SHUTTER ISLAND Breakdown | Ending Explained, Easter Eggs, Hidden Details & Things You Missed

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  • Опубліковано 31 гру 2024

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  • @heavyspoilers
    @heavyspoilers  Рік тому +205

    Check out our breakdown of Arrival here - ua-cam.com/video/JT3Xtrf384I/v-deo.html

    • @kingdoge8237
      @kingdoge8237 Рік тому +6

      watch the ninth configuration. stacy keach, thats the OG psych thriller. I feel shutter island is a scam to be honest

    • @PhantomFilmAustralia
      @PhantomFilmAustralia Рік тому +4

      Doctors don't carry guns, which explains why Teddy's partner Chuck never had one to surrender upon arriving onto the island.

    • @truthedministry
      @truthedministry Рік тому +1

      Shutter Island was ruined for me by the trailer for it. The trailer made the "twist" super obvious. So, I watched the film waiting for a second twist, like in Total Recall when Quaid is almost convinced, but notices that they guy telling him that none of it is real is nervous and afraid to the point that he starts sweating. Instead... I just got the obvious twist I was already expecting. Still a great film that was excellently shot and directed, but I never bothered rewatching it.

    • @aquaviii
      @aquaviii Рік тому +2

      0:00 Shitter Island

    • @mk-ultramags1107
      @mk-ultramags1107 Рік тому

      The first scene Teddy walks past his own hand cuffs

  • @admiralmelon8239
    @admiralmelon8239 Рік тому +8117

    i was so invested in the conspiracy of the island and that teddy was being gaslighted into thinking he was insane that i didn't accept the reality until the movie ended lol. even teddy accepted it before me, great movie.

    • @email471
      @email471 Рік тому +445

      ME TOO the entire ending I thought they were lying to him !

    • @surenhohn5191
      @surenhohn5191 Рік тому +670

      i still dont believe it! Free my boy teddy!!

    • @hndrx7197
      @hndrx7197 Рік тому +106

      ​@@surenhohn5191me too! And even though he was the bad guy, my mind is set (don't know why) that he was right.

    • @matso_yt
      @matso_yt Рік тому +3

      ​@@email471lmao same

    • @dogisgood1464
      @dogisgood1464 Рік тому +199

      This movie is so good that you could actually interpret it that way. This whole thing WAS a way to keep up the experiments and they caught wind he found out about it. They concocted this whole thing to drive him nuts. Its given away when Kingsley talks about how trained and also dangerous he is. He is a war hero and US Marshal, and he also had a tragic loss and serious ptsd. He was actually dangerous to them but with a key weakness they could exploit. That is discussed as well. What better way for top secret psychology experiments to stay hidden than to turn the tools on him. The movie can be watched that way including his last line. He is a soldier and realized the point of it. Its even mentioned that the N. Koreans and the Russians are doing the same kind of psychology experiments. Its as if he agreed with the violent generals and not the psychologically driven method. Remember he was told by Kingsley that he was on the front lines of a war. He actually chose the nazi doc and the general that talked about biting his eye, over Kingsley and Ruffalo. He says "why don't you try". That could be thought of as forget this stuff lets just have controlled war. Which we are.

  • @ZacThaBarber
    @ZacThaBarber 2 роки тому +11605

    How DiCaprio didn’t win an Oscar for this is beyond me

  • @JDubs0623
    @JDubs0623 2 роки тому +4419

    One thing that wasn’t explicitly mentioned but I think is a cool detail is that like you pointed out his clothes as a detective don’t fit but the patient white clothes are almost a perfect fit for him when he puts them on, showing which ones are truly his and which are not.

    • @Graymenn
      @Graymenn Рік тому +162

      The white ones are for orderlies, not patients.

    • @mk-ultramags1107
      @mk-ultramags1107 Рік тому +56

      So many details. The opening scene shows Teddy walk past his own handcuffs. The glass of water shows all 3 perspectives. "Who did this to you?"... "You did."

    • @rashmisingh-ug7bt
      @rashmisingh-ug7bt Рік тому +3

      ​@@mk-ultramags1107glass of water?

    • @mk-ultramags1107
      @mk-ultramags1107 Рік тому +87

      @@rashmisingh-ug7bt During the scene when Teddy is interrogating all the patients, the woman who writes down "Run" asks for a glass of water and we get 3 different shots. One shows the glass half full, another shows it empty and when she picks it up to take a sip, it disappears altogether. It's different for each POV

    • @dogisgood1464
      @dogisgood1464 Рік тому +21

      That would work if it wasnt that he was in orderly clothes not patients.

  • @mandiesavage8130
    @mandiesavage8130 10 місяців тому +261

    It did work, the line at the end was him telling "chuck" I know who I am and I can't live with these memories. I cried during this movie and honestly I cried reliving it with this video. There's been so many movies that should've won Leo an Oscar and imo this is definitely one of them. Shutter Island is one of my favorite movies ❤

  • @Solsev
    @Solsev 10 місяців тому +457

    I honestly don't know how someone could watch this film and walk away from it thinking he had truly regressed. It's expertly acted, and the expressions subtle, but the wording itself is so on the nose, I almost wish the line about monsters and heroes wasn't in there.

    • @juu2356
      @juu2356 9 місяців тому +19

      Exactly this. Leonardo is such an outstanding actor and also the others in that scene and movie were doing an amazing job.

    • @eddiedantes7732
      @eddiedantes7732 7 місяців тому +47

      I like the final line. It really drives home the complexity of his past. It's not just that he killed his wife. It's that, apparently, to which the movie alludes, he ignored his wife's own mental illness... which led to the death of his children and his rage then leads to his killing his wife, a mentally ill woman. As much as we want to side with Teddy / Andrew, he is indeed very violent, so violent that he has killed and would have killed many other innocent people had the props been real weapons. All this is to paint a subtle realization for the viewer that his past is far more complex than just the killing of his wife, and, the final line, for me, indicates this cryptic conclusion.

    • @Centrioless
      @Centrioless 3 місяці тому

      So you thought he didnt regress despite in the entire movie, he lived in his delusion? He's also had similar tests before the movie, yet he's always remained delusional

    • @enokcolney
      @enokcolney 3 місяці тому

      I would like to believe that he acted that way in the end because he wanted to investigate more and acted insane so that he wouldn't have to leave the island yet..😂Its possible too ya know

    • @TitanFall2Dev
      @TitanFall2Dev 2 місяці тому

      @@eddiedantes7732he didn’t kill the guard

  • @mrcead
    @mrcead 2 роки тому +4152

    That last part hit hard. He knew but played along and chose to forget it all, asked "chuck" for mercy with what's basically an assisted suicide without having to explicitly say so. This movie effed me up

    • @liislive529
      @liislive529 Рік тому +85

      that’s interesting I love how the movie built it up with Dicaprio great acting to where at the beginning you think he can’t help it but as the movie progresses he shows he knows more and more than you think by the end even the bald guy knew he knew by the end

    • @cuzmcc
      @cuzmcc Рік тому +3

      lol 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @LADYBOY1988
      @LADYBOY1988 Рік тому +15

      Hit you hard 🤣🤣🤣 you melon it's a film hits you hard 😂😂😂 ma homie stop putting comments on UA-cam 🤣🤣🤣

    • @miichelle22
      @miichelle22 Рік тому +3

      @@cuzmcc k. Kkk k k k. Ok.

    • @ccva780
      @ccva780 Рік тому +7

      @@LADYBOY1988 loool right? Mfckr so melodramatic 🤣🤣🤣

  • @tilarium2
    @tilarium2 2 роки тому +3292

    I never thought he regressed back into the fantasy. It's was that line about living as a monster or dying as a good man that shows it. He considers himself a monster for what he did and he doesn't want to live like that. He sees the lobotomy as a death of himself, a way to escape the pain of what he did.

