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* For the 2008 film of the same name, based on a novel by Jose Saramago see ''Film.{{Blindness}}''

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* For the 2008 film of the same name, based on a The 1995 novel by Jose Saramago see ''Film.''Literature.{{Blindness}}'' by Creator/JoseSaramago.
** The 2008 film adaptation of same name, ''Film.{{Blindness}}''.
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* For trope pages pertaining to the inability to see, look under DisabilityTropes, or specific examples such as BlindMistake, BlindSeer, BlindWithoutEm.

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* For trope pages pertaining to the inability to see, look under DisabilityTropes, or specific examples such as BlindMistake, BlindSeer, BlindWithoutEm.BlindWithoutEm.
----
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* For the 2008 film of the same name, go to ''Film.{{Blindness}}''
* For trope pages pertaining to the inability to see, look under DisabilityTropes, or specific examples such as BlindMistake, BlindSeer, BlindWithoutEm

to:

* For the 2008 film of the same name, go to based on a novel by Jose Saramago see ''Film.{{Blindness}}''
* For trope pages pertaining to the inability to see, look under DisabilityTropes, or specific examples such as BlindMistake, BlindSeer, BlindWithoutEmBlindWithoutEm.

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Namespace migration -> Turned to Disambiguation


http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/blindness_5375.png

''Blindness'' (original title ''Ensaio Sobre a Cegueira'' meaning "An Essay on Blindness") is a 1995 novel by José Saramago that was adapted into a film in 2008.

In an unnamed large city, an unexplainable and sudden outbreak of instant blindness is affecting people rapidly. In an attempt to prevent the epidemic from growing out of control, those suffering this are taken away and forced into a derelict mental asylum and held there until further notice. But the military guarding the place becomes increasingly hostile to the inmates, keeping them in at gunpoint. The government refuses to allow in basic medicines, so the hygiene and living conditions degrade horrifically within a short time.

The protagonist is the wife of an eye doctor who was among the first people to go blind. Because she is mysteriously immune to whatever is causing the blindness, she acts as a leader of her ward and tries to keep control over a situation which is rapidly deteriorating. [[ItGotWorse It gets worse.]] Much, much worse.

The book is followed by ''Seeing'' (original title ''Ensaio Sobre a Lucidez'', "An Essay on Lucidity") which follows the aftermath of an election in the aforementioned nameless country where the majority of the [[spoiler:now cured]] population has cast blank ballots.

----
!!This work contains examples of:

