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Shutter Island 6,5/10 4779 reviews

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Martin Scorsese wasn't kidding when he said that his neo-noir psychological thriller Shutter Island—based on Dennis Lehane's 2003 novel of the same name—would be because moviegoers would just to understand the ending. Nevertheless, he may have underestimated. Even after more than two viewings, it's still hard to definitively conclude just what exactly is going down on the titular island, and whether or not Leonardo DiCaprio's character is actually the mental case the film's supporting cast leads us to believe. First and foremost, let's get one thing straight: Leonardo DiCaprio's character—whom we'll hereafter refer to as 'Teddy'—is being brainwashed.Now, that's not to say that Teddy isn't crazy.

Or that he was right about everything. Or that he really was a U.S. (We'll get to all that stuff later.) Rather, what we see play out throughout the film is indeed an elaborate role-play in which the doctors at Shutter Island aggressively attempt to implant a specific memory into Teddy's mind—namely, that he is actually a man by the name of Andrew Laeddis who compassionately murdered his psychotic wife after she drowned their three children. Of course, the doctors are unsuccessful, as Teddy's repeated relapses indicate that he systematically rejects the memory as not being his. Nevertheless, Teddy is actively being brainwashed—sanity aside.

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Shutter Island. Summer, 1954. Marshal Teddy Daniels has come to Shutter Island, home of Ashecliffe Hospital for the Criminally Insane. Along with his partner, Chuck Aule, he sets out to find an escaped patient, a murderess named Rachel Solando, as a hurricane bears down upon them. Jun 16, 2010  The ending of Shutter Island seems ambiguous to many people, but again, to me it was pretty clear-cut. Teddy wakes up to the reality that he is actually Andrew Laeddis, though he is warned by Dr. Cawley and Dr. Sheehan that he has regressed into his fantasy world before.

The real question, however, pertains to whether or not that specific memory—in which Teddy kills his psychotic wife after she drowns their three children—is actually Teddy's. The film certainly invites viewers to accept the ending at face value, leading many to incorrectly assume that Teddy definitely did shoot his wife at their lake house and simply refuses to acknowledge the painful memory, despite the medical team's best efforts. Upon closer inspection, however, there's good reason to suspect that the memory in question isn't really Teddy's. Before we get deeper into Shutter Island's shady attempt at brainwashing Teddy, however, it's important to clear up another important plot point: Teddy is definitely not a U.S. Marshal.The evidence supporting this claim is staggering and obvious. We first know something might be amiss when Teddy, while perturbed by Dr. Cawley's unwillingness to cooperate with the investigation, states that he and his partner are 'going to file our reports and hand it over to.'

But fails to recall the federal chain of command. It doesn't take a U.S. Marshal to know that he's is referring to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Dr.

Sheehan—who is most certainly not a U.S. Marshal—completes Teddy's sentence with the FBI's nickname: 'Hoover's boys.' Strange that a veteran U.S. Marshal would struggle to recall to whom exactly he files his reports, no? But hey, migraines can be incapacitating!

While failing to recall the FBI might be excusable, failing to recognize the difference between a real, metal handgun and a cheap, easily-breakable plastic toy is not. Marshal worth his badge would surely recognize the correct weight of a revolver as soon as they pick it up, but Teddy actually goes so far as to claim he knows the gun is loaded on, and that 'his initials are on the side and there's a dent in the barrel from when Philip Stacks shot at me.' Yet he snaps it like a twig.Sorry, Ted—you're just playing cowboy. So, if Teddy isn't really a U.S.

Who is he?Teddy is quite obviously a patient at Shutter Island and is almost certainly the pyromaniac responsible for the deaths of his wife and three other people. The most telling piece of evidence comes when Teddy dreams of 'Andrew Laeddis,' the firebug supposedly responsible for burning down his apartment complex.

