced to the main characters, Gina and James. We learn about them, Gina mostly, how she lives and how she "sees" the world around. Outstanding cinematography, her version of a vision is incredibly done! This stage of their relationship is sweet and gentle. You feel the tenderness of their love.
The second stage is the operation and the aftermath of it. Gina slowly becomes truly herself. She changes her style of clothing, her behavior towards James. She can finally let go her past. She discovers new things, and learns…
the diving bell and the butterfly & enter the void have something in common: i turned them both after after like 5 minutes. so when this started with similar ~arthousey~ ~abstract~ pov shots, i did think the hazy lights and colors were pretty but also wanted to die a little. determined to make it through a movie i've anticipated for months, i stuck to it and was rewarded, if rewarded is the same as not getting hugely pissed off. this got better in the middle, and then got too weird, and then ended in an incredibly frustrating way - the "twist" is really that the husband is a dick but also sad, and the wife is slightly shady as well, but…
Frankly it seems that the only person committed is Blake Lively, because the rest of everything that involves this movie, never manages to attract you, the script is too weak, the story is too weak
A film that surprised me. The pace of the film is just perfect, and the story is superb.
Not sure why most people chucked this movie in the bin. Maybe it's because it's touted as a mystery thriller - which is highly inaccurate, as it's neither.
All I See is You is a straightforward relationship drama. And that's my go-to genre. I love this shit. Plus Blake Lively is amazing here. (She usually is.)
Blake's character regains her sight after eye-surgery, which should lead to a wonderful development within her existing good marriage.
But the husband is not vibing with his wife's newfound confidence and curious streak. He much preferred when she relied on him for everything. A delicate puppy to come home to every evening.
And she, in turn, starts to see her husband for what he really is; shallow, restrained and lacking any spontaneity. Just someone who enjoyed having his wife rely on him. Being her eyes and having that sense of control over everything.
But things are different now..
All I See Is You is infrequently on the cusp of becoming the intriguing film is teases periodically throughout, but aside from a visual gloss and Blake Lively's terrific performance, this is nothing but a missed opportunity. The film it wants to be is much stronger than the film it is and that's a crying shame.
Don't tell me Blake Lively can't act!
But also don't make me watch this movie ever again.