* AdaptationDistillation: The film stays relatively true to the novel, only making a few small changes, such as aging the Girl with Dark Glasses to being a call-girl in her mid 20s instead of a teenager.
* ApocalypseHow
* AWorldHalfFull: With the white sickness causing catastrophic damage to society [[spoiler: and ultimately destroying it completely]], it's shown in the end that [[spoiler: the blindness may only be temporary]]. There is ''some'' hope that life may someday get back on track.
* AwLookTheyReallyDoLoveEachother: The Japanese couple seem to be incredibly strained after they become blind, to the point of her rejecting him completely. But after a while they reconcile. The same goes for the Doctor and his wife, who is sickened and humiliated with how she cares for him now like he was a baby rather than her husband, but ultimately they prove to still care for each other.
* BlindBlackGuy: The Man with the Eyepatch and the pharmacist's assistant in the film.
* BodyHorror: The Thief's infected wound growing until it is a disgusting septic mass on his entire leg.
* ButNotTooBlack: One of the blind men in Ward 1 says how he can tell the King of Ward 3 (a Mexican guy) is "a nigger" from the sound of his voice, completely unaware that he's talking to a black man.
* BreakTheCutie: Pretty much everyone, but most of all [[spoiler: the women who become violently gang-raped.]]
* CityWithNoName: The city which the story takes place in is never named. When being adapted to film, the author José Saramago insisted that they keep this in the movie as well. All of the characters are of various races, so the setting could be anywhere.
** In the book, it's hinted to be in Portugal.
* CoolShades: The Girl with Dark Glasses, who wore them at first for medical reasons, but after she went blind it pretty much became RuleOfCool.
* DecoyProtagonist: When watching the film, it might appear at first the movie's main character would be the Japanese man, or the Doctor, but after a while it is made clear that the Doctor's Wife is the real main character of the story.
* DisabilitySuperPower: By being an ordinary blind man prior to the outbreak, the Accountant is fully capable of functioning normally, and so he quickly gains the upper hand over everyone else in the facility.
* DyingLikeAnimals: Blind crowds, nervous armed soldiers. Bad combination.
* EmergencyPresidentialAddress: There is a scene showing a public address from the governor, where she solemnly confesses that she too has gone blind.
* FadeToWhite
* FromNobodyToNightmare: The King of Ward 3 is seen, early on in the movie, as just a normal bartender who works at the luxury hotel and chats to the girl with dark glasses.
* HappyRain
* HookerWithAHeartOfGold: The Girl with Dark Glasses is a high-class callgirl, but soon after she is put in the fetid asylum, she becomes a caring motherly figure to the orphaned young boy.
* HopeSpot: When the initial few people are sent into the mental facility and slowly grow into a close-knit society that functions relatively nicely, it almost seems like things might not be so bad anymore. And then, ItGotWorse.
* IDidWhatIHadToDo: What the Doctor's Wife and the other women of Ward 1 say when [[spoiler: their friends and husbands try to keep them from volunteering to be gang-raped by Ward 3, in exchange for food for everyone.]]
* TheImmune: The doctor's wife.
* ItSeemedLikeAGoodIdeaAtTheTime: Putting video broadcasts in a quarantine area for the blind. The King of Ward 3 points out how stupid this is, so he smashes the monitors and sings a goofy Stevie Wonder song over the PA system.
* LightIsNotGood: White blindness.
* MagicalNegro: The Man with the Eyepatch in the movie, who supplies Ward 1 with up-to-date news of life on the outside, thanks to his radio.
* MaleFrontalNudity: Because the asylum is a cramped, squalid, overcrowded building full of blind people, no one cares anymore if people walk around completely naked or not.
* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: The Accountant seems to have a small moment of this, but not enough to change his actions.
* NoNameGiven: The movie seems to give the doctor and his wife names that are spoken in passing between each other, but for the most part in both the book and the movie, no one is given any real name. They're referred to only as "The Doctor" "The Doctor's Wife" "Man With The Black Eyepatch" etc.
* NotSoHarmlessVillain: The King of Ward 3 is seen at first as just an obnoxious guido who questions authority. Once he manages to get a hold of a loaded pistol, he becomes ''much'' more dangerous.
* ObfuscatingDisability: The Doctor's Wife pretends to be blind so as to not be separated from her husband. In a bizarre twist, the Accountant actually is blind since birth. As such, he is able to function normally and begins teaching the men of Ward 3 how to do such things as using a cane properly.
* OutWithABang: [[spoiler: The King of Ward 3]] is stabbed to death in the middle of receiving a blow job.
* ParentalAbandonment: The Boy gets separated from his parents when sent to the asylum.
* ParentingTheHusband: Much to the doctor's annoyance and embarrassment.
* PrimalFear: The film just goes down the list with this trope.
* ReligiousHorror: [[spoiler:When they get outside of the facility]], the group sees how churches are putting blindfolds over their Jesus statues and begin spouting prophecies of doom, proclaiming the outbreak of blindness to be an act of punishment from God.
* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: [[spoiler:The Doctor's Wife]] becomes hell-bent on revenge when [[spoiler:she is raped by the King of Ward 3.]]
* ScarpiaUltimatum: After the Ward 3 clique has taken all the valuable possessions the others have in exchange for food, the King of Ward 3 starts demanding all women of each ward to come have sex with his boys if they want to keep from starving. They do.
* ScavengerWorld: What the world is reduced to after the blindness outbreak got out of hand.
* SortingAlgorithmOfEvil: The Thief's JerkAss attitude seem downright mild once he is overshadowed by the new menace that is the King of Ward 3.
* SpicyLatina: The Girl with Dark Glasses, who is Brazilian in the film.
* TeamMom: The Doctor's Wife becomes this for everyone in their ward, and ends up leading the TrueCompanions [[spoiler: once outside]].
* [[spoiler: TemporaryBlindness]]: It's shown to be this in the end.
* TheFellowshipHasEnded: [[spoiler: When the group escapes the asylum]], one bump on the ground causes members to get separated completely, without any of them realizing it as they wander away.
* TookALevelInBadAss: Because the Doctor's Wife is the only one who can see, she is pretty much obligated to take responsibility over her ward as well as the others, everything that this entails caused her to go from a sweet and normal housewife to a [[TheDeterminator unstoppable force of nature in a pink sweater.]]
* TrueCompanions: The Doctor's Wife, the Doctor, the Japanese couple, the Girl with Dark Glasses, the Man with the Eyepatch, and the Boy. They become bonded together like a family, though they don't really have much of choice.
* YourCheatingHeart: The Doctor has an affair with the Girl with Dark Glasses after he becomes oppressed and emasculated by no longer having any control over anything anymore. To make it all the more awkward? His wife walks in right in the middle of their sex. Since it's such a horrible and desperate situation they're in, she forgives her husband.
----