    • @Mostly_Crazy
      @Mostly_Crazy 2 роки тому

      Yeah well he died a monster anyway because by hiding the truth he needlessly sentenced many more like him to be lobotomized instead of getting the help they need.

    • @prophez23
      @prophez23 Рік тому +49

      Exactly

    • @IamRyanBui
      @IamRyanBui Рік тому +22

      not really..but he can still die as a good man without living as a monster that "they" made him out to be becUse deep down inside..he knew that there was no escaping it..if everyone is in on it...

    • @robertcooper457
      @robertcooper457 Рік тому +122

      Also, as mentioned, how easily he just walks off with the guards, the whole scene is calm and clean as well as the fact that Dr Cheen calls him Teddy and there is no reaction. That last one is mainly what makes me think he never regressed back.

    • @AZ_actual_voter
      @AZ_actual_voter Рік тому +162

      The movie leaves no question about this: he chose the lobotomy over having to live with the knowledge of what happened to his family and his part in it.

  • @michaelblair7141
    @michaelblair7141 Рік тому +1562

    I am definitely of the opinion that he chose to go through with the lobotomy, but wanted to also reassure Dr. Sheehan that it had indeed worked. It was like a final goodbye and a thank you all in one. Great breakdown!

    • @bunk95
      @bunk95 Рік тому +4

      How do you know he got harmed in ways that are marketed with lobotomy?
      Who’s gonna act like those made to be thought of as human are lobotomized?

    • @ridiak3637
      @ridiak3637 Рік тому +75

      ⁠@@bunk95What does this even mean?

    • @DisobeyZOG
      @DisobeyZOG 11 місяців тому

      @@bunk95huh?

    • @FreddyBoBeddy
      @FreddyBoBeddy 10 місяців тому +22

      ​@@ridiak3637We may never know. I read it three times, and have no idea what point they were trying to make.

    • @gabagool_ovahere
      @gabagool_ovahere 10 місяців тому

      ​@@bunk95this comment is a lobotomy

  • @CLxJames
    @CLxJames 11 місяців тому +19

    3:32 - upon my first rewatch, I had thought the ill-fitting clothes was more of a "you're trying to be someone you arent, you don't quite fit into the role" but your idea works too

  • @amiramir-qg7xv
    @amiramir-qg7xv 5 місяців тому +18

    this was a very thorough analysis but there’s one detail no one mentions about this movie which is how when “teddy” and “chuck” exist the hospital and head to the lighthouse, chuck tells teddy he found files on andrew laeddis in the archives and he gives the paper to teddy and he probably intended that he will read it and figure out the truth a little sooner, teddy didn’t wanna look at the report or find out anything.

    • @_aWiseMan
      @_aWiseMan Місяць тому +1

      If you actually look at the paper it's different. So it may have been more of a way of trying to get him from accidentally falling off the cliffs. But it didn't work and he went to find a guard to come get him. That's why they were looking for him after. Another weird thing is. He had the paper still. But just never read it? He could have compared it to the one they gave him after and tried using it to say they made a fake file to try and make him insane. But he just didn't

  • @Jack.Ashford
    @Jack.Ashford Рік тому +2146

    Another little detail you didn’t mention is that in the ending when Andrew gets up to go to his lobotomy, Dr. Sheehan calls him Teddy and he has no reaction, which shows that he has left his fake identity behind.

    • @thejunktownsheriffkilliand4800
      @thejunktownsheriffkilliand4800 Рік тому +165

      Always fascinated me that even after those ending hints that he's been "cured" and is aware of the reality but just plays the delusion again nobody in there catches up to it. Sheehan could have easily gotten the clue

    • @gustymaat7011
      @gustymaat7011 Рік тому +25

      Or realized that he was drugged to change his mynd and it worked.... funk

    • @ainenicainte
      @ainenicainte Рік тому +67

      OR Sheehan forgot himself and called him by his real name. I think this is last clue that he was right all along

    • @alxexp
      @alxexp Рік тому +19

      @@ainenicaintenah ur wrong

    • @the-anti-theist
      @the-anti-theist Рік тому +6

      It would be more believable if there were just 2 shackles, but instead there are multiple shackles this means it could just be a boat storage of the shackles which means Teddy is the real deal cop not an inmate.

  • @MarkSashegyi
    @MarkSashegyi Рік тому +1591

    What really sucks is that the treatment did work, but because Andrew didn’t want to live with the pain it appears as if it failed, and likely set back any new approaches to psychotherapy over lobotomies-which was Dr. Cawley’s main motivation throughout the film.
    “What should be seen as a last resort, is quickly becoming a first response. Drug them up and lock them away.”

    • @bunk95
      @bunk95 Рік тому

      Psychotherapy and lobotomies are fictional. Fiction is used to market things outside of fiction of course.

    • @LordAlderaan
      @LordAlderaan Рік тому +46

      Yeah, this was what went through my head too. Can't blame him though.

    • @acab3146
      @acab3146 11 місяців тому

      Yup, the same, and it pisses me off, honestly xD Just because Andy was a pussy all the doctor's work became a waste and also his reputation suffered, pretty selfish

    • @Se7Tripz
      @Se7Tripz 11 місяців тому +6

      Fantastic point

    • @draconiansquid1570
      @draconiansquid1570 9 місяців тому +15

      Which apparently was a movie thing and not in the book if im not mistaken which kimda makes the whole thing different from the novel which is wild such a small thing can change everything

  • @AndrewStonerock
    @AndrewStonerock 2 роки тому +908

    He doesn't see the lady drinking water either. It really helps hammer home how much his mind is trying to protect him from water.

    • @F76CC
      @F76CC Рік тому +9

      I think that’s something that’s well known at this point though so he didn’t bother mentioning it.

    • @RKyle-wx6rp
      @RKyle-wx6rp Рік тому +48

      Oh my goodness, I noticed the weird cutaway, but did not even think about it until now

    • @liamfrr
      @liamfrr Рік тому +33

      i thought that invisible glass of water was an editing mistake at first

    • @toptiertech7291
      @toptiertech7291 Рік тому +3

      @@F76CChe didn’t mention it 😂😂

    • @F76CC
      @F76CC Рік тому +3

      @@toptiertech7291 yeah. That’s what I said….

  • @danacor1117
    @danacor1117 Рік тому +26

    I watched this movie in the theaters and that line "...to live as a monster or die as a good man..." always stuck with me. I took it as he came to grips with what he had done, but couldn't live with himself and wanted to let someone else know.

    • @_aWiseMan
      @_aWiseMan Місяць тому +2

      It is a way of saying goodbye to "chuck" and letting him know it worked but he simply can't live with himself. It's sad that it ended that way. But at least they now knew they didn't have to lobotomize everyone.

  • @ikapatino3214
    @ikapatino3214 Рік тому +80

    When you finally understand what is happening I felt so bad for Kingsleys character .He really wanted to help Andrew and was so sad when he had to labotomize him.

    • @_aWiseMan
      @_aWiseMan Місяць тому +4

      Yeah the sheer defeat on both of their faces at the end when he "regresses" is sad. All this effort to try and help him and in the end it did nothing. (Of course it's revealed after with his last line to "chuck" and him clearly ignoring when he was called teddy that he is still sane. And just choosing to go out as a "good" man instead of living with the pain and guilt.)