During this sequence, we get a close-up shot of a clearly fictional Laeddis' hands lighting a match. Interestingly, we are presented with the when Teddy lights a match later in the film, and even the movie's promotional cover art is a close-up of DiCaprio's face behind a lit match. Teddy probably turned into the pyromaniac responsible for killing his wife as a result of traumatic experiences that took place during his service in World War II.While overseas, we know that Teddy witnessed the death toll of a WWII concentration camp, was part of a squad responsible for 'murdering' dozens of disarmed Nazis, and was face to face with the results of a failed suicide attempt. These events have clearly taken a toll on Teddy, who dreams about them on an almost nightly basis. Such recurring nightmares are a clear sign of some serious PTSD, which may have driven Teddy to burn down his apartment in a fit of insanity.

While it's easy to take Shutter Island's big twist and ending at face value, it's a mistake to discount the fact that everything about the location itself is super shady.Just because Teddy has created a false narrative for himself doesn't mean that he's created a false narrative for the secretive, isolated mental institution. 'They're experimenting on people here,' Teddy tells 'Chuck,' his fake partner who is actually one Dr. Sheehan, and thus knows the truth of it.

Sheehan tries to dismiss Teddy's theory. But Teddy's got it figured out. 'That's the beauty of it, isn't it? Crazy people, they're the perfect subjects,' he says. 'They talk, nobody listens.

I stood at Dachau. We saw what human beings are capable of doing to each other, right? For Christ's sake, we fought a goddamn war to stop them and now I found out it may be happening here? On our soil?' Teddy might be crazy, but he isn't wrong.

Everything about Shutter Island 'reeks of government ops.' The guards carry military-grade rifles and drive military-grade vehicles. The most dangerous 'patients' are housed in an old Civil War fort. All of the facilities are surrounded by an electrified fence, lighthouse included.

If there was ever an opportunity to conduct government-sanctioned mind control experiments, a secret, isolated prison for the 'criminally insane' would be the perfect place. Who'd ever find out?Teddy, of course, figures it out. But what can he do about it? After all, he's the subject of a mind-control experiment himself.

The false memory in question, of course, is the film's pivotal lake house scene. In this fictional scene, Teddy comes home from his job (as a U.S. Marshal) to find that his mentally-ill wife has drowned their three children in an attempt at turning them into 'living dolls.' Teddy then shoots his wife out an emotional act of compassion, as she begs for him to 'set her free.' The scene is deep.

And it's entirely fake.At face value, the lake house scene serves to illustrate why Teddy is at Shutter Island in the first place, so it's easy for the audience to fall victim to the doctor's mind control. It all 'makes sense,' right? The problem is, it doesn't all add up.

It's not real. The entire memory is either fabricated or someone else's story, and the good doctors Cawley and Sheehan are aggressively attempting to implant this memory into Teddy's brain. The first piece of evidence suggesting that Teddy was the subject of an elaborate brainwashing experiment involves his supposedly having children.Not once in the film does Teddy talk about his children. In fact, he never mentions his children at all, even when recalling the fact that his wife died in a fire that killed four people.

Isn't it a bit odd that he wouldn't describe the arson as killing both his wife and children—i.e., his entire family? Even stranger, Teddy never once recalls the faces of his sons in any of his dreams, memories, or visions.

The only one of his supposed children's faces we ever actually see is his daughter, who first shows up in a dream as a frozen body in Dachau—which is probably where he really saw her. The only suggestion that Teddy ever had children comes from Dr. And why should we believe him? Despite Teddy's insistence that he 'never had any children,' Cawley forces pictures of three drowned children on him, telling Teddy their supposed names and reminding him that he dreams about the little girl every night. (In truth, he dreams about Dachau every night.) Teddy rejects it in sincere confusion, saying 'I never had a little girl.' And he probably didn't.

Cawley is merely trying to implant—in the name of science—an altogether different false reality into Teddy's already confused brain. While it may seem like a minor detail, this change in sentence structure is anything but insignificant. Since we know this isn't the first time Dr. Cawley and crew have attempted to 'bring Teddy back to reality'—aka plant a false memory in his head—it's safe to assume Teddy's heard 'Why are you all wet, baby?'

Over and over and over again. Yet, when recalling the lake house event, he still gets it wrong. And before you make the assumption that it's simply an unintentional scripting or dialogue error, consider the insane complexity and depth of Shutter Island. (As well as other Martin Scorsese films.) You can bet your bottom dollar the award-winning director intentionally changed Leo's line. First and foremost, consider this—which name sounds more plausible to you: Edward Daniels or Andrew Laeddis? Despite containing the exact same letters, Edward Daniels is certainly the more common and thus more likely name of the two.

