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Shutter Island


Directed by: Martin Scorsese
Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio
Genre:
Thriller
Run Time: 138 min.
Release Date:
February
2010
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
If you don’t like watching films twice, then I suggest you not view
SHUTTER ISLAND even once. But if you do, you need to click over
to the extra features on the DVD and watch "The Making of Shutter
Island." It is here where you will begin to realize how important it is
to restart the disc from the beginning.
Shutter Island is a film-within-a-film, about a
character-within-a-character. The multiple layers and textures are
unbelievably inviting in a very twisted sense. The entire film screams
thriller, but after you view it a second time, it’ll scream ...something
entirely different.
Dividing audiences and critics, Shutter Island reveals itself
to probably be too dense for many, but a revelatory success for others;
I’m obviously in the latter category.
Leonardo DiCaprio (THE
DEPARTED) has rapidly become director Martin Scorsese’s muse (and rightfully so).
The two have been nearly inseparable since GANGS OF NEW YORK. "Marty"
saw something inside Leonardo and knew that he had the acting chops
needed for some fairly tough roles. And here, on Shutter Island, Marty
gives him his toughest role to date.
As soon as we see Federal Marshals Teddy Daniels (Leonardo) and his
partner Chuck Aule (Mark Ruffalo,
WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE) arrive on
Shutter Island to investigate the disappearance of a mentally deranged
prisoner, we get the immediate sense that things are off-balance. The
guards look at Teddy and Chuck with great apprehension; their weapons
pointed in Teddy and Chuck’s general direction.
And as Teddy’s investigation winds up, so do clues that don’t match
up. The possibility of a 67th patient being on the island,
even though the warden and his charges claim there are only 66, tips
Teddy (and the viewer) off that something is amiss.
The dark edges surrounding the island also leads Teddy into
flashbacks of his time in WW II, and into other muted corners of his
past that he’d rather not see.
It is these dark corners that intrigue Dr. Cawley (Ben Kingsley,
YOU
KILL ME) and his partner Dr, Naehring (Max von Sydow,
THE SEVENTH SEAL),
themselves being psychiatrists. But we quickly garner that these two men
are at opposite ends of the same field. And are they fighting each other
over Teddy? If so, why?
It is here that I’ll stop any further possibility of spoilers for
those who choose to read this review. And it is also here that I need to
reaffirm the requirement that you watch this movie twice. If you do,
you’ll come away feeling as though you’ve seen two movies instead of
just one.
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Image from Shutter Island

DVD cost: $19.96
Purchase:
Tower.com (Blu-Ray)
Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
There are several clues
and intentional continuity errors throughout the film that foreshadow
the ending. This includes a patient's drink of water disappearing
between shots (she drinks from an empty hand), a cardigan appearing
briefly on 'Rachel' (which is later worn by the other 'Rachel') and
lines from Edward/Andrew's dreams being repeated (such as "Why are you
wet, baby?"). These techniques are also used in his dreams showing a
similarity between what he perceives as a dream and what he perceives as
real.
Movie Quote: "If
I were to sink my teeth into your eye, right now, could you stop me
before I blinded you?"
Other Actors/Actresses
from Shutter Island
  
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