to:

http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/blindness_5375.png

''Blindness'' (original title ''Ensaio Sobre a Cegueira'' meaning "An Essay on Blindness") is a 1995 novel by José Saramago that was adapted into a film in 2008.

In an unnamed large city, an unexplainable and sudden outbreak of instant blindness is affecting people rapidly. In an attempt to prevent the epidemic from growing out of control, those suffering this are taken away and forced into a derelict mental asylum and held there until further notice. But the military guarding the place becomes increasingly hostile
A link, search, or guide dog has bought you to the inmates, keeping them in at gunpoint. The government refuses to allow in basic medicines, so page "Blindness"

* For
the hygiene and living conditions degrade horrifically within a short time.

The protagonist is the wife of an eye doctor who was among the first people to go blind. Because she is mysteriously immune to whatever is causing the blindness, she acts as a leader of her ward and tries to keep control over a situation which is rapidly deteriorating. [[ItGotWorse It gets worse.]] Much, much worse.

The book is followed by ''Seeing'' (original title ''Ensaio Sobre a Lucidez'', "An Essay on Lucidity") which follows the aftermath of an election in the aforementioned nameless country where the majority
2008 film of the [[spoiler:now cured]] population has cast blank ballots.

----
!!This work contains
same name, go to ''Film.{{Blindness}}''
* For trope pages pertaining to the inability to see, look under DisabilityTropes, or specific
examples of:

