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Eight (2016)

User reviews

Eight

14 reviews
6/10

Hard to watch

I think it captures the life of a person with OCD, but it was a very hard to watch film. Not that I want films to be easy viewing / pleasant films but there is something about this film which made me very uncomfortable and almost gave me a headache..
  • deepshikha-baisya
  • Mar 27, 2018
  • Permalink
4/10

Eight

I think the movie is a good movie , however there are some things that can be improved. I would have liked to see a better ending. I would have liked to see more growth through out the character. There is growth, however I would have liked to see a more outstanding ending. I think they did a really good job giving a clear visual on what it is like going through OCD (Obsessive compulsive disorder). I do think there was at times that they went over the the top with it. I would have liked to see more actors in the movie. I also would have liked to see better coping skills. I think they could have done a better job at helping the actor overcome her struggle.
  • murraykeena
  • Mar 22, 2023
  • Permalink

Lead actor was okay, but poor script and direction.

Don't believe the review by one org1andrew, whose account's sole activity in almost two years is to review this film and then disappear. That's shill behavior. Someone who worked on the movie or knows the actors involved, writes an overtly glowing review as though this movie was directed by Hal Ashby or Robert Altman. What a joke.

Look the lead actor was okay. Considering the story sucked, the photography looked like a high school art project, she did a reasonable job at conveying the pathos involved. I hope this was some amateur high school production, because professional filmmakers would be loathe to have this sort of work on their resume.

The one glowing review screams sympathy vote. I don't understand why Aussie and Kiwi filmmakers continue to make dramatic crap when they should be doing what we supposed third world folk (I live in Thailand) manage to do here with almost no money.

Try making a fun movie that audiences will actually enjoy for a change. 2/10.
  • Marcus-Aurelius90
  • Jan 28, 2016
  • Permalink
1/10

Nothing happens

I'm sure that some people might consider this art, but in terms of activity, it basically watching grass grow. It is true that this is exactly the way to portray the OCD person with additional issues, but that doesn't make it interesting.

We basically watch a woman's alarm go off endlessly, go to the bathroom, followed by an endless shower. Activity like this goes on for most of the movie. All of this is real time, no breaks.
  • Jackbv123
  • Aug 20, 2017
  • Permalink
7/10

Real life HORROR

This honestly made me cringe at times, more so than actual horror films. I could not believe how a movie with almost no speaking at all could keep me fully engaged. I have known a couple people with this condition, but nothing close to the extent of this. The Lead role was very well done and realistic. Knowing that this is a daily struggle for so many, it truly breaks my heart. This movie is definitely raw and hits you like a ton of bricks, knowing that our minds can be the biggest horror story of them all.
  • mrsaalvarado
  • Feb 10, 2019
  • Permalink
8/10

WOW

So I stumbled upon this film today, and curiosity got the best of me. This sort of disorder has always interested me, and after watching Eight, as painstaking as it was, I am more the wiser regarding the sheer desperation and pain these people go through. The showers did me in, to be honest. Thoughts of the scene from Silkwood came rushing back. I did manage to make it to the end, and I am now glad that I did. Bravo to the director and the actress who performed this grueling task.
  • drummersixtyone
  • Apr 1, 2022
  • Permalink
9/10

A Day in the Life of OCD Hell

  • org1andrew
  • Nov 9, 2015
  • Permalink

Caught this "film" at the TIFF light box

  • KnockKnock1
  • Feb 11, 2016
  • Permalink
9/10

Likely very relatable if you have OCD

  • nicoletmv
  • May 18, 2018
  • Permalink
8/10

An Eight For Eight. Ha.

I cannot rate this higher because it is the most accurate and therefore opposite of fun and entertaining thing I have seen in recent memory.

