D-tox: Ojo Asesino File

The film is known for its troubled production history and delayed release.

serves as a transitional piece in Sylvester Stallone’s filmography, moving away from high-octane action toward a grittier, character-driven suspense. The film explores themes of trauma, isolation, and the fragility of the law enforcement psyche. Despite a "paper-thin" script noted by critics on IMDb, it remains a notable example of the "ten little indians" trope applied to a modern clinical setting. 1. Narrative Structure and Plot D-Tox: Ojo Asesino

This paper examines the 2002 psychological thriller (released in some markets as Eye See You or Ojo Asesino ). Directed by Jim Gillespie , the film is a blend of the "slasher" and "police procedural" genres, famously starring Sylvester Stallone as an FBI agent pushed to the brink. The film is known for its troubled production

The facility—described as "frighteningly monolithic"—becomes a trap when patients begin dying in suspicious "suicides." Despite a "paper-thin" script noted by critics on