http://blackplush.blogspot.com/2010/02/shutter-island-begins-with-woozy-sea.html

Shutter Island begins with a woozy, sea-sick U.S. Marshal Teddy Daniels 
(Leonardo DiCaprio) and neither he nor the audience will gain their equilibrium 
for the next two hours and twenty minutes.  Martin Scorsese's adaptation of 
Dennis Lehane's novel of the same name, is a wonderfully actualized piece of 
filmmaking. Scorsese has concocted a savory stew out of Lehane's story of 
paranoid isolation and ever ratcheting psychological trauma.  Stripped of their 
guns – and their power - at the ironclad gates of the Ashecliffe Hospital for 
the Criminally Insane, Daniels and his new partner, Chuck Aule (Mark Ruffalo) 
are set adrift on a remote and barren penal colony where everybody is a suspect 
and no one is a reliable narrator.  Saturated with color, and full of elements 
as primal as a hurricane, Shutter Island plays like the kind of movie Alfred 
Hitchcock would have made -  if Hitchcock had had Scorsese's prodigious talent.
   
Shutter Island may be the best movie Scorsese has ever made.  It is Casino 
good.  Masterly directed and sure-footed, Shutter Island shows all the colors 
of Scorsese's palette without any of the showy pretentiousness that sometimes 
upstaged his earlier work.  Everything he has learned about camera placement 
and movement is utilized here but all is in employed to illuminate and advance 
the story.  Some of the framing is absolutely gorgeous.  Shutter Island is 
Scorsese's valedictory turn. 


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