* AdaptationDistillation: The film stays relatively true to the novel, only making a few small changes,
such as aging the Girl with Dark Glasses to being a call-girl in her mid 20s instead of a teenager.
* ApocalypseHow
* AWorldHalfFull: With the white sickness causing catastrophic damage to society [[spoiler: and ultimately destroying it completely]], it's shown in the end that [[spoiler: the blindness may only be temporary]]. There is ''some'' hope that life may someday get back on track.
* AwLookTheyReallyDoLoveEachother: The Japanese couple seem to be incredibly strained after they become blind, to the point of her rejecting him completely. But after a while they reconcile. The same goes for the Doctor and his wife, who is sickened and humiliated with how she cares for him now like he was a baby rather than her husband, but ultimately they prove to still care for each other.
* BlindBlackGuy: The Man with the Eyepatch and the pharmacist's assistant in the film.
* BodyHorror: The Thief's infected wound growing until it is a disgusting septic mass on his entire leg.
* ButNotTooBlack: One of the blind men in Ward 1 says how he can tell the King of Ward 3 (a Mexican guy) is "a nigger" from the sound of his voice, completely unaware that he's talking to a black man.
* BreakTheCutie: Pretty much everyone, but most of all [[spoiler: the women who become violently gang-raped.]]
* CityWithNoName: The city which the story takes place in is never named. When being adapted to film, the author José Saramago insisted that they keep this in the movie as well. All of the characters are of various races, so the setting could be anywhere.
** In the book, it's hinted to be in Portugal.
* CoolShades: The Girl with Dark Glasses, who wore them at first for medical reasons, but after she went blind it pretty much became RuleOfCool.
* DecoyProtagonist: When watching the film, it might appear at first the movie's main character would be the Japanese man, or the Doctor, but after a while it is made clear that the Doctor's Wife is the real main character of the story.
* DisabilitySuperPower: By being an ordinary blind man prior to the outbreak, the Accountant is fully capable of functioning normally, and so he quickly gains the upper hand over everyone else in the facility.
* DyingLikeAnimals: Blind crowds, nervous armed soldiers. Bad combination.
* EmergencyPresidentialAddress: There is a scene showing a public address from the governor, where she solemnly confesses that she too has gone blind.
* FadeToWhite
* FromNobodyToNightmare: The King of Ward 3 is seen, early on in the movie, as just a normal bartender who works at the luxury hotel and chats to the girl with dark glasses.
* HappyRain
* HookerWithAHeartOfGold: The Girl with Dark Glasses is a high-class callgirl, but soon after she is put in the fetid asylum, she becomes a caring motherly figure to the orphaned young boy.
* HopeSpot: When the initial few people are sent into the mental facility and slowly grow into a close-knit society that functions relatively nicely, it almost seems like things might not be so bad anymore. And then, ItGotWorse.
* IDidWhatIHadToDo: What the Doctor's Wife and the other women of Ward 1 say when [[spoiler: their friends and husbands try to keep them from volunteering to be gang-raped by Ward 3, in exchange for food for everyone.]]
* TheImmune: The doctor's wife.
* ItSeemedLikeAGoodIdeaAtTheTime: Putting video broadcasts in a quarantine area for the blind. The King of Ward 3 points out how stupid this is, so he smashes the monitors and sings a goofy Stevie Wonder song over the PA system.
* LightIsNotGood: White blindness.
* MagicalNegro: The Man with the Eyepatch in the movie, who supplies Ward 1 with up-to-date news of life on the outside, thanks to his radio.
* MaleFrontalNudity: Because the asylum is a cramped, squalid, overcrowded building full of blind people, no one cares anymore if people walk around completely naked or not.
* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: The Accountant seems to have a small moment of this, but not enough to change his actions.
* NoNameGiven: The movie seems to give the doctor and his wife names that are spoken in passing between each other, but for the most part in both the book and the movie, no one is given any real name. They're referred to only as "The Doctor" "The Doctor's Wife" "Man With The Black Eyepatch" etc.
* NotSoHarmlessVillain: The King of Ward 3 is seen at first as just an obnoxious guido who questions authority. Once he manages to get a hold of a loaded pistol, he becomes ''much'' more dangerous.
* ObfuscatingDisability: The Doctor's Wife pretends to be blind so as to not be separated from her husband. In a bizarre twist, the Accountant actually is blind since birth. As such, he is able to function normally and begins teaching the men of Ward 3 how to do such things as using a cane properly.
* OutWithABang: [[spoiler: The King of Ward 3]] is stabbed to death in the middle of receiving a blow job.
* ParentalAbandonment: The Boy gets separated from his parents when sent to the asylum.
* ParentingTheHusband: Much to the doctor's annoyance and embarrassment.
* PrimalFear: The film just goes down the list with this trope.
* ReligiousHorror: [[spoiler:When they get outside of the facility]], the group sees how churches are putting blindfolds over their Jesus statues and begin spouting prophecies of doom, proclaiming the outbreak of blindness to be an act of punishment from God.
* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: [[spoiler:The Doctor's Wife]] becomes hell-bent on revenge when [[spoiler:she is raped by the King of Ward 3.]]
* ScarpiaUltimatum: After the Ward 3 clique has taken all the valuable possessions the others have in exchange for food, the King of Ward 3 starts demanding all women of each ward to come have sex with his boys if they want to keep from starving. They do.
* ScavengerWorld: What the world is reduced to after the blindness outbreak got out of hand.
* SortingAlgorithmOfEvil: The Thief's JerkAss attitude seem downright mild once he is overshadowed by the new menace that is the King of Ward 3.
* SpicyLatina: The Girl with Dark Glasses, who is Brazilian in the film.
* TeamMom: The Doctor's Wife becomes this for everyone in their ward, and ends up leading the TrueCompanions [[spoiler: once outside]].
* [[spoiler: TemporaryBlindness]]: It's shown to be this in the end.
* TheFellowshipHasEnded: [[spoiler: When the group escapes the asylum]], one bump on the ground causes members to get separated completely, without any of them realizing it as they wander away.
* TookALevelInBadAss: Because the Doctor's Wife is the only one who can see, she is pretty much obligated to take responsibility over her ward as well as the others, everything that this entails caused her to go from a sweet and normal housewife to a [[TheDeterminator unstoppable force of nature in a pink sweater.]]
* TrueCompanions: The Doctor's Wife, the Doctor, the Japanese couple, the Girl with Dark Glasses, the Man with the Eyepatch, and the Boy. They become bonded together like a family, though they don't really have much of choice.
* YourCheatingHeart: The Doctor has an affair with the Girl with Dark Glasses after he becomes oppressed and emasculated by no longer having any control over anything anymore. To make it all the more awkward? His wife walks in right in the middle of their sex. Since it's such a horrible and desperate situation they're in, she forgives her husband.
----
BlindMistake, BlindSeer, BlindWithoutEm
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* NotSoHarmless: The King of Ward 3 is seen at first as just an obnoxious guido who questions authority. Once he manages to get a hold of a loaded pistol, he becomes ''much'' more dangerous.

