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Some people's stories seem to translate well to film. I think Dennis Lehaney may be one of those.
I just saw a preview for Shutter Island which I read last year. Leo DiCaprio strarring and Martin Scorcese directing. Looks pretty good. The story was quite interesting. "Mystic River" is one of my all time favorites and I also quite enjoyed "Gone Baby, Gone" both adaptations of Lehane novels, so I am looking forward to this one. Anyone else a fan of Lehane's books/movies? |
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The thing you hear going into this film, from every other reviewer or person who's seen it or read the book, is "It's hard to talk about it without spoiling you..." Well, this is going to have ever so slight spoilers.
Old joke: Three lunatics come before the board of doctors at a mental hospital. In order to prove that they are sane enough to release into society, they need to present one correct fact about a topic, chosen at random. The doctors pick the topic: "Spiders." Lunatic 1 says: "Spiders have eight legs." That's correct. Off he goes. Lunatic 2 says: "Spiders build webs." That's correct too, he's a free man. Lunatic 3 captures a spider. He pulls its legs off, then puts it down on the table and tells it to run. When it doesn't move, he looks at the doctors and proudly announces: "Spiders can't hear without legs!" Within 5 minutes, Scorsese is tossing very obvious (some might say too obvious, but there's a point to that) clues our way that there's something wrong on Shutter Island. Apart from the flashbacks suffered by our hero, which in and of themselves are nothing out of the ordinary considering what he's quickly established to have gone through, there's something... off about everything. Or rather the exact opposite: it's all a little too on, a little too clear, a little too easy. A woman has disappeared from a high-security mental institution; what's happened to her? Who knows the true story? He plays beautifully on our preconceptions of what should happen in a story like this - and even what did happen in reality back then. Of course there's something creepy about old Bedlam-style mental hospitals (the chief doctor even comments on how they Don't Do That Anymore, just so we know they do.) Of course the German doctor has to have a Nazi past (how could he not?). Of course there's a conspiracy of commie-hunters (it's the 1950s, after all). Of course the missing woman can't simply have disappeared without a trace (people just don't do that). (Edward Daniels is a much more believable name than Andrew Laeddis, isn't it?) The greatness in Shutter Island isn't so much in the payoff - I'm still not sure it's not a bit of a cheat - but in the way Scorsese keeps us guessing while pretending he's not. He pits the gorgeously shot and acted 40s/50s noir drama against the 90s/00s subversions his audience has learned to expect, and then keeps dancing around it, alternating between exaggerating his story to the point of outright horror - which is only to be expected, considering the setting - and presenting hints so subtly that we keep wondering: What if there isn't a twist, just harsh reality? What if all the perfect suits and the creepy asylum and the Mengele-light doctor (what is this, von Sydow's sixth career revival?) and the conspiracy really are just... a really well-done, and quite horriffic, period piece? And however much the ending irks me on some level, the achievement here isn't in the answer the movie gives, but in the ones it forces us to answer ourselves. Which version do we want to be true? There's only one boat leaving Shutter Island, and we may need to prove that we know fact from fiction before Scorsese lets us leave. (Oh, and spiders really do have their ears on their legs.) ![]() |
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