Shutter Island

Peter Marsay  |  Reviews
Date posted:  1 May 2010
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SHUTTER ISLAND Director: Martin Scorsese Cert. 15

Martin Scorsese’s latest picture reunites him with his now regular collaborator Leonardo DiCaprio, who takes the lead role of Teddy Daniels, a US Marshal in 1954 on assignment to the remote Shutter Island, home to a secure facility for deranged criminals, where a murderess has escaped from her seemingly inescapable cell.

The story makes for excellent escapism, and moves at a swift enough pace to never leave the audience with sufficient time to dwell on each successive fragment of the plot, which becomes ever more complicated as it apparently takes shape and the big picture materialises. Every technical aspect of the film on its own is exceptional. The cinematography is noticeably flawless, the performances are all top-drawer and there are genre references galore. Were Alfred Hitchcock alive today he might almost have the right to call Scorsese a copycat!

Thrills and spills

This all amounts to two plus hours of quality pulp fiction, but from a director so expert a storyteller, it feels perhaps one step too far into style over substance territory. The content features subject matter relating to such real life horrors as the Holocaust and filicide. On one hand these are not handled gratuitously, and are absolutely integral to the story, but some may find their juxtaposition with a tale, which is ultimately inconsequential, uncomfortable. If you are not in that boat though, then Shutter Island should provide you with plenty of interesting thrills and spills.

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