Anyone who watches this with significantly negative feedback obviously does not have anxiety or OCD. It is boring to watch for those who cannot relate; maybe even seem overdone. I assure you, it is not. If anything, for the most serious cases, it censors the most embarrassing types of compulsions, obsessions, and rituals. For me, being one that can sadly relate, this was extremely difficult to watch because it was quite triggering, making me think about my own obsessions and rituals. So maybe even as a little ERP (Exposure Response Prevention), I had to watch this in little short bits over time, otherwise I would be flooded with anxiety I could not cope with. Am I ashamed to admit how pathetic this is? Yes. Have I done, do I continue do, many illogical compulsions and rituals every damn hour of every day that are far more embarrassing, that I am not admitting to my own consciousness, to my friends, let alone in a public forum? Yes, yes, and yes.

If this seems campy or weirdly horror like, that is because it is. I promise you that the darkest things our brains can do in real life are far more frightening than any made up horror film.

I do not have the cleaning subtype, but this is scarily accurate, in so far as the desperation, the madness you feel knowing what you are doing is madness, the utter panic; the fact that anyone else watching you would likely think some very unkind things about you, when all you are is a girl with a unbelievably powerful mental disorder that will not go away. No matter what you do. Indeed, the more you forcefully try to make it go away, the more serious it actually becomes, to "make up" for any deficiencies.

And how alone you inevitably are, you and your disorder. Because you might have many loved ones who want with all their hearts to save you; to rescue you from this pain, but there is little they can do when your OCD rules your every thought and what feels like every cell in your body. You can try to let in love for others, you can accept love, but at the end of the day, you know who you are really married to for life.

So you do the only thing you can, when suicide is not an option. You continue pushing through another second, another minute, another hour, another day, another year.

And the ending was unfortunately the most relatable thing of all. Because your one victory is equivalent to everyone else's, well, breathing. And about a thousand times easier to lose than it is the win. Because the thoughts don't go away, and despite the many victories you thought you had. Then, suddenly, it is ten years later, twenty years later, you are still alive, but you don't know how, and it's all been a nightmare. And you are still in it. Stuck. No way out. The credits might roll, but for us sufferers, the horror continues. Relentlessly.

#0CD #mentalhealth #mentalhealthawareness.
  • ASuiGeneris
  • Oct 28, 2024
  • Permalink
10/10

A day in the shoes of a real fighter

One of the best films I have seen this year 2023. A great example of a film with few words but a million messages through other means. A day in the life of Sarah who has OCD. An Oscar winning performance by Munro, an amazing script that keeps you hooked to this experience from beginning to end. As the day progresses and the protagonist tries to find the energy and optimism to make it another minute, let alone a day, dealing with OCD, I started gasping for air/oxygen to make it through the next scene. Like Sarah, the protagonist, I kept hoping that the obsession and the compulsion would not win. What a fight!
  • rubyxxi
  • Feb 15, 2023
  • Permalink
10/10

Trigger Warning

It was a wonderful movie how they made it and it showed the battles of everyday life living with OCD, Huge trigger warning on that one part she takes a shower. When I saw just that one part, Oh my Gosh, scary. So much scarier than watching a horror movie almost. I was horrified when that came on. So huge trigger warning to anyone who can relate to this shower scene. Words cannot express, I like legit almost vomited twice. This really shows how an OCD person strugglse because I felt it in my whole body. That part made me feel like I had a legit outter body experience.
  • thesupermom
  • Nov 9, 2017
  • Permalink

Disturbing, Raw and Lead was Great

I also thought originally that it was a RL documentary, discovered later she was acting, but it made it no less real and raw. I wasnt sure if I'd write this review because of is raw content and the very real feelings it stirred. I must admit I jump skipped 10secs at a time through alot of it bc the rawness became too real for me.

That said, lead did so well, it was so believable as a true life person. If you have OCD, know someone who does, or are in the field studying this, I highly recommend it; if not, you will likely find it too slow and probably annoying. Unfortunately it's one of those films that you really like because the subject is personal for you, or youll really hate it because you have no interest in the subject.
  • grfulnfree-72649
  • Nov 25, 2019
  • Permalink

An accurate portrayal of true OCD

It shows the real anguish faced on a daily basis by thousands of people with OCD. While it may be boring, tedious, or even silly to others, those wit OCD know the suffering of the woman portrayed in this movie. Heartbreaking!
  • ktunney-98927
  • Oct 17, 2019
  • Permalink

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