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discount gucci sunglasses Shutter Island - A Revie |
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In terms of soundtrack, the film is at its best when there is no music at all, where the dripping of a dank cavern or the howling of the storm winds is enough. When there is music, it usually consists of loud tribal drums that take the viewer right out of the picture.
There is quite a lot of silliness here, but that does not mean Shutter Island is not a fascinating film. It may run nearly three hours, but it's compelling and the time passes quickly. There may be some quibbles, and it may not be Scorsese’s greatest, but it is an enjoyable
What good is a movie set in an asylum if it doesn’t have a good dollop of craziness to go with it? Since the film is mostly told through the eyes of Teddy Daniels, he is the one who suffers insanity. Similar to this year’s The Wolfman, this film makes use of surreal hallucinations, which are occasionally effective – the image of frozen bodies slowly coming alive like zombies is certainly chilling- but most of the time they are as awkward and pretentious as those from Wolfman. This insanity of his leads to the film’s twist ending, which ends up coming off as ridiculous.
In Shutter Island, the titular asylum is in the former camp, and utilises the sinister nature of that archetypical image well. This place is more a jail than a mental hospital, with its barbed wire fences, myriad guards, constant storms and damp, lugubrious hallways. Even the patient that goes missing is erroneously referred to as a ‘prisoner’. These set pieces are mostly effective, helping create the appropriate atmosphere, though one or two distract a little. The dismal, dank nature of this setting is somewhat justified in the ending, not to give anything away.
Read on
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Shutter Island Movie Review
Martin Scorsese's Shutter Island - Film Review
‘You Act Like Insanity Is Catching’
A Dark and Stormy Night
There has always been something fascinating regarding stories of the mad, especially those that prominently utilise the asylum. An audience’s lust for the horrific draws them towards the ancient madhouses that are more like torturous dungeons than institutes for aiding people with mental problems, like Arkham of Batman fame, or [link widoczny dla zalogowanych], the asylum can be a modern but sterile place where the doctors oppress the patients, and the viewer is made to root more for the delusional lunatics rather than the sane doctors, as seen in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest and K-Pax.
Despite the silliness his role creates, DiCaprio does a fine job with Daniels, especially in his more angry and confused moments [link widoczny dla zalogowanych], and does get some good conversations with the doctors and patients. Better still are Kingsley as the head psychiatrist, who seems to have a subtle insanity of his own, and Jackie Earle Haley in a small role as George Noyce, a dangerous patient Daniels goes to for information. His part may be minor, but it definitely leaves an impression.
In Martin Scorsese’s latest thriller [link widoczny dla zalogowanych], two US Marshals, Teddy Daniels (Leonardo DiCaprio) and Chuck Aule (Mark Ruffalo) are sent to a mental institution for the criminally insane to investigate the mysterious disappearance of a female patient, Rachel Solando (Emily Mortimer), who apparently drowned all her children. As their investigation furthers, Daniels becomes suspicious of the lead psychiatrist, John Cawley (Ben Kingsley) and begins to think that he and his partner were just lured there to be part of some twisted experiments being carried out by the doctors. Daniels thusly tries to learn more about the twisted nature of the institution, despite being hounded by some very distressing hallucinations.
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