    • @justmeagain7
      @justmeagain7 2 дні тому

      He was selfish​, as he decided to pretend that the treatment didn't work when it actually did.
      Other patiens could be treated and healed with the same treatment, if he didn't had pretended that it didn't work.
      @_aWiseMan

  • @kuldeepnayak8341
    @kuldeepnayak8341 Рік тому +800

    The best thing about the movie is that even though you doubt this all being in his mind. You just don't want to believe it and you start to actually feel connected and follow Teddy's journey which makes the ending more exciting. As both Teddy and audience knew it all along just they don't want to accept it and live in his fantasy. The movie was never never about discovering the truth it was always about denying it.

    • @erenyeager7967
      @erenyeager7967 8 місяців тому +22

      1 year late comment but agreed
      When i saw the movie first time i thought they were just trying to fool Teddy until the end

    • @cormacmacaongusa
      @cormacmacaongusa 7 місяців тому +1

      The audience didn't know all along lol

    • @NEOSOBASED
      @NEOSOBASED 5 місяців тому +1

      So so real, I really couldn't accept it and I wrote my friend after I first watched this movie, and I told him that it's sooo weird to see HIM as the one with problems, so weird, and I was denying it in chat too lol, I said I wish the movie ended like it should have without the Twist, I don't really mean it but it was very weird to me, really is the best twist I've ever seen and had, amazing movie

  • @jasonbriggs2559
    @jasonbriggs2559 Рік тому +720

    This is one of my favorite movies of all time! I have watched it multiple times and see something new with every viewing. Another detail at the very beginning is you can see the shackles hanging in the room on the boat where Teddy (DiCaprio) wakes up. This is an immediate clue that he had been a prisoner and was just waking up on the boat after having been most likely sedated and dressed for the role he was about to play. At some point, his clothes had to have been changed, and the fake gun belt put on him. This is also evident by him being disoriented when he is standing at the sink, and he tells himself to pull it together. I always asked myself HOW could he not have already met Chuck when the boat left the dock? Well, that was the reason...he was sedated. When he finally woke up, the role play began...

    • @coltondenham9533
      @coltondenham9533 Рік тому +19

      I thought it was odd when I saw the shackles this explanation would make semse

    • @lakshmisree5878
      @lakshmisree5878 Рік тому

      p

    • @Zeta9966
      @Zeta9966 Рік тому +11

      I mean there are all these odd things about him, but you could also chalk it all up to him having PTSD from the war trauma he experienced. There are so many misdirections thrown at us throughout the movie. The woman looking at Chuck could be that she's scared to say anything because she's afraid of the caretakers.

    • @Jaymen_
      @Jaymen_ Рік тому +4

      @@Zeta9966if you watched the film for the first time you would think this. But the ending would tell you the truth and watching it more times you could see more Easter eggs. Like the shackles on the wall.

    • @juu2356
      @juu2356 9 місяців тому

      PLUS the sedation could also be one reason for his sickness in the beginning. when I had been in narcosis I always felt very sick afterwards...

  • @LonnieBray
    @LonnieBray 2 роки тому +1735

    I wish you pointed out that at the end, chuck called out "Teddy" and Andrew did not respond. Meaning he was no longer in the illusion. Amazing review nonetheless 👏🏾 🙌🏾

    • @fiknbeyo
      @fiknbeyo Рік тому +79

      Nice point out! I never peeped that until now.

    • @manishabharti2538
      @manishabharti2538 Рік тому +13

      I was about to mention this 😅

    • @juu2356
      @juu2356 9 місяців тому +11

      you can notice that right after he said "which is worse, to live as a monster or to die as a hero". there for like one second, he looks at Dr Sheehan very straight. this is the moment, where you can tell that he still was aware of and accepted that he is andrew.

    • @AdmiringObserverR
      @AdmiringObserverR 9 місяців тому +4

      but was that just intentional at that point? He deliberately did not answer because it did not matter.

    • @biereney1636
      @biereney1636 7 місяців тому

      THIS

  • @p_nk7279
    @p_nk7279 Рік тому +12

    He understands at the end, he lets the doctor know he understands, and he makes the choice.
    Phenomenal film and acting.
    We love Leo!

  • @leesamaha9493
    @leesamaha9493 Рік тому +41

    In the final scene he smoked the cigarette given to him. If he was stuck in the illusion he would carry on believing the cigarettes had been drugged as he stated earlier while delusional. This demonstrates he was in the real world at the end. He knew the cigarette wasn't drugged.

  • @devindenman526
    @devindenman526 Рік тому +790

    I think I read somewhere that the creepy woman doing the "shush" motion did it because she didn't have any knowledge of the experiment they were doing with Laeddis and because of her loose grip on reality she thought that he was in disguise and fooling the staff and guards. The shush was her basically saying, "Oh, you're wearing a disguise! Well, mum's the word, I won't tell."

    • @SignalFlowers
      @SignalFlowers Рік тому +29

      This is exactly it.

    • @Happypotato917
      @Happypotato917 Рік тому +6

      @@SignalFlowersso the movie was an experiment? Am done 😂

    • @Spaced7
      @Spaced7 Рік тому +35

      Love this! I always assumed she knew the truth and that the whole institute was 'briefed' one way or another. She 'shushes' herself to keep quiet.

    • @danielciocilteu3545
      @danielciocilteu3545 Рік тому +8

      Or maybe, just maybe, Andrew was a very vocal patient who talked a lot of nonsense in the ward so many other patients found him too nosy and so she motioned him to shut up, one more time. XD

    • @bunk95
      @bunk95 Рік тому +2

      The video said she was [lobotomized]. Theres other torture to make one behave in similar ways.

  • @evanfromheaven9981
    @evanfromheaven9981 Рік тому +201

    To me, what makes Andrew reverting back into the fantasy impossible at the end is exactly what you stated, Teddy Daniels would not have willingly walked over to the guards and workers and accepted the lobotomy. Everything we saw about Teddy in the movie shows his distrust of the staff and doctors.
    I have to respect Andrew’s decision, I would not want to remember such a traumatic event either and I wouldn’t have to worry about harming anyone anymore. Great film and great video!

    • @sadi5713
      @sadi5713 2 місяці тому

      I would rather the guards shoot me than getting a lobotomy it is truly terrifying.

  • @imarxb
    @imarxb 2 роки тому +216

    Watching this film broke my heart at the time. Martin Scorsese is a great director.

    • @jennyanydots2389
      @jennyanydots2389 2 роки тому

      He also directs animal porn on the DL, not a lot of people's are aware of that but it's 100% fact son.

  • @MDelorean
    @MDelorean 11 місяців тому +21

    The storm and fire never being real never crossed my mind, but it very much makes sense. Great analysis! I agree that he choses to be lobotomized because he doesn't want to live as a monster. What a masterpiece.

    • @mylesmarkson1686
      @mylesmarkson1686 8 місяців тому +1

      This is a cafeteria-movie... You pick and choose what parts you want to believe and what parts you don't. That's the beauty of a story told through the eyes of an unreliable narrator.

    • @_aWiseMan
      @_aWiseMan Місяць тому +2

      ​@@mylesmarkson1686the Storm was, definitely real tho. The fact that they were talking about it when he wasn't there. And all the preparations and damage was real too. They probably just lied to him to try and convince him further. Which while messed up (it's phycology there's always a little moral issues with the treatment for mentally unwell people) is better than lobotomizing him. It is also a really good way to make it more hard to tell if they are gaslighting him into going crazy.

    • @mylesmarkson1686
      @mylesmarkson1686 Місяць тому +1

      @@_aWiseMan Well-said!

  • @RhondaPorter-y1p
    @RhondaPorter-y1p Рік тому +4

    At the end he knows the truth. That’s why he makes the comment about dying as a good man. This is one of my favorite movies and I have watched it multiple times. I have never noticed that the patient does not have a glass of water in her hand when she takes a drink! Several other things I never noticed too! I must go home and watch it again tonight!!! Great video!

