REVIEW: ‘Shutter Island’ Clichés Can’t Stop DiCaprio Star Power, Genre Appeal
by S.T. KarnickAlthough it’s ambiguous about much, Martin Scorsese’s Shutter Island makes two things extremely clear: Leonardo DiCaprio is a seriously big movie star, and delivering on genre expectations excuses a multitude of sins as far as audiences are concerned.
The Scorsese-directed suspense-horror film has been number one at the U.S box office for two consecutive weekends, despite its stunning collection of genre cliches, long-out-of-fashion narrative ambiguity, agonizingly slow pace, and few real surprises, along with the director’s usual arresting visual style. Thus a good deal of the credit must go to DiCaprio’s star power.

Telling the tale of a U.S. Marshall, played by DiCaprio, who with his new partner investigates the escape of a violent prisoner/patient at a federal detention and treatment facility on an island several miles off the coast of Massachusetts, Shutter Island employs enough horror and suspense cliches to scare off any discerning moviegoer.
There are, for example, the isolated island itself (so reminiscent of Agatha Christie’s And Then There Were None and many other suspense stories), a stormy scene in a graveyard, wanderings through a confusing maze of corridors in an insane asylum, the hardnosed detective investigating a case that becomes much more complex than he thought it would, a sinister ex-Nazi, a character’s disturbing memories of wartime, classical music backing a scene revealing atrocities, weird people making perplexing claims, a character taking a hypodermic away from a doctor and injecting the latter, an automobile explosion, and many, many more.
What’s more, Scorsese employs this farrago of the familiar in the service of a plot that ultimately becomes one of those “what really happened?” stories that were so popular in the late 1960s and early ’70s and then died an extremely well-deserved death. Scorsese and his screenwriters actually do a good job of bringing out the epistemological implications of this material, which could inspire in more-educated audience members a few moments of consideration about how humans can in fact know that we know things. But surely no more than a few moments of it.
Unfortunately, the film is so resolutely irresolute that it’s ultimately impossible to know what really happened, and the characters are too wooden for us really to care. DiCaprio’s U.S. Marshall, for example, is given a huge amount of back story in the film, yet the narrative’s ultimate undermining of the audience’s knowledge of what happened and what he actually did makes it impossible for us to judge his actions and thus know how much to sympathize with him. We know little about him except for the tragedies he has endured, which are revealed in only rather piecemeal fashion during an overly drawn-out narrative.
This seems to be a choice on the director’s part, apparently in hopes of making the atmosphere that much creepier. The Dennis Lehane novel on which the film is based reportedly includes a good deal of lighthearted byplay between the marshall and his partner, and it seems a rather better choice than Scorsese’s.
Thus, despite DiCaprio’s star power, he is never able to make the character particularly likable, further undermining any change at audience sympathy.
All of this makes it even more impressive that audiences are turning out in relatively big numbers. To be sure, a good many people who have seen Shutter Island seem quite convinced that it is a mystery meant to have a real answer, as exemplified by a discussion at screenrant.com. Nonetheless, it seems quite clear that Scorsese and his writers intended that no definitive answer to the film’s central mystery should be found within its story.
It’s possible, of course, that some ticket-buyers may well be attracted by the film’s narrative ambiguity, or that some were drawn in by a fondness for Lehane’s novel (but not many, I think). Perhaps the couple of decades of blessed freedom from these ambiguity stories has allowed the arising of a new generation of moviegoers not yet turned off by such stories. Maybe this sort of story is no longer a cliche for a large part of the audience.
The trailers, commercials, and other advance publicity for the film, however, certainly did not emphasize the presence of such ambiguity. Instead they dwelt on the presence of DiCaprio, Scorsese’s visual bravura, and the picture’s gothic atmospherics. In other words, a big star in a genre film.
My guess is that Hollywood industry insiders won’t find Shutter Island ambiguous at all. The message is clear: big star plus recognizable genre equals serious money.
And that’s the kind of message movie Hollywood does best.






Subscribe via RSS
Got a Tip?
20 Comments
Absolutely loved this movie. I'm usually not a huge fan of Dicaprio, but he did an outstanding job. The musical score was great and made the movie even more suspenseful.
I actually liked the trailer for Shutter Island, and I'm very much interested in viewing this neo-schlock flick from Scorcese. It looks like his imitation of a Val Lewton meets "The Black Sleep" type of film. Now that's up my alley!
Great review and you'd think people would get sick of the same predictable formula. DiCaprio's face has one expression in most of the film and he looks ridiculous trying to play tough guys.
