The Eyes Have It

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Creepy.

One of the scariest things you can see on film is something you know is not alive acting as if it is; statues move, eyes of dolls pop open, parts of the architecture animating of their own accord. This can happen as someone is watching it, or out of the corner of the eye, ceasing as soon as the character looks right at it. It doesn't matter, it is more than enough to send some unstable souls over the edge into madness (followed quite often by death).

Note that this trope is particularly effective and chilling when the audience never knows if what they're seeing is real, or all in the character's head. And while such occurrences usually result in the demise of the witness, it's not required that they literally keel over due to fear. Quite often, the imagery of the moving/living inanimate implies a guilty conscience, if not outright stated.

Subtrope of Malevolent Architecture. Almost always produces Nightmare/ParanoiaFuel. (Although if done badly, this leads to Narm.) Often related to Your Mind Makes It Real and Clap Your Hands If You Believe.

Despite the trope name, it doesn't always have to be eyes. And while a particularly visceral, textual description is possible, this trope almost always appears in visual media.

Compare Uncanny Valley. Related to Demonic Dummy, Perverse Puppet, Portrait Painting Peephole and Living Toys. Sometimes overlaps with Eye Awaken, though that trope usually only applies to living (or at least sentient) creatures.

Not to be confused with the Charmed episode of the same name, which made use of Eye Scream rather than this trope. Or the Criminal Minds episode, also with the same name, which also makes use of Eye Scream.

Examples of The Eyes Have It include:

Film

  • In the 1999 remake of The Haunting of Hill House, not only does the ghost of Hugh Crain cause his house to come alive in various ways, but in one particularly Anvilicious scene, a pair of stained glass windows in Eleanor's bedroom are seen to turn into colossal, glaring red eyes.
  • A great deal of the fear dealt out by Chucky of Child's Play derives from the power of this trope, at least before the doll starts running around openly trying to kill everyone.
  • An example where much more than eyes is used: Young Sherlock Holmes, the scene where the knight in the stained-glass window leaps down to do combat with the poor priest. Notable because it is specifically later revealed, like other deaths in the film, to be caused by a hallucinogenic drug. What the priest saw was in fact all in his mind, but since it made him flee the church and run under the wheels of a moving carriage, he still ended up just as dead.
  • Clash of the Titans. The head of the statue of the goddess Thetis falls to the floor. The eyes of the head open, indicating that Thetis herself is controlling it.
  • Another non-horror example: the protagonist's degeneration in Bamboozled.
  • In the movie Shanghai Knights, there's a scene where the dynamic duo are searching through a library, and someone is in the walls, using the old gag where they look out the pictures through the eyeballs to watch what's going on. In a couple shots, the eyes look like they could really be the eyes in the painting moving.
  • Henry's baby in Eraserhead. While it isn't completely still, most of it's other movements are stiff and artificial enough to make it look like it wasn't alive anyway. The eyes mainly move to remind you this thing is alive and is apparently some kind of human in order to add to the wrongness.
  • "You know, sometimes I get the feeling that painting is watching me? Even *smiling* at me?"


Literature

  • In Devon Monk's Dead Iron, a room of Strangework mantics is absolutely still, except for eyes following LeFel and Mr. Shunt.


Live-Action TV

  • Similarly, Stephen King's Rose Red featured a scene where a statue of Ellen Rimbauer in the mansion garden ripped off her own face, the eyes of which then opened. The poor witness died of a heart attack soon after.
  • Doctor Who example: "The Awakening". A stone carving in a church starts blinking and later belching smoke due to the alien imprisoned behind it.
    • Another Doctor Who example: The statues in Blink. The way they move between the strobes of light, caught in new and more hideous poses as the sequence progresses so you can see they're alive but you can't see they're alive, well... It's not nice.
    • In fact, the Trope Name comes from the Doctor commenting on the eyes in the walls of a hallway in The Rebel Flesh.


Theme Parks

  • A headstone for a woman named Leota, found right next to the entrance of The Haunted Mansion at Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom, has what appears to be a bronze relief of a woman's face, with eyes closed, on it; if one watches it for long enough, her eyes open, her head moves, and she looks around before closing her eyes and going still again. See the page image.


Video Games

  • Call Of Cthulhu adventure "The Auction". When the Brazen Head is activated, its metal eyelids open, revealing living eyes inside the sockets.
  • The stalking menace in Barrow Hill turns out to be a mobile stone from an ancient ring of Celtic monoliths.
  • When you grab the Morph Ball at the start of Super Metroid, the scowling eyes and mouths of the nearby statues glow... and then as you leave they turn to look at you.
  • In Condemned: Criminal Origins, there is a level that takes place in an abandoned department store, with lots of plaster mannequins standing about, modeling old cloths. Wait, what was that motion in the darkness over there... ?


Web Animation

  • Parodied in a Homestar Runner Halloween cartoon, where the eyes of a painting literally follow the Homestar Runner across the room. He notices, and takes down the painting, revealing that it has holes in the eyes, behind which are "a pair of weird, one-eyed crows."


Western Animation