  • @dragonsgreedgaming13
    @dragonsgreedgaming13 Рік тому +143

    Brilliantly done. Watching this movie a second time is like watching a whole new film, as nearly every scene takes on a new meaning when you look at it from the perspective of everyone else who knows that Teddy is actually an inmate the whole time.

  • @alilarhdiri9666
    @alilarhdiri9666 Рік тому +156

    Leo should have at least 5 Oscars by now. His movies are masterpieces

    • @JohnS-il1dr
      @JohnS-il1dr 6 місяців тому +4

      Paul Newman should have won 6 but got one for a crappy movie about pool. It was hollywoods apology for not giving him one earlier

    • @samkingsway6564
      @samkingsway6564 4 місяці тому +1

      absolutely 100% agree!!!

  • @Artofficial1986
    @Artofficial1986 Рік тому +214

    I really love this movie. I mostly love the setting of an inescapable mysterious island. The added danger of the storms and possibly violent patients made the whole movie feel really spooky and atmospheric.

    • @fuckit2424
      @fuckit2424 Рік тому +3

      Spot on as far as that vibe the movie gave from beginning to the very end man 💯

  • @MrElhecka
    @MrElhecka Рік тому +17

    Thanks for the great video, I missed this before. One thing I still don't understand - I've probably just missed something and hopefully someone can help with this: when Teddy and Chuck are in the graveyard, Teddy tells Chuck that he has been researching the clinic and is convinced that they are conducting horrible experiments, and that he wants to expose the whole thing. Chuck responds that perhaps the clinic already knows what Teddy is doing, and has actually lured both of them to the island as a trap. If Chuck is really Teddy/Andrew's doctor, why would he say that? He seems to be confirming or at least reinforcing Teddy's delusion and paranoia by saying it, and decreasing the chance that the role-play will work.

    • @mylesmarkson1686
      @mylesmarkson1686 8 місяців тому +8

      Great point, and I don't think that anyone has ever come up with a good answer. The only answer I ever got was "Well, due the horrible storm, they had to hurry his delusions along to get the role-play done faster". Are you kidding me? It's scenes like this one (with no half-decent explanations) that make me think that Teddy really was a US marshal and that the doctors are brainwashing him into thinking he's a patient. And so they're constantly filling his head with paranoia and violence to drive him crazy and eventually worthy enough to become the 67th patient at Ashecliffe.

    • @VladAndreiRusu
      @VladAndreiRusu 3 місяці тому +4

      So it all starts with 'Chuck' asking Ted "So what are you here to do, Ted?" and he responds "I'm here to gather the evidence, go back to the mainland, and blow the lid off on this whole thing".
      Rewatching the picture, something seems off about Chuck, it felt like he instantly switched to a different persona before going into that whole rant. I might be going mad myself, but even the visuals around Chuck felt a bit off, which might be intentional, to show Dr. Sheehan coming out, instead of 'Chuck'.
      In the earlier scene, before arriving at the crypt where the dialogue is happening, Chuck and Ted are almost hit by a big branch, endangering their lives. I think this made Chuck either angry or consider pulling the plug on the whole thing. So he asks Ted 'What are you here to do, Ted?' and hopes for a glimmer of truth, a glimmer of hope, but all he gets is psychosis.
      Chuck then blows a fuse, drops the act, and switches to a fed-up Dr. Sheehan who aggressively charges (verbally, of course) at Ted. You can see the effects on Ted as he should be excited that his partner is supporting his theory, but when faced with the aggressive assault, he can only yelp "bullshit, bullshit" and retreat into his shell until saved by the doors opening and light shining through, maybe signifying Dr. Cawley intervening between them to stop a haywire Dr. Sheehan.
      The last thing Chuck said before going off is: 'What if they staged this whole thing to have you here? To have US here?' I think he didn't want to be there anymore, he felt that Dr. Cawley was putting him up to this task that was actually becoming dangerous, and he was ready to pull the plug and leave Ted live in the delusion until Cawley intervened and snapped him out of his burst of anger. His next lines after the door opens "It's an island, boss! They're always going to find us" are spoken in a completely different tone, and instead of supporting the delusion as before maybe by reinforcing that 'they are watched and everything is indeed planned', he's finding sound reasoning for what's happening, similar to what he's been doing earlier and after, in a more familiar 'Chuck' tone, showing that the act is back on track and Chuck has reverted to his role.
      Also, notice how the last 'Chuck' question was 'what are YOU here to do, Ted' (not 'what are WE here to do, Ted'), signifying that this is all a 'party' for Ted. While at the end of the rant 'Chuck' says 'to have US here', meaning that in this part, he was as much of a pawn as Ted is for the whole movie, and being put in a position of danger made him angry, making him slip out of the role for a second.
      At least, that's how I looked at it while watching the movie a second time. Now knowing the twist at the end and the role each one was playing, you notice all the small details that this video shows. ( I think there are even more that could be interpreted, but these are the most 'in your face' ). Frankly, I think the movie is quite frightening... it seemed like Ted had no awareness or control over his delusions and hallucinations. I am scared that my brain can trick my senses into feeling sensations that are not real, and go as far as creating a completely new identity and new memories. This being said, I despise Andrew for allowing Cawley and Sheehan to think they failed in the end. After all that effort they were able to achieve success, only for Andrew to not be able to cope with reality and fake his regression, pretty much committing 'suicide by doctor'. He took the coward's way out and he could have had the dignity to do it by his own hand, which would have allowed the people who undertook a huge effort to make him better a semblance of a win, at least from a medical standpoint. Instead, he proved the 'Nazi' and the Violent Warden right by showing that the transorbital lobotomy was indeed the only solution. Who knows how many patients that could have been cured has he condemned to this cruel fate by his actions in the final scene.
      To Andrew I say, all monsters can become good men, but you lost your chances to die as one when you abandoned reality, instead of facing it. There is always something you can do to make amends. Repent and dedicate your life to doing good to those in need, there is no greater salvation and repentance for your sins.

    • @seal5low
      @seal5low 2 місяці тому +3

      I've just rewatched that scene and my interpretation is as such: Andrew starts doubling down on his delusions, sinking deeper into his paranoia (taking about government grants and fictional meetings at prisons with Noyce) and Dr Sheehan see this. Obviously all of Sheehan and Crawleys work rests on this treatment method working for Andrew. When Sheehan sees in this scene that Andrew isnt showing any signs of coming out of his delusions (evidened by the look of concern that develops on his face) he plays along for a bit, I believe to see how far the delusion goes, before he realises he needs to try and counter Andrews thinking to try and pull him back to being closer to the reality they're hopign he'll find. Sheehan starts to point out how ridiculous some of Andrews ideas are ("they've got an electrified fence around a sceptic facility" "where's one shred of evidence she ever existed?") As he does this Andrew starts to get a bit more anxious, grabs between hs eyes as if struggling to cope with being faced with the logic. Sheehan continues to point out illogical points in Andrews delusion (a faked escape, 'they were looking in to you') and Andrew does become softer andstart to question it "There's no way they could have known I'd be assigned to this case, no way". To me I see a patient resisting all reality and sinking into delusions and a frustrated doctor trying desperately to get him to acknoweldge how illogical it all is and bring him back to reality to save the credibility of his methods.
      Extra point here from this scene - 'Teddy' says Noyce was sentenced to "Life in Detam (sp?) prison" and that he 'found' him and spoke to him. This heavily implies that 'Teddy' spoke to Noyce at Detam Prison. As soon as we meet Noyce in Ashecliffe it's a massive clue that 'Teddy's' memories are all ficticious as clearly Noyce was never at Detam (as he's at Ashecliff) meaning Teddy could never have spoken to him there.