to:

* NotSoHarmless: NotSoHarmlessVillain: The King of Ward 3 is seen at first as just an obnoxious guido who questions authority. Once he manages to get a hold of a loaded pistol, he becomes ''much'' more dangerous.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
I dont recall anything indicating it took place in America specifically. correct me if I\'m wrong though.


** In the book, it's hinted to be in Portugal. In the FilmOfTheBook, it's an American city (even though it was filmed in Toronto).

to:

** In the book, it's hinted to be in Portugal. In the FilmOfTheBook, it's an American city (even though it was filmed in Toronto).

Removed: 118

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Evil Foreigner is a Wrestling trope


* EvilForeigner: The King of Ward Three, who in the film is Mexican, though his ethnicity never factors into anything.
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Added DiffLines:

* TheImmune: The doctor's wife.
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* DisabilitySuperPower: By being an ordinary blind man prior to the outbreak, the Accountant is fully capable of functioning normally, and so he quickly gains the upper hand over everyone else in the facility. Being

to:

* DisabilitySuperPower: By being an ordinary blind man prior to the outbreak, the Accountant is fully capable of functioning normally, and so he quickly gains the upper hand over everyone else in the facility. Being
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* TeamMom: The Doctor's Wife becomes this for everyone in their ward, and ends up leading the {{Nakama}} [[spoiler: once outside]].

to:

* TeamMom: The Doctor's Wife becomes this for everyone in their ward, and ends up leading the {{Nakama}} TrueCompanions [[spoiler: once outside]].
Camacan MOD

Added: 226

Changed: 4

Removed: 256

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Nakama was renamed True Companions.


* {{Nakama}}: The Doctor's Wife, the Doctor, the Japanese couple, the Girl with Dark Glasses, the Man with the Eyepatch, and the Boy. They become bonded together like a family, though they don't really have much of choice.



* TrueCompanions: The Doctor's Wife, the Doctor, the Japanese couple, the Girl with Dark Glasses, the Man with the Eyepatch, and the Boy. They become bonded together like a family, though they don't really have much of choice.




<<|{{Literature}}|>>
<<|{{Film}}|>>

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\n<<|{{Literature}}|>>\n<<|{{Film}}|>>----

Removed: 208

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YMMV


* UnfortunateImplications: The filmmakers and writer are of the belief that not only do people stop caring about hygiene when they go blind but they will be reduced to crawling around and acting like animals.
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Added DiffLines:

* UnfortunateImplications: The filmmakers and writer are of the belief that not only do people stop caring about hygiene when they go blind but they will be reduced to crawling around and acting like animals.

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