Hey, didn't last year prove that the old-time star system had finally imploded onto itself. I remember reading about that at this site.
Actually, in the case of Sandra Bullock, the star system may not be totally dead, not with $400 million in the till from Blind Side and <the Proposal. But like the dinosaur, the star system is facing extinction.
How do I know this? How many modern-day stars are the subject of impersonators, like in the old days with Burt Lancaster, John Wayne, Cary Grant, Bette Davis, Katharine Hepburn, Kirk Douglas?
Is there anyone out there who is doing impersonations of Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Hanks, Meryl Streep, Russell Crow, Sandra Bullock, George Clooney, etc., etc., ect.
You can't, and when you can't find the prospect of parody through impersonation, it shows there isn't anything distinctive or memorable in today's crop of stars. Barbra Walter was right when told Bill O'Reilly last week that there are not stars left.
Without dropping a spoiler, let me say that I was actually p/o'd when this movie ended. Although the ending could have been somewhat plausible, it became preposterous because of all the events that supposedly led up to it.In fact, I'm doubly mad because I may have to watch it again so just so I can just check off all of the events that are supposed to give the ending some kind of logic. It's a great setup with a potentially great ending that is undermined by the implausibility (in hindsight) of nearly everything that leads to it.
Don't agree with the review much at all, which I consider, like most other negative ones, to be mostly on the "misread" side, but each to his own. I think many discerning filmgoers love this film and precisely for the very reasons that the reviewer lays out. In fact, I know quite a few who've gone back for second and third viewings. It's not everyone's cup of tea, though, but there's more going on that meets the eye. Moving, well acted and beautifully executed, a mind-bender. Don't listen to the reviewer, go check it out yourself.
What kills me about the music is that, as fitting as it is, absolutely none of it was written specifically for the movie. Scorsese and Robbie Robertson did a Tarantinoesque dive into the record bins, and found some of the most haunting and suspenseful music ever written.
I thought Robert Downney, Jr. did a terrific (albeit brief) impression of Russell Crowe in "Tropic Thunder".
Nevertheless, your point is well taken.
I was so intrigued by the brilliance of this movie that I saw it again the following night to find clues and to understand it better. Sure enough, there were many, and I'm sure if I see it again I would notice even more. This movie is the kind that made me think, how did I miss that, or, I wish I would have caught that. The ending to me is quite clear, if you look at the "partner's" reaction to the "puzzling" statement just said and which was immediately preceded by the item on the platter on which the camera zoomed. The cliches to me were so insignificant. To be sure, Leo's acting talent has risen to new heights with this project.
I do not like going to movies that leave me scratching my head, "No Country For Old Men" comes to mind. I haven't seen this movie, but by the looks of this review there's certainly some head scratching to be done. Is it asking too much to have a coherent story?
I agree. It was a multi-layered movie that looked cliched on the surface.
I'm a "discerning filmgoer" and didn't like this movie at all. Save your money.
[...] the rest here: REVIEW: ‘Shutter Island’ Clichés Can’t Stop DiCaprio Star Power, Genre Appeal This entry is filed under America – Blogs, Big Hollywood. You can follow any responses to this [...]
Impossible for DiCaprio to overcome the aura of having lived an extremely privileged life that practically oozes out of him. The regular guy shtick he tries to convey by knitting his brows to show "intensity" screams FALSE.
When comics like Frank Gorshen or Rich Little did imitations of famous actors it was usually on a variety show like Ed Sullivan or Dinah Shore or Jackie Gleason or later on Carol Burnett ( wonderful comic) or Sonny and Cher. Geez I just took a trip down memory lane and am now feeling nostalgic. And those were network tv shows not cable so EVERYONE saw them. The tv market has splintered and people watch or tivo as needed. Everything is a niche market these days.
Everyone at BH knows you have to have a likable "prota-gone-ist" to make a film work. Perhaps someone should inform Scorsese?
totally lost after watching this movie
what's wrong with your faaace?
hahaha
Take a gander at that pic of Ruffalo and Di Caprio… On the left is a man. On the right is an oversized baby playing dress-up in his grandpa's suit. He looks as ridiculous in these hardboiled roles as Kirk Cameron or Ralph Macchio would. I mean, how on earth could a man like Scorcese, who has cast DeNiro and Liotta in his films, have fallen in love with this doughy, uber babyface? To me, it's as incomprehensible as casting Maggie Gyllenhaal as a femme fatale. Acting talent is beside the point utterly.
Strange, very strange.
So correct on Di Caprio.
You must be logged in to post a comment.