Monday, 31 May 2010

Film review - Shutter Island

This 50s-set thriller is a bit of a disappointment – especially as it comes from Martin Scorsese. US Marshall Teddy Daniels (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his new partner (Mark Ruffalo) arrive on the 100-per-cent spooky titular island to find an escaped mental patient. As a storm hits, Daniels starts to believe that there is more going on at this hospital than there first seems.

It is obvious right from the get-go that Scorsese is paying homage to his favourite B-movies of the 40s and 50. In the opening scene the score is full of orchestral crashity-crashity boom-ba-boom, when all we’re looking at is Leo on a boat. The melodramatic score and ominous shots of the island as it comes into view seem totally over the top to a modern audience – instead of building tension it makes everything seem quite humorous.

There’s no let-up in the hokum when we reach the island – the mental institution is run by everyone’s favourite screen baddy (Ben Kingsley) and an archetypal creepy German (Max von Sydow), and of course “there’s only one way off the island”. Once the massive storm comes, there is no way off the island, and we follow Leo as he runs around the forest, soaked to the skin and desperately trying to find the truth.

In the end this is just a lot of noise and driving rain signifying very little. There’s nothing wrong with the performances – DiCaprio is fine in the leading role, Ruffalo gives a quality performance and Kingsley is everything you expect – and there are some creepy moments, but the slow pace and unintentionally hilarious flashbacks will leave most feeling cold. The film just doesn’t sweep you along like it should.

As a silly thriller, it works well enough. If you want some deeper meaning, it is best to look elsewhere.

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