A hypnotic meditation on perception and memory, Claude Chabrol's Eye follows a quiet, observant protagonist who becomes entangled in a web of secrets after a chance encounter. As ordinary moments accumulate—glimpsed conversations, shifting light, and unfinished sentences—the boundaries between truth and illusion blur, driving the character to question trust, desire, and the true meaning of sight. The film moves with a poised, clinical clarity, inviting viewers to infer intention from implication rather than spectacle. It is a suspenseful, unnerving study of how what we see can reveal more than what is said.
A hypnotic meditation on perception and memory, Claude Chabrol's Eye follows a quiet, observant protagonist who becomes entangled in a web of secrets after a chance encounter. As ordinary moments accumulate—glimpsed conversations, shifting light, and unfinished sentences—the boundaries between truth and illusion blur, driving the character to question trust, desire, and the true meaning of sight. The film moves with a poised, clinical clarity, inviting viewers to infer intention from implication rather than spectacle. It is a suspenseful, unnerving study of how what we see can reveal more than what is said.