• Xenforo is upgrading us to version 2.3.7 on Thursday Aug 14, 2025 at 01:00 AM BST. This upgrade includes several security fixes among other improvements. Expect a temporary downtime during this process. More info here

Shutter Island

Rate the movie

  • 10

  • 9

  • 8

  • 7

  • 6

  • 5

  • 4

  • 3

  • 2

  • 1


Results are only viewable after voting.
I just got a 2nd viewing for this, and it definitely holds up on a second viewing. I also interpreted the movie differently from the people I saw it with, so this is a movie that can be viewed differently. I also noticed a lot of small things that are seemingly small, but show you how it all was in your face the whole time. This film was really meticulously plotted out :up:

Oh, and:

the dream scene where his wife turns to ashes is SSSOOOO great! Seriously, one of the best filmed scenes I have ever seen. It is emotional, visually beautiful, well acted, well paced, and very cerebral. The imagery in scenes like this is amazing.
 
After viewing it a second time, I can honestly say I would want Marty to take on Bioshock now.
 
I was thinking the same. The whole atmosphere and look reminded me so much of Bioshock. At least get the same cinematographer to do the film.
 
Marty is one of those directors if he signed on to direct ANYTHING I like, I would be excited. I don't think there is much he is wrong for.
 
I agree with the ending theory that
"Teddy" sort of forces himself into the fake reality of him being a hero in order to escape the guilt of what he really did. He at times likely tricks his mind into believing it but eventually reverts back into sanity and guilt. Guilt which he can't handle.
 
I just got a 2nd viewing for this, and it definitely holds up on a second viewing. I also interpreted the movie differently from the people I saw it with, so this is a movie that can be viewed differently. I also noticed a lot of small things that are seemingly small, but show you how it all was in your face the whole time. This film was really meticulously plotted out :up:

Oh, and:

the dream scene where his wife turns to ashes is SSSOOOO great! Seriously, one of the best filmed scenes I have ever seen. It is emotional, visually beautiful, well acted, well paced, and very cerebral. The imagery in scenes like this is amazing.

I saw it a second time aswell, it's really worth it. What I noticed especially was how great Mark Ruffalo was in his role.
He constantly displays both sides of Chuck. You see how awkward he feels in the roleplaying, something you might interpret as simple uneasiness of his character on a first viewing.
Also what I really love about his performance is that it seems like he walked straight out of a 40's movie into the coloured frames of Shutter Island. The pomaded hair, the bulky suit and the quite theatrical delivery of his lines (Now they got us both, HERE, NOW!), no doubt Scorsese specifically instructed him to walk and talk like those 40's moviestars, you know like Edmond O'Brien or someone. Very cool. :up:

And this just might be DiCaprio's performance. A very demanding role indeed, and it fits him like a glove. There isn't anyone else working in Hollywood today that is so well suited to portray the violent, agressive, angsty mess of Teddy Daniels.
I have seen very few ''Noooooo!!!'' scenes that DIDN'T suck. The one from this movie turns your blood to ice. It's a scene that I find very admirable, so unflinching. When he wades through the pond to get to his kids, we see every step he has to take to get there, feeling his desperation.

If this turns out to NOT be the best movie of the year, this will have been a great year for movies. :p
 
Last edited:
Yeah i loved this movie from begining to end! It was just fantastic on so many levels.
 
I saw it a second time aswell, it's really worth it. What I noticed especially was how great Mark Ruffalo was in his role, he constantly displays both sides of Chuck. You see how awkward he feels in the roleplaying, something you might interpret as simple uneasiness of his character on a first viewing. Also what I really love about his performance is that it seems like he walked straight out of a 40's movie into the coloured frames of Shutter Island. The pomaded hair, the bulky suit and the quite theatrical delivery of his lines (Now they got us both, HERE, NOW!), no doubt Scorsese specifically instructed him to walk and talk like those 40's moviestars, you know like Edmond O'Brien or someone. Very cool. :up:

And this just might be DiCaprio's performance. A very demanding role indeed, and it fits him like a glove. There isn't anyone else working in Hollywood today that is so well suited to portray the violent, agressive, angsty mess of Teddy Daniels. I have seen very few ''Noooooo!!!'' scenes that DIDN'T suck. The one from this movie turns your blood to ice. It's a scene that I find very admirable, so unflinching. When he wades through the pond to get to his kids, we see every step he has to take to get there, feeling his desperation.