    • @justingifford4425
      @justingifford4425 2 місяці тому

      The whole exercise is reinforcing his delusions, but that is the point. The doctor explains this at the end. They are letting him go through with it so that he can find that the conspiracy isn’t real. He never actually finds any evidence of these experiments and torture being done.

  • @ChipHaven_Dan
    @ChipHaven_Dan Рік тому +4

    very good video and breakdown...this movie is soo good...so much work has been put into this...and DiCaprio is amazing

  • @Sooch900
    @Sooch900 Рік тому +347

    I always thought that he was “cured” and then willingly accepted the lobotomy by acting like he regressed. Excellent break down, I missed quite a few things that you brought up in the video!

    • @moneloxakshay1054
      @moneloxakshay1054 Рік тому +44

      he was cured, he didn't regress. he accepted the lobotomy because he didn't wanna carry on living with the guilt. check the last line he says to Shaheen

    • @middleclass-014
      @middleclass-014 Рік тому +6

      @@moneloxakshay1054thats what i thought after watching it… it gives me chills when i starting to understand “die as a good man”

    • @juu2356
      @juu2356 9 місяців тому

      plus check the look he gave Dr Sheehan right after he had said this @@moneloxakshay1054

    • @AdmiringObserverR
      @AdmiringObserverR 9 місяців тому +1

      Either existence he has the choice to live as is a shitty one, so I can believe this.

    • @Phantom_Anthem
      @Phantom_Anthem 9 місяців тому

      @@moneloxakshay1054that’s what he literally said

  • @FormerGovernmentHuman
    @FormerGovernmentHuman Рік тому +207

    Great job.
    My only nitpick which I can’t remember for sure, doesn’t Shaen call him Teddy as he walks away and he doesn’t respond? Slightly signaling he’s done playing the role.

  • @tomfurlong5384
    @tomfurlong5384 2 роки тому +221

    I only watched this movie once about 10 years ago and it's always stuck with me. After watching this Breakdown I'm going to watch it again later. These breakdowns of classic movies are brilliant.

    • @sentientcardboarddumpster7900
      @sentientcardboarddumpster7900 2 роки тому +3

      Same here. I really liked it back then too. I understood the twist at the end, it's always stuck with me. I never bothered to go back and watch again, but honestly I'm not the best at picking up this kind of depth on movies. If I watch a movie I enjoy I usually come to UA-cam and watch a breakdown of it like this. I appreciate this trend, and this channel name being Heavy Spoilers is perfect haha. This one's a W for the algo

    • @caledunsmore
      @caledunsmore 9 місяців тому

      Yeah it's actually better the second time knowing the twist and noticing all the clues

  • @Ironman829
    @Ironman829 10 місяців тому +8

    You forgot to mention Nice is Rorschach from The Watchmen...

  • @Bbeaucha88
    @Bbeaucha88 9 місяців тому +2

    I heard Penn (from Penn and Teller) once describe the "perfect" conclusion to a routine as being "A complete surprise but utterly inevitable". That quote stuck with me because it also describes the perfect conclusion to a story. The end being totally novel but when you think about everything you have seen so far it makes so much sense that you can't believe you didn't see it coming. Shutter Island and Fight Club are perfect examples of this.

  • @victorianicholson5220
    @victorianicholson5220 Рік тому +128

    Wow! This is a fantastic breakdown!
    I think another important element of the weather is the fact that when he is in the past, similar to water, is that the camp is snowing, displaying his PTSD. It shows those memories are frozen and stuck in his mind rather than the fluidity of water which he can change. I think once he starts working things out, that’s when he sees his family frozen, showing the PTSD has them stuck in his mind no matter how many times he tries to change the memory.
    I think he definitely chooses to have the lobotomy as he realizes the memories are always there no matter how many times they try to use the role play. He recognizes that he doesn’t want to forget again, unless it’s forever.

  • @desember1467
    @desember1467 Рік тому +44

    I found this video and ran straight to Netflix to see Shutter island, only so that I could come back to this video. I found the movie okay at first, but with this video for context, I realize that Shutter island is simply a masterpiece of a movie. You make great videos man. Thank you for your hard work.

  • @vishmaster09
    @vishmaster09 4 місяці тому +6

    Fun fact, in the novel the names of the 3 children are: Rachel, Edward & Daniel. Which is why he has Andrew takes the name Edward Daniels

  • @danielgalan2321
    @danielgalan2321 Місяць тому +4

    The lady in the garden does the shush gesture because they’ve told her to not reveal the experiment to Teddy. She is mimicking what has been instructed to her.

  • @markweaver8529
    @markweaver8529 Рік тому +59

    I've seen this film a few times,but the way you broke it down made me realise what an absolute masterpiece the film is.
    From the writing,to the acting to the directing.
    An astonishing film.
    Also the little nuggets I've never seen in the film before,like the woman he interviewed in the canteen that was drinking out an imaginary cup.

  • @damianstarks3338
    @damianstarks3338 2 роки тому +712

    Can’t thank you enough for this breakdown this movie is definitely a masterpiece.

    • @ExploringInterests
      @ExploringInterests 2 роки тому +2

      You mean the book was a master piece...

    • @kingdoge8237
      @kingdoge8237 Рік тому

      check out ninth configuration

    • @Cole444Train
      @Cole444Train Рік тому +7

      @@ExploringInterests Not sure why both can't be true.

    • @ExploringInterests
      @ExploringInterests Рік тому

      @@Cole444Train Sorry but I'm going to be one of those guys, you'd know if you read it.

    • @Cole444Train
      @Cole444Train Рік тому +8

      @@ExploringInterests aaaaaaand you're being one of those guys.

  • @kylecarter1599
    @kylecarter1599 2 роки тому +175

    I haven't watched this since it hit DVD, but you got me wanting to watch it again. Great breakdown!

  • @ramtigerfalcon8387
    @ramtigerfalcon8387 10 місяців тому +2

    You've got my attention friend.
    3 of my all time favorite( Shutter island , Arrival, Dune) movies I've just listened to you break down and also present idea/ interpretations that I hadn't already come up with.
    Let's keep it going friend.
    Subscribed.

    • @MalikaRodriguez-n5e
      @MalikaRodriguez-n5e Місяць тому

      I haven’t seen dune. But shutter island and arrival are my top two of all time !!! great minds think alike

  • @immwk
    @immwk 10 місяців тому +2

    Great breakdown mate. Going to rewatch Shutter Island soon

  • @ReelRejects
    @ReelRejects 2 роки тому +930

    I ADORE THIS BREAKDOWN! I’ve watched it twice mate

    • @heavyspoilers
      @heavyspoilers  2 роки тому +44

      Internet high five to the crew

    • @jennyanydots2389
      @jennyanydots2389 2 роки тому +1

      Which time did you pound off to it?

    • @liislive529
      @liislive529 Рік тому +3

      I watched it 5 times not gonna lie I love this movie I watched this movie 1000 times

    • @agc8355
      @agc8355 Рік тому

      . . . love ? o k 4 me thO a bit of actual dialogue since "great scene"
      y'et he just babbles on & on a n d ON ~ adore huh well - am out reject

    • @UC4AQUgrQ9EwVIGoF0w7xHXg
      @UC4AQUgrQ9EwVIGoF0w7xHXg Рік тому

      ​@@jennyanydots2389 all of it

  • @TheSmokeweeda
    @TheSmokeweeda Рік тому +113

    I love this breakdown. I went back and watched the entire movie again, and I saw all the clues which makes me appreciate this movie even more. At the 17:47 minute mark, you can see Dr Sheehan and an orderly look at each other and smirk while Teddy is interrogating the staff. Amazing! These are the things you wouldn’t notice unless you watched the movie a second time. What a masterpiece!

