Sight: A Mirror That Reflects
By Dr. Jeannie Yi,
Founder Executive Producer of Main
Street
Sight
is an American movie with Chinese heritage.
The movie is based on
Dr Ming Wang’s journey from China to
America,
and how this journey has turned an ordinary
Chinese
to an extra-ordinary human being.
At the height of his career as a celebrate
doctor he doesn’t forget
to give back to the society
with what his talents, family and faith have
brought him to where he is today.
Sight
celebrates the Chinese culture and the
America dream
in its best manifestation.
In two hours, Sight
does well in clearly expressing its powerful
message
of faith, love and hope through powerful
imagery
and excellent story telling.
It tastefully blends lighthearted moments
with an impactful drama
Sight,
leaves the audience including myself, and
the other guests,
feeling uplifted rather than deeply
saddened.
It is an extremely touching film that gives
positive and important insight
into how one can find harmony in their
relationship with their past
and illuminate the present with the light
of faith and optimism.
Dr Wang himself said it best,
if we can embrace our past we can have a
better present.
What strikes me most is the seemingly simple
chronological story wrapped
in a highly emotionally charged story
telling language and imageries
centered around love, perseverance,
optimism and faith in the face
of adversity.
It is based on the autobiographical book
written by
Doctor Ming Wang named From
Darkness to Sight—
A Journey from Hardship to Healing. It
depicts the trials and
tribulations of his life through
difficulties faced both in
his humble beginnings in China during the
cultural revolution
and as a world renowned laser eye surgeon
in the United States.
The juxtaposition between the past and the
present lives of
Doctor Wang
is at the center of the film.
The 5-year old Kajal, an orphan in
Calcutta whose eyes were intentionally
blinded
by her stepmother who poured acid into her
eyes while the girl was asleep
(a blind singing beggar would get more
profit )
parallels with Dr Wang’s childhood
traumatic experience when his only friend,
a young teen girl classmate was violently
snatched away
by the local hooligans.
In both cases Dr Ming Wang could do
nothing.
Kajal’s eyes were too damaged to be
salvaged. When the stepmother found
that Kajal could not sing, she was then
abandoned to die.
The young girl in Ming’s life simply
vanished
(The movie reminds me of young Forest and
Jenny ).
When Kajal was brought into Ming’s
life,
the teenage girl’s image also appears in his
dreams to hunt him.
Where is peace and healing?
The evil acts of humans are always matched
by the greater benevolence of the Creator,
a message strongly vibrates throughout the
movie,
otherwise how could it be explained
that another blind teenager orphan Maria,
a fifteen year old girl from
Moldova in Eastern Europe,
was brought to Ming for surgery.
The first surgery failed. The second
succeeded .
What has happened in between two surgeries?
It’s the same technology, the same doctor
and the same hospital.
The only difference in between is Dr Ming
Wang’s visit to the church
where Kajal was.
She was then playing with the other blind
kids happily when the
heavy minded doctor walked in. Kajal placed
a wooden beaded cross
in Ming’s hand when he leaves.
If a 5-year old could accept the fatality
and move on, why can’t
Ming give the surgery of Maria’s eye
another chance, this time with faith in God?
Miracle happen!
When Maria sees herself first time in
15 years she slowly murmurs:
I’m so pretty.
The crowds broke into tears. So did I.
Another scene in the movie that speaks
directly to me
is Ming’s rejection by Jon’s
Hopkins Admission Dean
simply because of his color- the guy didn’t
even bother to look at Ming’s application.
I had a similar experience.
The first semester when I sat in the English
class for a course of Medieval Allegory 101,
my young English professor simply wouldn’t
believe I came up with the
“echo analysis”
saying the Red Cross in the Fairy Queen
got lost in the Dark Forest
and walked in circles in the woods is
because the dark woods symbolizes
the clouded dark mind that can no longer
tell truth
(Una - the princess in the besieged fortress
waiting to be rescued )
from falsehood ( Deussa who seduced the Red
Cross and made him lose the way.)