Secondly, that whole 'Rule of 4' thing is just some trickery created by Dr. Cawley to help instill a fake memory within Teddy's mind. Just as 'Rachel Solando' is a fictional entity created from 'Dolores Chanal,' 'Andrew Laeddis' is an entirely fictional entity created from 'Edward Daniels.' This name game's only function is to break down Teddy's sense of reality even further.

Only with a complete destruction of Teddy's identity can Dr. Cawley and Dr.

Sheehan successfully implant the false memory into Teddy's head. However, what we really see transpire is Teddy choosing to be lobotomized. The doctors' aggressive role play actually worked—just not in the way they had hoped. Teddy does, in fact, remember that he burnt down his apartment building and killed his wife.

He also knows that, if that scenario is wrong, he killed his wife at the lake house after she drowned their three children. Either way, he cannot live with the pain, and chooses to go on as U.S. Marshal Edward Daniels, knowing full well that he will be lobotomized. 'Which would be worse,' he asks Dr.

Sheehan, 'to live as a monster or to die as a good man?' Teddy chooses the later. But don't take our word for it.' Teddy does indeed choose his fate,' of New York University, who acted as Martin Scorsese's psychiatric adviser. According to Gilligan, Teddy is effectively telling Dr.

Sheehan, 'I feel too guilty to go on living. I'm not going to actually commit suicide, but I'm going to vicariously commit suicide by handing myself over to these people who're going to lobotomise me.' Of course, if we want to get to the bottom of Teddy's famous last words, it wouldn't hurt to ask the author's opinion.Dennis Lehane, who wrote the original novel from which the film is created, 'I liked that line when I read the script. I would say that line, which comes across as a question, he asks it sort of rhetorically. Personally, I think he has a momentary flash. To me that's all it is. It's just one moment of sanity mixed in the midst of all the other delusions.' Lehane continued, explaining why it's so important that it was phrased as a question.

Explained

'When he asks the question, he does it in such a way that, if he were to say it as a statement. Then there's no solution here but to stop the lobotomy. Because if he shows any sort of self-awareness, then it's over, they wouldn't want to lobotomize him.' Still, Lehane isn't convinced Teddy was totally sane when he delivers the iconic line. 'My feeling was no, he's not so conscious that he says 'Oh I'm going to decide to pretend to be Laeddis so they'll finally give me a lobotomy.'

That would just be far more suicidal than I think this character is,' he said. 'I think that in one moment, for a half a second sitting there in that island he remembered who he was and then he asks that question and he quickly sort of lets it go. That was my feeling on that line.'

Still confused? Don't believe us? Think we're wrong? No problem— Shutter Island is an almost infinitely confusing film.

In fact, even its lead actor didn't know what was going on!' There were a few weeks there certainly towards the end of filming,', 'when we were doing some of the end sequences, where there was almost a lapse in the understanding of where I was because we kept pushing this guy further and further and it was day after day of re-enacting a traumatic event that was either a dream or reality for this guy. I remember saying to Marty: 'I have no idea where I am or what I'm doing right now. What's going on with this guy?' And he said: 'Don't worry, just do the scene again and keep pushing him.'

Even DiCaprio knows that there are multiple ways to interpret the supposed insanity of his character. 'There's a certain level of ambiguity in the ending of this film and throughout the entire movie that could lead the audience to have a different experience of it on further viewings,' he said. 'So that also challenged me as an actor in the way I portrayed Teddy, because often times we'd be pushing him to different extremes, and it was then in the hands of Scorsese and editor Thelma Schoonmaker to gauge where to go to in different circumstances. It was one of the most challenging, but at the same time I relish those experiences.'

813/.54 21PS3562.E426 S55 2003Shutter Island is a novel by American writer, published by in April 2003. A was released in February 2010. Lehane has said he sought to write a novel that would be a homage to settings,.