    • @yashjhunjhunwala6381
      @yashjhunjhunwala6381 Рік тому +1

      great observation

    • @Yabadabadoo29
      @Yabadabadoo29 Рік тому +1

      Yeah. I watched it a third time and couldn't help but marvel at their reactions. They were playing along the whole time. They just let him. 😅

    • @IagoMartinsJ
      @IagoMartinsJ Рік тому +12

      And how does no one talk about just after the nurse "define unusual, this is a mental institution, marshal, for the criminally insane, usual isn't a big part of our day" and then EVERYONE LAUGHS because they are literally doing a very UNUSUAL thing, by this "play pretend"

    • @horizoniki
      @horizoniki Рік тому +1

      All these little details we don’t notice but our subconscious does.
      That’s why this movie will live in our heads rent free forever.

    • @GodWorksOut
      @GodWorksOut 9 місяців тому +2

      Now watch it again believing that he really is Teddy and it’s a totally different movie. You’ll notice a ton more Easter eggs then.

  • @vudusid8717
    @vudusid8717 Рік тому +69

    Another interesting fact that you missed is that in the book Andrew messed up his wives weekly medication due to being drunk, and this is what led her to have a psychotic episode and kill the kids. Dunno why they left this detail out in the film but it really adds to why Andrew felt so much guilt. It was basically his drinking problem that caused his kids death. This kinda reminds me of The Shining. Jacks drinking problem is what made him susceptible to the spirits infultrating his mind in the book, a drinking problem he got from his father, and his father from his father etc.

    • @RoseanneSeason7
      @RoseanneSeason7 4 місяці тому +5

      Great point

    • @M23js
      @M23js Місяць тому +2

      A lot of amazing books get details omitted for film. And it sucks cuz sometimes it's necessary for the back plot of the character. Like in perks of being a wallflower, Charlie's past was so vague you never understand him in the movie. The book though.. you understand and FEEL for the kid. Same here, important backstory loses emotion for his self hatred. Sad.

    • @greggemus1696
      @greggemus1696 14 днів тому +1

      I never read the book and just rewatched this movie an hour ago and that’s such a crazy point you just made about him messing up the medication all the time because he was drunk. When he’s offered a drink, he asks for “soda and ice”. God damn I love this movie!

  • @sams9744
    @sams9744 Рік тому +1

    I've tried to watch this film and it just scared me too much to continue. It's on the freeview channel tonight but yet again the first scene of them going through the grounds and seeing the weird looking balding woman with a scar across her neck. Never understood the plot as i could watch the film. So it's easier and I'm grateful for being able to watch the YT shorts. It does remind me of Titanic for some reason, only in reverse. He survived, she didn't... I don't think I'll ever be able to watch the full movie, tbh. Even more grateful for this video... Great job!

  • @darklly
    @darklly 11 місяців тому +3

    “Which one be worse, To live as a monster or to die as a good man?”
    I think this line sums the ending. Andrew accepted the truth, however he is wondering if living the rest of his life as a monster (Andrew) is worse than dying as a good man (Teddy). His answer was shown that he didn’t want to give on teddy and decided to play this role for the last time and die as being Edward Daniels

  • @bradley163
    @bradley163 2 роки тому +190

    Damn. This is an expert level breakdown. My favorite Scorcese film of the past 15 years by a wide margin.

    • @pnut3844able
      @pnut3844able Рік тому +5

      The only scorcese movie I like, bc its not another dumb mob movie

    • @thefearofg0ds758
      @thefearofg0ds758 Рік тому +3

      @@pnut3844able you should check out The Aviator, Wolf of Wall Street, and Silence if you haven't already. Scorcese took like over a decade long break away from making Mob movies after The Departed(though The Aviator came out before). The Aviator sort of has a few of the same vibes as Shutter Island as it deals with mental illness.

    • @brothermouzone1307
      @brothermouzone1307 Рік тому +6

      ​@@pnut3844able Are you calling Goodfellas, The Departed and Casino dumb mob movies?

    • @brothermouzone1307
      @brothermouzone1307 Рік тому +1

      Wide margin? Not arguing with your opinion, The Departed and Wolf of Wall Street by a wide margin, how does Shutter Island rate a wide margin?
      Just curious.🤔

    • @expert-editz
      @expert-editz Рік тому +6

      ​@@brothermouzone1307 the departed is one of the best movies of all time. Not sure what the other guy is waffling about.

  • @lenasamzelius5530
    @lenasamzelius5530 Рік тому +76

    We should mention that the book Shutter Island by Dennis Lehane is very well written and incredibly interesting!
    Thank you for the video!

  • @junioredits25
    @junioredits25 Рік тому +86

    This movie hit me hard, never expected that kind of an ending at all. I actually couldn’t accept the fact that all the investigation that Andrew did was just his illusion and the doctors and nurses were playing all along.

  • @brianelza9807
    @brianelza9807 Місяць тому +1

    Thank you! This is one of my all time favorite movies. Love it!!!

  • @joshuabrodsky1857
    @joshuabrodsky1857 Рік тому +32

    I remember watching this movie for the first time and at the end still being on the side of Dicaprio's character, thinking they were setting him up. I was so convinced that Teddy was actually a cop, I just glossed over the big reveal.

    • @sydneysparksjoy
      @sydneysparksjoy 8 місяців тому +3

      Same here! I thought Ashcliffe had won, and they’d silenced Teddy for discovering their cruel experiments.
      But then I watched the film more times. After this video-just as Scorsese intended-the truth is so much more heartbreaking than what the audience and Teddy is led to believe. 🥺

  • @KevinColt
    @KevinColt Рік тому +189

    Every Leo Dicarpio film is a masterpiece, lets just admit it.

    • @aerpx
      @aerpx Рік тому +8

      easy to admit, my favorite actor by a mile.

    • @charlieross4674
      @charlieross4674 11 місяців тому +10

      While i enjoyed Critters 3 as a young boy, im not sure anyone would call it a masterpiece!

    • @jandoor2068
      @jandoor2068 8 місяців тому

      Wasn't he in Titanic? That movie sucked donkey balls.

    • @erenyeager7967
      @erenyeager7967 8 місяців тому +2

      Hé has some flaw movies but not much. More good movies of him than bad thats for sure

    • @JerkVegas86
      @JerkVegas86 7 місяців тому

      Boogie Nights Sucked 😂

  • @hardcoreclassicenjoyer
    @hardcoreclassicenjoyer Рік тому +24

    Hey mate, had to pause ~8 mins in to write a comment. This is unbelievably good commentary. I know it's standard symbolism being explained, but it's all concise, accurate and engaging. Thanks for making this. A cut above many good movie analyses

  • @AaronSilvious
    @AaronSilvious Рік тому +1

    Very nice. A lot of points I missed after watching it many times.

  • @TheRocketNasty
    @TheRocketNasty 9 місяців тому +1

    man ive watched the movie a few times over the years and always forget everything except the fact that he is the patient, but still never understand anything else in the movie i dont know how you nail all of these little points... it makes the movie so much better knowing these things

  • @universaldragonninja
    @universaldragonninja Рік тому +47

    When he finds Rachel in the cave at first she doesn’t have any shoes but then before he leaves she’s wearing shoes. They mentioned that every patient only gets two pairs of shoes, so not only should she be barefoot but she shouldn’t have any shoes to wear. That whole scene with Teddy in the cave could have be an allegory to Platos cave.

    • @justinwinningham4892
      @justinwinningham4892 6 місяців тому

      Was this real or in his head?

