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Reviewed by Film Editor Barry Benintende
Shutter Island / Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio, Michelle Williams, Sir Ben Kingsley, Mark Ruffalo
About
halfway through Shutter Island, I leaned over to ask a friend "When
did
Leonardo DiCaprio become a great
actor?" I answered my own question; during the opening scene of Shutter
Island when DiCaprio was getting seasick and the movie was unfolding
brilliantly right before my eyes. The actor stars as Federal Marshal Teddy
Daniels, a tough as nails federal marshal who gets called out to a remote
island / psychiatric hospital for the criminally insane off of the New
England shore. Set in 1954, Shutter Island has plenty of unsettling
mood music and creepy imagery throughout. There is also more cigarette
smoking than a Fellini film. Shutter Island is directed by
Martin Scorsese, the man who has movies
coursing through his veins. Scorsese has been hit or miss in recent years,
but he hits the nail on the head this time out.
From the initial shots of the institution, to the chronic exhaustion on
DiCaprio's face, Island is nearly note-perfect. There are too many
twists and turns to the plot to try and explain it without giving things
away, but suffice to say that there is an island populated with maniacs, a
questionable Dr. Cawley (the always watchable
Ben Kingsley) and his staff of physicians, nurses and heavily-armed
corrections officers. Daniels arrives on the island with his new partner
Chuck Aule (Mark
Ruffalo), determined to get to the bottom of a case involving a female
inmate named Rachel Solando, who vanished from her cell without a trace.
Solando was sent to the island after drowning her three children and
arranging them around the dinner table for her husband to find and then
Solando ate a meal at the table before her neighbor discovered what she had
done. This is about as cringe worthy a moment as I have ever seen on the big
screen.
Not long after the marshals arrive on the island, a fierce storm hits,
stranding them, until at least the weather clears, so Daniels and Aule start
asking questions, but the answers that they receive are half truths and in
some cases outright lies. Nobody on the island is willing to talk; not the
staff or patients and certainly not Dr. Cawley or Dr. Naehring (Max
von Sydow)
Naehring
may be an ex-Nazi, which begs the question why is he employed by the United
States government? As the two Marshals dig deeper, Daniels begins to fall
apart at the seams. Horrid dreams, migrane headaches, and hallucinations
involving his dead wife Dolores (the luminous
Michelle Williams), all of which undermine Daniels' ability to do his
job. Dolores died in an apartment fire and in Daniels’ dreams she appears
with burns on her back. The man who started the fire may be on the island,
and Daniels wants to find him. Is there a conspiracy going on? Are
lobotomies being performed in the abandoned lighthouse? Why are patient
records not available? Did Solando even escape? You'll have to watch it
yourself to figure all of that out.
While you are figuring out the mystery, enjoy Williams' disturbing
performance and DiCaprio's best piece of acting since What's Eating
Gilbert Grape? Other performances which range from good to great
include appearances by
Patricia Clarkson,
Elias Koteas,
Jackie Earle Haley and
Ted Levine
Based on
the novel by
Dennis Lehane
Screenplay by
Laeta Kalogridis
Rated R for disturbing violent content, language and some nudity
Photos by Alex J. Berliner/Berliner Photography / BEImages / Paramount Pictures Special Screening of 'Shutter Island' in New York, America - 17 Feb 2010 / Paramount Pictures New York special screening of 'Shutter Island' sponsored by Giorgio Armani at the Ziegfeld Theater In the photos: Leonardo DiCarpio, Jackie Earle Haley, Roberta Armani, Patricia Clarkson, Michelle Williams, Sir Ben Kingsley and his wife and Executive Producer /Author Dennis Lehane
Riveting Riffs Magazine's Film Editor Barry Benintende is a freelance journalist living in San Diego. He is happily married to Sharon, with two sons, a daughter, two cats and the world's finest Terrier named Jack.
Reviewed February 2010
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