If this turns out to NOT be the best movie of the year, this will have been a great year for movies. :p

Spoiler tag it dude. :woot:

But agreed about Ruffalo. I'm also looking forward to watching Kingsley's performance again. And yeah, this could be one of Leo' best roles. He goes deeper and darker than any of his other roles.

I'm gonna see it on friday again, so I can't wait.
 
I saw it a second time aswell, it's really worth it. What I noticed especially was how great Mark Ruffalo was in his role, he constantly displays both sides of Chuck. You see how awkward he feels in the roleplaying, something you might interpret as simple uneasiness of his character on a first viewing. Also what I really love about his performance is that it seems like he walked straight out of a 40's movie into the coloured frames of Shutter Island. The pomaded hair, the bulky suit and the quite theatrical delivery of his lines (Now they got us both, HERE, NOW!), no doubt Scorsese specifically instructed him to walk and talk like those 40's moviestars, you know like Edmond O'Brien or someone. Very cool. :up:

And this just might be DiCaprio's performance. A very demanding role indeed, and it fits him like a glove. There isn't anyone else working in Hollywood today that is so well suited to portray the violent, agressive, angsty mess of Teddy Daniels. I have seen very few ''Noooooo!!!'' scenes that DIDN'T suck. The one from this movie turns your blood to ice. It's a scene that I find very admirable, so unflinching. When he wades through the pond to get to his kids, we see every step he has to take to get there, feeling his desperation.

If this turns out to NOT be the best movie of the year, this will have been a great year for movies. :p

Completely agreed. This will be a hard movie to top. I hope it being so early in the year doesn't hurt it as far as Oscars consideration goes, but I think it will :csad:
 
It makes me frustrated we didn't get this in October. We would have had this on DVD by now. It's a definite buy for me. Anyone think Leo had a shot as Oscar chances? I doubt it but it's cool to think about.
 
Wow. I just came from seeing this movie and all I can say it what a let down.
I was so disappointed with nearly everything except the first 30 minutes. I pretty much knew the ending less than an hour into it. I really hoped that it would have played out differently and I would have been pleasantly surprised, but alas, no such luck.
Thumbs down.

Dont get me wrong, a lot of the film was very well done, visually and such. But I think the plot was predictable and disappointing.
 
"Knowing" how it ends is a lot different than knowing how you got there. I doubt anyone really knew how all the pieces fit together. I thought it was masterfully stitched.
 
"Knowing" how it ends is a lot different than knowing how you got there. I doubt anyone really knew how all the pieces fit together. I thought it was masterfully stitched.

Right, Im not saying that I knew every detail like
M Ruffalo actually being the psychiatrist, Dr. Sheehan , I just assumed he wasnt real at all or was a plant from the hospital

But I knew pretty early on that
Leo was a patient at the hospital, just not sure how he was out and about

I guess I felt like the first 20 minutes or so really set me up for something awesome and great and it was just "meh"
 
Wow. I just came from seeing this movie and all I can say it what a let down.
I was so disappointed with nearly everything except the first 30 minutes. I pretty much knew the ending less than an hour into it. I really hoped that it would have played out differently and I would have been pleasantly surprised, but alas, no such luck.
Thumbs down.

Dont get me wrong, a lot of the film was very well done, visually and such. But I think the plot was predictable and disappointing.
THANK YOU. I thought I was the only one that felt like that.
 
Lehane (original author) commented on the film's ending

http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2010/03/03/shutter-island-author-dennis-lehane-gives-his-read-on-the-movies-ending/ :
"Shutter Island" concludes with the revelation that Leonardo DiCaprio's U.S. Marshal Teddy Daniels is in fact an alternate persona constructed by former U.S. Marshal and current Shutter Island inmate Andrew Laeddis. The entire investigation that unfolds over the course of the story was in fact an elaborate ruse designed to rattle Laeddis so much that he puts his Daniels persona to rest. In this book, there's no question about how the ending plays out. Laeddis, seemingly on the road to recovery after his shocking ordeal, goes to sleep. He wakes up and meets with his doctor, who had been playing the role of his partner for the "case," outside the main facility. As the two sit there, it becomes clear that Laeddis has once again lapsed into his Daniels persona, essentially sentencing himself to a lobotomy.

The film is more ambiguous. Things play out similarly, but as Laeddis/Daniels sits and has a smoke with his doctor/partner, he asks the question "Would you rather live as a monster or die as a hero?" This raises the possibility that his relapse is in fact intentional, that Laeddis is so tired of being sick, he longs for the blissful ignorance that a lobotomy will bring.