When you only listen to yourself, it’s like
you are listening to the echos
of your own voice. Falsehood is an echo,
l wrote. My thesis got a B! The English
professor simply wouldn’t believe
a Chinese fresh from China could come up
with such a “brilliant theory”.
My 5-year university fellowship requires
me to get straight A!
I went to my own professor Prof.
Mathewson (bless his soul)
who taught literary theory in comparative
literature department and explained to him
how I got the image. I told him when I was
17 years old I graduate from high school
but there was no job nor university entrance
exam to take, just like what Dr Ming
describes in the movie.
It’s a very bad period in Chinese
contemporary history and we could do nothing
to change our fate. One of my aunts who
worked in a remote mountainous county
next to Tibet asked me to be a replacement
teach for two months because
their Chinese teacher was having a baby.
I went. These two months created the most
unforgettable experience in my life!
Every day at 3pm, a train would pass by the
mountain pass
we would all then swaRm onto the gate of the
school
on the mountaintop to wave and call out to
the train:
Train bring us out the giant mountains 火车 带 我们 出大山
Our voice was so young and loud it pierced
through the fog in the mountains
and valleys and we would jump and run
tumbling down to the bottom
of the mountain
where the train would stop, our voices
echoed after us, rumbling like a
thunder storm chasing us.
The train was gone, the Hope was gone.
Prof Mathewson held
my cold hands and my tears washed down my
face.
My English professor, after learning the
story, apologized
and changed my grade to A.
That day I learned two things:
1. fairness to all. 2. Forgiveness.
America is a very forgiving country.
Once you know you are wrong, you apologize.
People will give you and give you a second
chance.
Dr
Ming got
enrolled into university in 1977 during
the first university entrance examination
after a ten-year rupture
in the enrollment system,
I was enrolled in the following year 1978.
1977 and 1977
were actually only 6 months apart.
Dr Wang came to America in 1982 to
study his Master and PhD;
I came to America in 1985 to study for my
PhD
after I got my Master in China.
It is this kinship and parallel paths with Dr
Ming
I identify and the movies.
The movie is like a mirror and my journey
in china and to America
is getting played out.
The imageries and messages in the movie Sight
resonate with lots of audiences.
I am sure that its powerful imagery and
universal message will elicit a
deep emotional response from viewers of all
races, colors, ages and creeds.
The ghost of Dr Ming’s past that
constantly haunts his thoughts and
affects his performance in the present left
him after Kajal case.
The movie ends with Dr Ming Wang dancing
with Kajal leading the way
… blind but happily accepting what life has
brought her.
There is always a silver lining no matter
how faint it is.
It keeps us living on with hope and love.
Sight keeps
you feeling an overriding light of optimism
throughout the
hardships shown on the screen.
Even though Sight deals
with heavy subject matter, it does not weigh
you down.
The movie always keeps a balance between the
dark traumatic events
and the lighthearted optimism of the story.
For instance the pretty Chinese girl from
Tsingtao who works in the bar
Dr. Ming and his fellow doctors
frequent and the subsequent dating scenes
between the two
provide a balance to the haunted nights.
The uneasiness I have is that there are
times where the screenwriter
does tend to lose touch with reality though
and in certain places
the dialogue feels contrived and forced.
( The movie needs a voice over. The few
characters in the lives of Ming
here in America and over there in China
just don’t sound authentically Chinese.)
It gives the impression that the character
is a caricature of an actual person
and they are just being used as a tool or
prop to express ideals unnaturally.
This overly deliberate approach is not
needed, as the story itself naturally
and effectively evokes the desired emotions.
And I would cut fifteen minutes to shorten
and speed up the movie.
If I had a choice and Liberty
I would leave out the family members of Dr.
Ming Wang back in China.
Their story belongs to another movie.
This movie is about Dr Ming.
It’s his journey, a journey of sight and
healing.
To bring them here, it feels like overkill.
Dr. Jeannie Yi,
Founder Executive Producer of Main
Street |