He described the novel as a hybrid of the works of the and the 1956 film. His intent was to write the main characters in a position where they would lack 20th century resources such as radio communications. He also structured the book to be more than his previous book,.Lehane was inspired by the hospital and grounds on in for the model of the hospital and island. Lehane had visited it in the as a child with his uncle and family. Contents.Plot In 1954, widower U.S.

Marshal Edward 'Teddy' Daniels and his new partner Chuck Aule go on a ferry boat to Shutter Island, the home of Ashecliffe Hospital for the criminally insane, to investigate the disappearance of a patient, Rachel Solando (who was incarcerated for drowning her three children). She has escaped the hospital and apparently the desolate island, despite being kept in a locked cell under constant supervision.In Rachel's room, Teddy and Chuck discover a code that Teddy breaks. He tells Chuck that he believes the code points to a 67th patient, when records show only 66. Teddy also reveals that he wants to avenge the death of his wife Dolores, who was murdered two years prior by a man called Andrew Laeddis, who he believes is an inmate in Ashecliffe Hospital.

The novel is interspersed with graphic descriptions of and which Teddy helped to liberate. After hits the island, Teddy and Chuck investigate Ward C, where Teddy believes government experiments with psychotropic drugs are being conducted. While separated from Chuck for a short while in Ward C, Teddy meets a patient called George Noyce, who tells him that everything is an elaborate game designed for him, and that Chuck is not to be trusted.As Teddy and Chuck return to the main hospital area, they are separated. Teddy discovers a woman (in a sea cave he tried to take refuge in) who says she is the real Rachel Solando. She tells him she was actually a psychiatrist at Ashecliffe, and when she discovered the illegal experiments being run by them, she was incarcerated as a patient.

She escaped and has been hiding in different places on the island. She warns him about the other residents of the island, telling him to take care with the food, medication and cigarettes, which have been laced with psychotropic drugs. When Teddy returns to the hospital, he can't find Chuck and is told he had no partner. He escapes and tries to rescue Chuck at the lighthouse where he believes the experiments take place. He reaches the top of the lighthouse and finds only hospital administrator Dr.

Cawley seated at a desk. Cawley tells Teddy that he himself is in fact Andrew Laeddis (an anagram of Edward Daniels) and that he has been a patient at Shutter Island for two years for murdering his wife, Dolores Chanal (an anagram of Rachel Solando), after she murdered their three children.Andrew/Teddy refuses to believe this and takes extreme measures to disprove it, grabbing what he thinks is his gun and tries to shoot Dr. Cawley; but the weapon is a toy water pistol. Chuck then enters, revealing that he is actually Andrew's psychiatrist, Dr.

Lester Sheehan. He is told that Dr. Cawley and Chuck/Sheehan have devised this treatment to allow him to live out his elaborate fantasy, in order to confront the truth, or else undergo a radical treatment. Teddy/Andrew accepts that he killed his wife and his service as a US Marshal was a long time ago.The ending of the novel is unclear as to which 'reality' is true: the recovery or the investigation.

It is also unclear whether Teddy has truly regressed, or if he wishes to 'die' (at the very least, lose his ability for conscious thought, through lobotomy) in order to avoid living with the knowledge that his wife murdered their children and he is her murderer.Adaptations Film. Main article:The novel has been adapted into a film by director, starring as Teddy Daniels, as Chuck Aule, as Dr. Cawley, and as Dr.

Naehring.The film was originally scheduled to be released by on October 2, 2009, in the United States and Canada. Paramount later announced it was going to push back the release date to February 19, 2010; reports attribute the pushback to Paramount's not having 'the financing in 2009 to spend the $50 to $60 million necessary to market a big awards pic like this,' DiCaprio's unavailability to promote the film internationally, and Paramount's hope that the economy might rebound enough by February 2010 that a film geared toward adult audiences would be more viable financially.The film opened #1 at the box office with $41 million, according to studio estimates. As of 2019, this remains Scorsese's highest box office opening. The film remained #1 in its second weekend with $22.2 million. Eventually, the film grossed $128,012,934 in North America and $166,790,080 in foreign markets, for a total of $294,803,014, becoming Scorsese's highest-grossing film worldwide until.Audiobook The version of the novel is read by.The version of the novel is read by.Graphic novel The story has also been reworked into a published by, with art by ( ).

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