Sinopsis(1)

Comienza con un flash. Un hombre se queda ciego repentinamente cuando conduce del trabajo a casa. De repente, todo su mundo se convierte en una neblina lechosa e inquietante. Una tras otra, cada persona que se cruza – su mujer, su médico, incluso el aparentemente buen samaritano que le lleva a su casa – correrá la misma suerte en un momento dado. A medida que se extiende el contagio y el pánico y la paranoia se apoderan de la ciudad, las víctimas de la ceguera repentina, de "La enfermedad blanca", son confinados y sometidos a cuarentena en un psiquiátrico abandonado en donde cualquier parecido con la vida normal empieza a desvanecerse. Dentro del hospital en cuarentena hay un testigo secreto: una mujer (Julianne Moore) que finge estar ciega para poder estar junto a su marido (Mark Ruffalo). Armada de un creciente valor y con voluntad de sobrevivir, llevará a una improvisada familia de siete personas por un viaje a través del terror y el amor, la depravación y la belleza, la guerra y el asombro, para salir del hospital y volver a una ciudad devastada en la que pueden ser la única esperanza. Su viaje pone de manifiesto la peligrosa fragilidad de la sociedad y el estimulante espíritu de la humanidad. (Notro Films)

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Reseñas (5)

POMO 

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español Un par de acertadas escenas psicológicamente tensas y una impresionante ambientación postapocalíptica en el último tercio, frente a la ejemplar actitud idiota de los personajes, que enterró todo el potencial de un tópico interesante. La película no quiere convertir al personaje principal en una «heroína de Hollywood» tanto que al final convierte al espectador en un idiota. Me refiero a los acontecimientos en la cuarentena que pueden no haber ocurrido en absoluto dadas las circunstancias. Incluso el concepto de la cuarentena al comienzo de la epidemia era poco realista y poco fiable. Que el Estado por miedo aísle, de una forma tan antisocial y como si fueran zombis no deseados, a un grupo de personas que han perdido la vista por razones inexplicables, y que dispare a ellos con metralletas por salir de la multitud por un metro, cuando pasan por un pasillo, ¿rodeados de muros de hormigón de cinco metros? Y la banda sonora extraña, a veces absolutamente inapropiada (música perversamente cómica en las escenas cuando se supone que debe dar escalofríos) tampoco ayudó mucho. Soy un espectador más bien emocional que un buscador de agujeros lógicos sin sentido en la probabilidad, pero esto fue demasiado. ()

J*A*S*M 

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inglés In the hands of Fernando Meirelles, a smart script brimming with ideas becomes a captivating and very powerful psychological drama that will delight many viewers. And maybe there will be just as many people unable to think beyond the delicately tapped motifs, the resolution of which is left outside the film (otherwise it would be much longer) – and they will be guided to the third section, where they might feel well… Personally, I think Blindness is a far more interesting film that the celebrated City of God. ()

Marigold 

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inglés If there is anything I hate from the bottom of my soul, then it’s these hollow "Shyamalan" mysterious too-art almost allegories, which are, at their cores, built a) on stupid psychology, b) a tense directing style, which may make one drunk for a while through expressiveness, but they then only kill through unconceptual changes of perspectives and filters, c) on the poser emphasis of the overlap to general metaphysical categories. As long as it looked like a (flimsy) psychological thriller, I was willing to accept it, as soon as it went into a "spiritual" mode, it turned into a repulsive poser film without content. Society in chaos? No, movie speech in spasm. Instead of relief and a flurry of human heat, for the last twenty minutes I felt an urge to see those rotten blind zombies (because they're not characters) die. In fact, Blindness is as banal (if not more banal) as Hollywood disaster movies in which a family is united by disaster. But at least there you can enjoy it. ()

gudaulin 

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inglés I have long dreamed of someone making an animated film for adults that would play intelligently with a genre, and when I saw Rango in that form, I was quite disappointed. When I saw Outbreak back in the day, I thought this was typical Hollywood stuff, and how nice it would be if someone tried to make it more realistic, like a cruel psychological drama. So I waited and got Blindness, and I was duly punished for my dreams because while I approve of the direction of Blindness, its final form is unfortunately awkward. The film is scattered in terms of the screenplay, essentially wanting to be something like Children of Men, but it lacks Cuaron's brilliant direction above all. While Meirelles does make an effort to depict a city struck by an apocalypse, the atmosphere is still somehow missing, and the film can be considered a unique example of how not to work with characters. I considered giving it three stars, but in this case, it would only be for the effort and subject matter. Overall impression: 45%. It's a shame that when someone actually makes a film like this, it turns out so uninteresting and uninspiring. ()

Kaka 

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inglés The merits of the chilling post-apocalyptic atmosphere and the setting are not outweighed by the fatal blunders in the script, the massive lapses in logic and the absurd behaviour of the main characters, or rather the main character, who is the only one without a visual impairment. Similarly implausible is the socio-political aspect, the depiction of the soldiers' approach to the quarantine, and the origin of the disease, which goes unexplained. If this is supposed to be a subliminal social/relationship satire about realising the importance of family togetherness in difficult situations, it has grossly failed. If it is supposed to be a classic mystery-thriller with a hint of apocalypse, it failed too. ()