Shutter Island - Movie Review

  • 12 March 2010

Rating: 4 out of 5

Essentially a B-movie thriller with an A-list cast and production values (and an epic's running time), this film is almost ludicrously well-made. Scorsese is clearly having fun rattling our nerves, and he does it very well.

In 1954 Boston, Ted (DiCaprio) is a US Marshal heading with his new partner Chuck (Ruffalo) to the Shutter Island hospital for the criminally insane. A patient (Mortimer) has mysteriously disappeared, and the head doctor (Kingsley) is acting suspicious. So is everyone else for that matter. As Ted delves deeper into the mystery, which hints at a big conspiracy, he struggles with the implications these events have for his own life, including the death of his wife (Williams) and his experiences liberating Dachau at the end of the war.

We can imagine the words "ominous chord" written into the script at key moments. Although of course we don't have to imagine it with the foghorn-like score. Add to this first-rate technical credits including editor Thelma Schoonmaker, cinematographer Robert Richardson, production designer Dante Ferretti and costume designer Sandy Powell, and Scorsese has made one of the best-looking movies of the year. Every moment is charged with suggestion and, frankly, insanity. Guilty pleasure movies don't get much more polished than this.

That said, the disparity between the high-calibre production and the rather simplistic story is somewhat jarring. Sure, the plot twists and turns and twists again, but in the end there's not much to it, and we understand this from the beginning. So we never invest much into the film; we merely wallow in the heightened reality and cinematic pyrotechnics that keep us visually entertained even if our hearts and minds are never caught up in the increasingly operatic nuttiness.

And the cast is having fun as well, diving into their characters and ladling on the innuendo with arched eyebrows and shifty glances. As DiCaprio's mind starts slipping, we sometimes forget that we're watching a raging potboiler, although not for long. Scorsese packs the film with so many thrilling details, surreal asides and masterful set-ups, many of which echo classic thrillers from the 1940s, that we can't help but enjoy the ride

Image caption Shutter Island

Facts and Figures

Year: 2010

Genre: Thriller

Run time: 138 mins

In Theaters: Friday 19th February 2010

Box Office USA: $125.0M

Box Office Worldwide: $294.8M

Budget: $80M

Distributed by: Paramount Studios

Production compaines: Paramount Pictures, Phoenix Pictures, Sikelia Productions, Appian Way

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 4 / 5

Rotten Tomatoes: 69%
Fresh: 166 Rotten: 76

IMDB: 8.1 / 10

Cast & Crew

Director: Martin Scorsese

Producer: Brad Fischer, Mike Medavoy, Arnold Messer, Martin Scorsese

Screenwriter: Laeta Kalogridis

Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio as Teddy Daniels, Mark Ruffalo as Chuck Aule, Ben Kingsley as Dr. John Cawley, Emily Mortimer as Rachel Solando, Michelle Williams as Dolores Chanal, Max von Sydow as Dr. Jeremiah Naehring, Jackie Earle Haley as George Noyce, Patricia Clarkson as Rachel 2, Ted Levine as Warden, John Carroll Lynch as Deputy Warden McPherson, Elias Koteas as Laeddis, Robin Bartlett as Bridget Kearns, Christopher Denham as Christian, Spencer Treat Clark as Timothy

Also starring: Mike Medavoy, Arnold Messer, Martin Scorsese, Laeta Kalogridis