I've always been of the view that Martin Scorsese is over rated, and while there's nothing wrong with his directorial style, I find it more workmanlike than particularly inspiring. (OK, there is usually a bit of noticeable flair here and there, but he doesn't give me the near constant pleasure that I find in the best works of Spielberg, Hitchcock or even Brian de Palma when he was at the top of his game.)
The point is, I don't rush to see any of his movies, although I often do see them eventually.
Hence, I only watched 2010's
Shutter Island on Netflix on the weekend.
It's not a bad movie, but an oddly old fashioned one, particularly thematically in how it deals with psychiatry. The book it was based on is only from 2003, but it feels it could be much older. It reminded me a bit of Hitchcock's
Spellbound, at least in terms of the way it treats "talking therapy" with a seriousness which we're not exactly used to seeing in the modern era of pharmo-psychology. (Actually, now that I re-read the plot of Hitchcock's movie, which I have only seen once perhaps 30 years ago, it has other similarities too.)
There are some aspects which hurt its credibility. As
one bad review says:
He stuffs the film with heavy-handed art direction and piles on a
ludicrously ominous soundtrack. The soundtrack is a constant reminder of
the movie's importance and only highlights its unimportance.
Yeah, there is one early sequence in which the score is just completely over the top. It's impossible not to notice it, and I can't understand why Scorsese let it stand. (Interestingly, I see that there was no original music used at all - it was all bits and pieces of existing works selected. And here I thought I could perhaps gives Hans Zimmer a blast for being overbearing again.)
The art direction bothered me too, in both extremes - the opulence of the psychiatrist's home in the mental asylum, and the dungeon like quality of the old asylum. I mean, the plot is essentially a bit B grade trashy (nothing wrong with that,
per se), but having so much that seems OTT in art direction kept making me think that it's a bit ridiculous that they spent so much money on it.
As to final scene and what it means - my son, to his credit (unless he had already read this on line - I should double check) picked up on the intended meaning immediately, before I had thought of it. But
this article, full of spoiler of course, indicates that he was correct.
My final verdict: I wouldn't say don't watch it, but go in with low expectations and you may end up satisfied enough.
Update: in retrospect, it could be argued that my complaint about the art direction is unfair, given the explanation of the entire situation that comes close to the end of the film. (This is hard to discuss without doing a big spoiler). But we are never
shown the difference between reality and delusion, and it would not have been hard to do so. Physically, everything about the place looks the same, making the art direction problem still feel like a problem.