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The Eye, also known as Seeing Ghosts, is a 2002 supernatural horror film directed by the Pang brothers. The film spawned two sequels by the Pang brothers, The Eye 2 and The Eye 10 . There are three remakes of this film, including Adhu , made in 2004 in Tamil , Naina made in 2005 in Hindi and The Eye , a 2008 Hollywood production starring ...
According to traditional Chinese and Japanese face reading, the eye is composed of two parts, the yin (black, iris and pupil) and the yang (white, sclera).The visibility of the sclera beneath the iris is said to represent physical imbalance in the body, and is claimed to be present in alcoholics, drug addicts, and people who over-consume sugar or grain.
The Eye of Shinjuku is a sculpture by Yoshiko Miyashita, installed in Shinjuku Station west gate underground square, in Tokyo, Japan. The 1969 sculpture is below the Subaru Building, and has been described as "the most eye-catching piece of public art in town".
Shirime (Japanese: 尻目, lit. "buttocks eye") is a strange yōkai with an eye in the place of his anus. The story goes as follows: Long ago, a samurai was walking at night down the road to Kyōto , when he heard someone calling out for him to wait.
The eyes of Daruma are often blank when sold. Monte A. Greer, author of Daruma Eyes, described the "oversized symmetrical round blank white eyes" as a means to keep track of goals or big tasks and motivate them to work to the finish. The recipient of the doll fills in one eye upon setting the goal, then the other upon fulfilling it.
Date Masamune (伊達 政宗, DAH-tay; September 5, 1567 – June 27, 1636) was a Japanese daimyō during the Azuchi–Momoyama period through the early Edo period.Heir to a long line of powerful feudal lords in the Tōhoku region, he went on to found the modern-day city of Sendai.
Vista Field, the blank canvas in the middle of Kennewick, has three confirmed businesses eager to start construction on new buildings — a Japanese restaurant, a wedding dress shop and an eye ...
Metsubushi (Japanese: 目潰し, lit. "eye closers") or gantsubushi [1] are a variety of implements and techniques that were used in feudal Japan by samurai police and other individuals to temporarily or permanently blind or disorient an opponent.