Los Angeles Times

‘All I See Is You’

Blake Lively stars as a blind woman who stunningly regains her sight

- By Katie Walsh calendar@latimes.com

The premise of “All I See Is You,” wherein Blake Lively stars as a blind woman who has her sight restored, sounds unbearably sentimenta­l. Thankfully, the film itself is far weirder than that.

Director Marc Forster explores questions of identity in relationsh­ip to sensory experience­s in this erotic-ish thriller, about a woman whose whole self opens up to the world — for better or for worse — after cutting-edge eye surgery restores the sight she lost as a child in a tragic accident.

Forster, who wrote the script with Sean Conway, seems fascinated by creating a cinematic experience of blindness. It’s a unique viewing experience as he weaves a visual spectacle of morphing light and color, melding into abstract shapes, a kaleidosco­pe of fractured, fantastica­l images coupled with detailed sound design in an attempt to represent the perspectiv­e of Gina (Lively) and her experience of the world.

Gina lives in Bangkok with her husband, James (Jason Clarke), for his job. But not much about their background or past is fleshed out beyond her flashbacks to the terrible childhood car accident that took her sight and killed her parents. He’s the protector of his vulnerable wife and seems to both relish and strain at the responsibi­lity of caring for her and helping her navigate her small world.

“All I See Is You” posits that our selves are defined by how we experience the world. If a sense is taken away or restored, it changes the way we see ourselves, the way we move, how we relate to others.

With her sight back, Gina wants to eat up the world in great gulps — explosions of color at the flower market, faces in the crowd, a kayaking trip, her own face with makeup, her body in a sexy dress, a Spanish peep show with her sister and brotherin-law.

With her sight intact, she becomes a different person — it affects how she presents herself to the world, changes her sexuality — and that doesn’t sit well with her husband.

As an actor, Clarke seems to shape-shift if the light hits him in a certain way. He’s at once handsome and guileless, but at the right angle his visage darkens. As he toes the line between loving and sinister, we never quite trust him.

He leaves blind Gina for a minute too long outside a nightclub bathroom and later he seems wary of her, when she changes as the result of her surgery. His power crumbles as she gains hers, and we’re never quite sure how exactly he might try to hold onto that power.

There are moments of the experiment­al, abstract and sensual in “All I See Is You,” where Forster keeps the audience utterly unmoored, questionin­g where this story could possibly go. That sensation is a rare experience in most genrebased cinema, and with a few notable exceptions, “All I See Is You” is refreshing­ly resistant to predictabi­lity.

But for all of Forster’s experiment­ation and his willingnes­s to prod at the strange, jagged edges of this relationsh­ip, he ultimately rejects darkness. The final message may tip toward sentimenta­l, but it’s in line with the film’s embrace of light all along.

 ?? Roland Neveu Open Road Films ?? A HUSBAND and wife (Jason Clarke and Blake Lively) must adjust to a major change in their relationsh­ip after she has an operation.
Roland Neveu Open Road Films A HUSBAND and wife (Jason Clarke and Blake Lively) must adjust to a major change in their relationsh­ip after she has an operation.

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