We asked Lehane for his thoughts on the altered ending in an interview last week. "I would say that line, which comes across as a question, he asks it sort of rhetorically," he explained. "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."

"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. My feeling was no, he's not so conscious 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. 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."
That's about as detailed an explanation as a fan could hope for. It's also a sensible read, even if you don't agree with the decision to make the change. Lehane was and is okay with it though.

"I liked that line when I read the script," he said. "There was just some debate as to how much of a question it is and how much of a declarative statement. In the end they went with it being a question, which I think is important."
I thought that was a FANTASTIC interpretation. Now I'm not so concrete on the position that everything was pretty clear-cut by the time the credits roll.
 
It makes me frustrated we didn't get this in October. We would have had this on DVD by now. It's a definite buy for me. Anyone think Leo had a shot as Oscar chances? I doubt it but it's cool to think about.

I'm not frustrated, I think that strategically, it was much better to wait to release the film in theaters later. It's likely gotten a lot more attention this way.
 
I'm not frustrated, I think that strategically, it was much better to wait to release the film in theaters later. It's likely gotten a lot more attention this way.

For BO, you are right. For Oscars, I think it loses momentum being released now for next year's Oscars. Films released at this time of year rarely, if ever, get nominations or win. It is always the films in the fall that the Oscars favor, cause they are newer so the hype is fresh. I think Shutter Island made more money with this date, but lost its chances at any major awards.
 
True. But I don't want to wait for another year and know that it may not be nominated for anything. Which it should. There's so many things to think about and how Marty weaved everything together. He made it look effortless.
 
Agreed. The film is really meticulously put together. Especially when you see it a 2nd time, you see how fluid everything about it was much more so than you do on the 1st viewing. I want to see this have a chance at the Oscars, but given the date and the Oscars history with Scorsese, I doubt it. He did win for The Departed, but that was after so many times of him losing. He deserves more than 1 Oscar at this point in his career.
 
I can't wait to see it again tomorrow. I think the second time will be the correct way to see it.
 
I wish i could actually change my vote from an 8 to a 9. This is really one of those movies where it takes you some time to process but then you realize how good it really is.

When the movie ended i was a little befudled by the ending and so my opinion of the film was not super high. But soon after that i relaized i could not get this film out of my head. This is a movie that you really do need some persepective to truly appreciate.
 
What exactly tipped you when he had trouble removing his gun? I thought it was just him fumbling a bit.
[
Federal Agents are supposed to be experts at handling their guns, i.e., no fumbling when pulling it out of the holster.
Precisely.
I really loved the first few hours after watching the film, where you look back and retrace the first clues leading up to the end. It's strange how almost in-your-face the puzzle pieces were, and you still couldn't quite piece them together in the right place until Marty showed it to you.

Agreed. I like dark mystery movies like these and it's also nice to see it doing so well at the box office.:yay:

I'd love to see it again but there's a number of other movies in theaters now that i've been putting off seeing.So the next time i see Shutter Island will probably be on dvd.:o
I thought it was quite clear to me that he did not regress back to his delusional state. The last line would be without context if he did.

That's pretty much how i interpreted the final scene too.It's quite a sad and tragic ending really.
Marty is one of those directors if he signed on to direct ANYTHING I like, I would be excited. I don't think there is much he is wrong for.
It probably will never happen but i was was thinking of him doing Avengers actually.For a film with such a large ensemble cast/budget like that you're going to need an experienced (preferably veteran) director who commands respect from the actors IMO. Marvel/Disney would have no trouble finding stars to sign up if they got him.:bow:
It makes me frustrated we didn't get this in October. We would have had this on DVD by now. It's a definite buy for me. Anyone think Leo had a shot as Oscar chances? I doubt it but it's cool to think about.
Had this been released when it was originally planned to i'm sure it would have been up for some of the major awards at the Oscars. For 2011 it's very questionable unfortunately.

In the categories best actor (DiCaprio), supporting actor(Kingsley), director, picture and cinematography i could see it getting nominations.
 
Yeah, Kingsley was something sprecial to the whole film. It's something you like and focus on in the first viewing but tonight when I see it again I'm sure it will be more enjoyable and changed, as will the film itself.
 
Loved it. Don't want to go into Lehane's interpretation because of spoilers but I don't totally agree with it. I'll see it again when it hits the budget theater (bad economy) but as far as I am concerned it was great. Some scenes won't go into which ones were straight up chilling.
 
Back
Top
monitoring_string = "afb8e5d7348ab9e99f73cba908f10802"