There’s a special kind of cinematic purgatory reserved for movies that can’t quite decide if they’re supposed to make you scream, laugh, cry, or just quietly wish you had gone blind during the opening credits. My Left Eye Sees Ghosts lives in that purgatory. Directed by Johnnie To and Wai Ka-Fai—two men who should’ve known better—this Hong Kong genre casserole manages to be part ghost story, part rom-com, part tragic widow sobfest, and part existential midlife crisis, all glued together with the cinematic equivalent of stale chewing gum.
The film stars Sammi Cheng as May Ho, a woman who marries rich after seven days, loses her husband in a scuba accident, and immediately graduates from “tragic widow” to “chain-smoking, shoplifting, drunk-driving hot mess.” If that sounds like a character study in grief, don’t get too excited. This isn’t Manchester by the Sea. This is Casper if Casper had a gambling problem and an editor who left all his footage in the dryer for too long.
The Premise: Ghosts, But Make It Soap Opera
After her husband dies, May discovers her left eye can see ghosts. Not demons, not poltergeists, not anything remotely scary—just garden-variety ghosts who appear to be auditioning for a mid-tier TV sitcom. Enter Ken Wong (Lau Ching Wan), who claims to be her dead childhood classmate but spends most of the film acting like the ghostly equivalent of a clingy Uber driver.
Ken isn’t terrifying. He doesn’t stalk her. He doesn’t whisper cryptic warnings. He mostly nags her into getting her life together, which is basically what her therapist should’ve done if she had one. If your big horror gimmick is “woman sees ghosts through one eye,” you should probably make the ghosts do something more interesting than playing spectral guidance counselor.
And May’s big dream? Not revenge, not closure, not even self-redemption. No, she just wants to see her dead husband one last time, which is touching if you’re into weepy melodrama, but frustrating if you bought the DVD hoping for The Sixth Sense and wound up with Ghost Whisperer: Hangover Edition.
The Tone: Horror Meets Hallmark Channel
This movie can’t decide what it wants to be, which is ironic considering it’s about a woman who literally sees double. One scene is played for comedy, like when May gets drunk and wrecks her car only to find her ghostly self lying outside the wreckage. Ha ha—she’s dead! Just kidding, she’s fine. Cue laugh track.
The next scene is melodrama so thick you’ll need a machete to cut through it. She cries about her dog. She cries about her husband. She cries about crying. Somewhere in the background, Ken the ghost is trying to hug her like he’s starring in a Casper reboot nobody asked for. Then the movie pivots into rom-com territory, teasing a “maybe romance” between May and the guy who looks suspiciously like her dead husband. If this doesn’t sound unsettling to you, you may be in need of your own exorcist.
The Performances: Or, How to Waste Talent
Sammi Cheng is a capable actress, but here she spends most of her screen time alternating between “tragically drunk” and “tragically hungover.” Lau Ching Wan does his best with the role of Ken, but it’s hard to look dignified when your job is to play a ghost who spends most of the movie gaslighting the heroine into thinking you’re someone else. It’s less “spirit of comfort” and more “catfishing from beyond the grave.”
Supporting roles? Forgettable. A few relatives scowl at May for being a gold digger. An exorcist pops up briefly, probably wondering if he can bill the director for hazard pay. Even the dog’s ghost manages more screen presence than some of the human cast.
The Reveal: A Twist Nobody Asked For
The big reveal is that the ghost Ken wasn’t really Ken at all—it was her dead husband in disguise. Yes, you read that correctly. Instead of just appearing as himself, hubby decides to cosplay as May’s childhood acquaintance so she won’t get too attached. Nothing says eternal love like emotional manipulation from beyond the grave.
And then, just when you think this revelation might lead to something dramatic or meaningful, the film drops it like a hot potato and pivots to hint at a romance between May and the real Ken (who was alive all along). Because apparently, the only thing better than marrying a man after seven days is falling for a doppelgänger of your dead spouse.
The Ending: Boo, But Not the Good Kind
By the time the credits roll, May can no longer see ghosts, which is probably for the best. If I had gone through two hours of ghostly gaslighting and supernatural romance bait-and-switch, I’d gouge my left eye out too. The movie closes with a vague suggestion that May and Ken might get together, which is supposed to be sweet but mostly feels like the cinematic version of reheating leftovers.
The Verdict
My Left Eye Sees Ghosts is less a film and more a cinematic mood swing. It tries to juggle horror, comedy, romance, and drama, and ends up dropping all of them on the floor like a drunk clown at a children’s party. It’s not scary enough to be horror, not funny enough to be comedy, not romantic enough to be a rom-com, and not tragic enough to be drama. It exists in the no-man’s-land of genre, haunting your DVD shelf with the same persistence as one of May’s eye-ghosts.
At $1.7 million, the budget wasn’t tiny, but the payoff feels like the producers accidentally spent most of it on fog machines and cigarettes for Sammi Cheng’s character. The film has been described as “tongue-in-cheek,” but the only thing cheeky about it is the audacity to waste two hours of your life and call it entertainment.
Final Thoughts:
If you ever wondered what would happen if Ghost (the Patrick Swayze one) hooked up with Absolutely Fabulous and their child was raised on a steady diet of cheap wine, cigarette smoke, and unresolved grief, this is it.