    • @JohnS-il1dr
      @JohnS-il1dr 6 місяців тому +1

      ​@@justinwinningham4892she was real and she was tasked to confirming his theory about shutter island.

    • @kaarthuisplus
      @kaarthuisplus 3 місяці тому +3

      @@JohnS-il1dr She wasn't real. He made her up. Everything she said about "once you're declared insane, no one will believe you" is exactly the same thing "Teddy" said to "his partner chuck" in the cemetery. There were no rats either. In fact, I'm pretty sure there was no storm.

    • @thecensoredmuscle563
      @thecensoredmuscle563 2 місяці тому

      ​@kaarthuisplus she was real, woke him up, started a fire etc.

  • @cdamiengtz.
    @cdamiengtz. 2 роки тому +32

    A masterful movie , always great to watch each time & as for the ending.....The Dr. "Chuck" calls him Teddy after walking off, he doesn't acknowledge him at all because that's not his name, it's Andrew. When you hear another person's name you usually wouldnt look cause it's not your name being called

  • @amandahugginkiss55
    @amandahugginkiss55 Рік тому +40

    Dennis Lehane is an amazing author and he deserves more credit than the director, imo. This film inspired me to check him out which led me to reading his entire library. He's great and Shutter Island is my favorite. Great video, great content, thanks!

    • @MsArtemis64
      @MsArtemis64 Рік тому +2

      Shutter Island and Mystic River are two of my favorite books, and they were both made into great movies!

    • @monochromenight8943
      @monochromenight8943 Рік тому

      Authors can't get more credit than the director when it comes tor a film. If that were the case it would be the same for many screenplay writers. Orĺ hell, editors, the often usung heroes.

    • @w3bbi3
      @w3bbi3 11 місяців тому +1

      The book is so much better I laughed the first time I tried to watch shutter Island

  • @lenni9669
    @lenni9669 10 місяців тому +3

    One of my most favorite films of all time. Oppenheimer was the only movie that equaled it in greatness for me personally

  • @Burrell19
    @Burrell19 11 місяців тому +8

    It still blows my mind that the real twist is that Teddy was really who he really was and not Andrew, and that the people on the island were experimenting on him to see if they can convince someone to be someone they aren't. I can't wait for the sequel to come out where Teddy exposes everything.

    • @mylesmarkson1686
      @mylesmarkson1686 8 місяців тому +2

      I like this take, especially for the fact that the doctors didn't do a single thing the whole movie that would actually help him, like the ridiculous idea of playing along with one's delusions in the first place!

  • @chaseorosco9017
    @chaseorosco9017 Рік тому +30

    One thing you didn’t mention was Chuck’s reaction when he snapped at the male patient he was interviewing. He makes an attempt to restrain Teddy while looking over to the nurses. He also attempts to restrain Teddy when he snaps at Dr. Jeremiah.

  • @jimmyolsenblues
    @jimmyolsenblues 2 роки тому +51

    I agree that he knew at the end. he was self aware and chose his own fate.

  • @sleeplesshead602
    @sleeplesshead602 Рік тому +8

    I can't watch this only once. This movie blew my mind and also saddening me because of the fact at the end. I would like to watch it again this weekend. The details are amazing. Great job explaining the details!

  • @smoothALOE
    @smoothALOE 11 місяців тому +1

    I think I need to watch this movie again soon. I saw it in theaters and never went back to it, but this video makes me wanna revisit it. I absolutely love Martin Scorsese. This one is different from most of his other films.

  • @Oldsoul759
    @Oldsoul759 5 місяців тому +1

    I read the book before I got to watch the film a months after.
    Reading the book gave me chills and stops as the plot twists and turns.
    When I watched the film, I got the same feelings.
    Kudos to Dennis Lehane, Martin Scorsese, Leo and the writers. They stayed true to the material. One of the best books and film adaptation.

  • @jamescrawford1534
    @jamescrawford1534 2 роки тому +53

    I always thought (in retrospect) the patient who shushed is parroting what everyone is saying, but doesn't realise he is subject of the secret

  • @timo4698
    @timo4698 2 роки тому +38

    This film is genuinely amazing for the storytelling. Trying to help the person accept their own guilt and consequence is a noble idea but unfortunately he cannot live with his past , so he delved into fantasy. A very real component of ptsd like behaviour.

    • @tombryant52jumpscoach
      @tombryant52jumpscoach Рік тому +2

      Accept his guilt but, more importantly, accept reality. But the reality is so horrible that he cannot permanently live with it, and to protect himself from the endless horror, he resets back to a fantasy that he can live with but is unacceptable to the institution because that makes him highly violent and dangerous.

    • @neglectfulsausage7689
      @neglectfulsausage7689 Рік тому

      I judge him guilt free. He did what needed t o be done.

  • @MrEloliver
    @MrEloliver Рік тому +59

    unlike you, i didnt guess the plot twist from the start, and that made the ending 100000x better. The ending was amazing and the way andrew came to grips with the reality of what happened but still chooses to live the rest of his days oblivious of the trauma he's faced is kinda heartbreaking looking back at it.

    • @turbo8628
      @turbo8628 5 місяців тому +2

      I envy you for two reasons;
      1) being modest enough to admit that you didn't see it coming.
      2) experiencing the twist in its fullest.
      If you haven't seen it, i think you may appreciate the prestige by christopher nolan.

    • @souju_13
      @souju_13 5 місяців тому +1

      lol yeah, i stumbled upon this movie because i heard it had a great plot twist to it so while watching the whole thing i would come up with my own theories, which all turned out to be wrong.

    • @katymvt
      @katymvt 3 місяці тому +1

      I figured out Chuck was Dr. Sheehan during the patient interview, but had no idea about Teddy until the end.

  • @Sjoerd9
    @Sjoerd9 Рік тому +1

    17:16 I think the laughter you can hear there is coming from somewhere further in the building, not from the guard. There were scary laughing sounds in the background throughout this part.

  • @andrewleonard8408
    @andrewleonard8408 10 місяців тому +1

    I've been taking my Aunt and Cousin through Cinema classics the past few months. 1 classic a week.
    We've watched LOTR, many 007 movies, and now were just starting in on the thrillers with Shutter Island.
    I cant wait for their mind to be blown like mine was the first time I saw this movie.

  • @GERntleMAN
    @GERntleMAN Рік тому +44

    I only watched it twice, but remember that I thought in the end Andrew chose to not live as a monster and made the conscious decision for the lobotomy in a more subtle and calm way, speaking in the language they gave him by orchestrating this elaborate therapy. He honoured the effort that way. Seemed always rather clear to me

    • @charlieross4674
      @charlieross4674 11 місяців тому +2

      I always thought I was pretty smart by getting that last part when he said that, but I didn't get anything else shown in this breakdown but there are many many comments about the "die as a monster/live as a good man" line, which shows me that that was the most obvious, telegraphed hint in the movie lol.

  • @cavemanzach9475
    @cavemanzach9475 Рік тому +14

    I actually really agree with your intro. I guessed the twist from the trailer and wrote the movie off as cliche without ever having watched it. However, when I did I was floored by everything about it. The twist is only one facet of the film, with all of the character development and movement from scene to scene actually being really, really good.

  • @maxfuzzovski8833
    @maxfuzzovski8833 Рік тому +23

    One of my favourite movies of all time. Story, actors, ending, pure perfection. This masterpiece is very underrated. You must watch it more than once to fully understand perception of story.

  • @ragincajun993
    @ragincajun993 2 місяці тому

    Well done! Excellent work. I mean you even found an extra botch the scene 🎬! 👏

  • @HishamHossain
    @HishamHossain Рік тому +1

    The best explanation video, so well researcher and put together!

