Shutter Island (2010)
Starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Ben Kingsley, Mark Ruffalo, Emily Mortimer, Michelle Williams, and Patricia Clarkson
Directed by Martin Scorsese
It's the mid 1950s and patient Rachel Solando has disappeared from a psychiatric hospital located on Shutter Island. Two U.S. Marshals are called in to investigate the case. Little do the two marshals know that the island is home to some interesting and perhaps unethical treatments and they may be the hospital's next "experiments."
That summary is pulled directly from my book review of Shutter Island that I posted last year. The novel was an enjoyable read, but didn't really work as a whole for me. There were dream sequences that seemed oddly written and characters seemed to simply appear in order to give a clue to the main character, U.S. Marshal Teddy Daniels (here played by Mr. DiCaprio).
Fortunately, my qualms with the book worked extremely well onscreen thanks, in large part, to some beautiful direction by Martin Scorsese. Feeling quite old school, Scorsese has crafted big budget "pulp" film. While those cheaply made film noirs of the 40s and 50s certainly appeared to be made on a miniscule budget (see this as an example), no expense was spared here. Thanks to some fantastic scenic design by Dante Ferretti, Scorsese proves to be a master behind the camera, crafting some beautiful and ingenious shots that lifted this film way above the average cinematic experience.
While Act Two of the film drags a bit, Act Three proves to be quite engaging...much moreso than the book. I remember the book feeling like it ended much too quickly, but in the film, I was actually astounded by how Scorsese and screenwriter Laeta Kalogridis allowed the film to play out at a relatively slow pace. They weren't afraid to explain things, unlike the book which seemed to have a need to bring the tale to an end as quickly as possible.
However, the film isn't perfect. Leo has an accent that fades in and out which irked me a little bit. It also seems that Scorsese wanted his actors to "overact" similar to those film noirs of yore, but it seemed a little jarring at times. My biggest issue -- which would certainly nary be a quibble to most -- is that there were some very poorly edited scenes. Thelma Schoonmaker is Scorsese's go-to editor, but here there were multiple scenes with inconsistencies. A raised hand in this shot turns into a lowered hand in the next would be an example. True, none of these errors affected the story, but they were glaring to me...enough that I'm posting about it here.
Still, overall, this is quite a good film. A nice homage to cinema of the past.
The RyMickey Rating: B+
No comments:
Post a Comment