  • @thegamerboneless2864
    @thegamerboneless2864 Рік тому +5

    Even at the end when marked called him teddy he didn’t respond or look back. This was a brilliant movie in the fact that you can spot new things each time you watch it. Look at the background characters and dialogue when theirs groups.

  • @dylanstevely1443
    @dylanstevely1443 Рік тому +8

    I originally watched this movie a few years ago and had no clue what was actually going on . But then I watched it a second time a year later and realized most of the things you said in your video. But after watching your video it shed a lot of light on the little details that I’ve missed

  • @T-BoneStone
    @T-BoneStone 2 роки тому +15

    🐐🐐🐐this one is also rent free for me as well
    I’ve personally always felt that he chose to go back in to the fantasy. He didn’t want to face the truth of what he did.
    I never caught the cup of water not being there! What a find!!
    Really appreciate this breakdown as a whole and you for taking the time to make it! Thanks Paul!! Keep ‘em coming

  • @rakgadim.mohlala1324
    @rakgadim.mohlala1324 5 місяців тому +3

    When his partner hands the guards the gun in the begging I was confused about why chuck was carrying his gun the wrong way and why he looked like he had never handled a gun in his whole life. Teddy looked confused and everyone else looked nervous and uncomfortable

  • @thebossy1
    @thebossy1 10 місяців тому

    I've always been obsessed with this movie everything down to the amazing score. I don't know how many times I've watched it. Thanks

  • @AjaxOutlaw
    @AjaxOutlaw Рік тому +7

    Yea. When chuck realized what he was actually doing the look Ruffalo gives says it all. Great performances all around

  • @immortalxd6190
    @immortalxd6190 Рік тому +13

    This is by far the best breakdown I came across. Thank you so much for explaining it so simply and brilliantly ❤️

  • @brothermouzone1307
    @brothermouzone1307 Рік тому +5

    My first time watching this movie was the Superbowl after party 2023.
    I too figured out in the opening sequence, something was off with Leo's character. The Easter eggs and your in depth analysis; never would have made the connection.
    I'm surprised you did not reference/similarities the water and the color red to the movie The Sixth Sense.
    Excellent job!

  • @jakobwing9660
    @jakobwing9660 Рік тому +1

    Great Video great Film, just watched it and wasn't even sure what I should believe after the ending.

  • @Polymathically
    @Polymathically Рік тому +18

    A few additional things worth mentioning. When Dr. Cawley is first introduced, pay attention to how he speaks about how the mentally ill used to be treated. Before he says "drowned", he quickly glances at Teddy and slightly changes his tone. While this further underscores Dr. Cawley's distaste for what passed as mental health care in the past, it's also his way of testing Andrew. Dr. Cawley knows that Andrew's children were drowned, and thus even the mention of drowning might be enough to trigger him. When Teddy is interviewing the staff and forces one of them to admit he breached protocol to use the restroom, Chuck can be seen in the background glancing and nodding at one of orderlies, non-verbally assuring him that Teddy is stable. Also, the guard that lets them into Ward C wasn't the one laughing; if you turn on the closed captions, it says that an unseen inmate was laughing. Anyway, great video!

  • @mattgriffinreal
    @mattgriffinreal 2 роки тому +48

    Great review, Paul. This is one of my favorite films. You shared some things that I never noticed before, and it makes me want to watch the film again for the n-th time. This was definitely during the prime era of Leonardo DiCaprio (after Titanic,) and I don't think that Leo could have chosen a better script (other than The Great Gatsby.)

    • @Cole444Train
      @Cole444Train Рік тому

      what do you mean Leo choosing the script?

  • @stevemammen5595
    @stevemammen5595 2 роки тому +6

    I love the fact that you dug deep through this movie. I had to watch it a few times to get more out of it. Great film!

  • @Kajkes
    @Kajkes 11 місяців тому +5

    The real tragic part is that the method worked and could have saved numerous others, but the doctors will treat it as a failure...

  • @joffles6516
    @joffles6516 8 місяців тому +1

    2:31 there’s also two water cup outlines on the table despite that being the first time she set the cup down

  • @JusNoBS420
    @JusNoBS420 Рік тому +9

    Love how you have been great films that some of your younger viewers might not have seen before but should 😊

  • @mikecasey3055
    @mikecasey3055 Рік тому +4

    Man that review made it way better, can’t wait to watch it again!

  • @Yourhighnessnona
    @Yourhighnessnona Рік тому +84

    Can someone tell me why he was considered so violent? He shot his wife because she killed his kids. He also regretted it right after. And why was everyone scared of him?

    • @saramack99
      @saramack99 Рік тому +52

      Wondering that too. His wife is way worse than he is. I don’t understand why he’s the most dangerous patient

    • @stefthorman8548
      @stefthorman8548 Рік тому

      he's an mentally unstable war hero@@saramack99

    • @mylesmarkson1686
      @mylesmarkson1686 8 місяців тому +34

      And also, why were people (Dr. Naehring & The Warden) telling him throughout the movie that violence is a good thing? It's like they wanted him to be more violent, not cure him from being so violent.

    • @Frank2489
      @Frank2489 7 місяців тому +73

      If I’m not mistaking, the reason for him being considered extremely violent and dangerous is because of his military training and his detective mind. He’s able to concoct highly elaborated and detailed conspiracy theories in his mind and act them out from a point of view of a hero putting in danger the other patients in doing so. At least that’s what I got from it.

    • @wizarddog
      @wizarddog 6 місяців тому +29

      When he would go into his delusions, he would violently assault patients and staff. In addition, because he had a keen mind, he could bypass most of their counter measures like locked doors and evade security. He was intelligent and resourceful but his inability to deal with the tragedy regarding his family left him in his delusional state to protect himself.

  • @tommalaga248
    @tommalaga248 3 місяці тому

    the flame and water symbolisations are great i didnt notice them watching the movie the first time

  • @4444sha
    @4444sha 6 місяців тому +1

    Thanks. Now I understood the missing links clearly 😃

  • @blizzart9191
    @blizzart9191 Рік тому +10

    Something important you didn't mention in the ending talk scene between Teddy and Chuck: look at the curious and surprised facial gesture of Chuck when Teddy brings the quote with the monster vs. good man, telling his psychiatrist subtly that he's" cured" now, and going forward now by choice, to "die"as a good man at least, instead of going on with being a living hell for all around him. The ending isn't open, imo., if you watch and analyse very carefully, because on the question of "what's now, boss/ teddy?"Chuck asks him back to hear some kind of future plans or visions. Instead he shows his old behaviours in a very open way with the devastating paranoia phrase, that was build around on throughout the whole film openly( representing fire, the delusion), which then gets contradicted again seemingly by his deeper going ending quote( representing the water element, the reality), building up the whole contradictory theme into this last two phrases basically, leading into a clear, developed conclusion now. I know, hard to understand maybe, but let's assume he would be still in his typical mental trauma phase: he won't go up by himself to take the walk to his "electricity chair" without still trying dumb shit again or defend himself, because as we learnt through the film: he's a man of"power" with strong defense mechanisms. But the way he now talks and walks calmly, rather than hasty and offensively, shows his progression on a psychological level and that he understood to do the "society" there a favor and dying as a good man, than being the living monster, that he otherwise would be. Also he knows in his mind, that Chuck got the message there and will respect him for that decision. He died in the battle as good, honorable man so to speak.

  • @patrickbutler7352
    @patrickbutler7352 2 роки тому +8

    Thanks for the breakdown Paul!! Love your videos mate

    • @heavyspoilers
      @heavyspoilers  2 роки тому +1

      Cheers mate. Hope you have a good weekend and thanks for the kind words.