Shutter Island: Scorsese On Track for Biggest Hit Ever

By: Roger Friedman   //   Saturday March 13, 2010

It’s an amazing story with a happy ending: Martin Scorsese is on track to have his biggest hit ever with “Shutter Island.”

The Hitchockian like saga should finish this weekend with $106 million in domestic box office receipts. Scorsese’s Oscar winning “The Departed” made a total of $132 million in the US.  Right now, “Shutter Island” is Scorsese’s second biggest hit ever in his long and illustrious career.

Everyone scoffed when “Shutter Island” was held out by Paramount from its fall 2009 release. But now the decision seems very wise. Some of the reasoning for the wait was to give Leonardo DiCaprio a chance at a Best Actor nomination and win. For this past season, with Jeff Bridges in the lead and George Clooney very hot in “Up in the Air,” DiCaprio would have struggled. But now he’s got a clear path and an early start.

Ditto Scorsese and the movie. They will wind up in the Winner’s Circle next fall, most definitely.

And no, “Shutter Island” isn’t in 3D, and no one is blue. It’s just good old fashioned movie making, with strong characters, a good plot, and a twist that knocks the audience out.

Meanwhile, Tim Burton’s having his biggest hit in a long time. “Alice in Wonderland” is up to $165 million already, with no end in sight. Will it surpass Burton’s “Batman” from 1989, which finished its run at $251 million? We’ll see. I still think the best Tim Burton movies were the ones that made the least money: “Beetlejuice,” “Big Fish,” and “Edward Scissorhands.”

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Scorsese, DiCaprio to Score Biggest Opening Ever: $37.3 Mil ‘Shutter’ Weekend

By: Roger Friedman   //   Saturday February 20, 2010

125043 shutter island leo ruffalo 341 Scorsese, DiCaprio to Score Biggest Opening Ever: $37.3 Mil Shutter WeekendIt looks like famed director Martin Scorsese and actor Leonardo DiCaprio are having their biggest weekend opening ever.

“Shutter Island,” with the star power of Leonardo DiCaprio, Ben Kingsley, and Mark Ruffalo, is set for a $37.3 million weekend.

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Leonardo DiCaprio Set for Sinatra, But He Won’t Sing

By: Roger Friedman   //   Thursday February 18, 2010

ldicaprio Leonardo DiCaprio Set for Sinatra, But He Wont SingLeonardo DiCaprio is still to set to play Frank Sinatra for Martin Scorsese. But he’s probably not going to sing.

“With those records?” Scorsese asked me, his voice rising, at the premiere last night for his new DiCaprio collaboration, “Shutter Island.” “Frank will do the singing. But we’re waiting for a finished script.”

So while he’s waiting, Scorsese’s next film will likely take a break from DiCaprio. “The Invention of Huge Cabret” is lighter fare for Scorsese, about a 12-year-old boy who lives in Paris and meets famous French silent film director and magician George Méliès.

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Scorsese Still Looking for His Sinatra

By: Roger Friedman   //   Wednesday November 4, 2009

Even though Leonardo DiCaprio has been named as Martin Scorsese’s first choice to play Frank Sinatra, he seems like he’s still looking around.

“When I see the new script soon, and meet with Tina Sinatra, we’ll start to think about it,” Scorsese told me last night. “He has to age from a teenager to his 70s, so we may have to have a few people play him. I don’t know.”

Scorsese also talked to me about his upcoming BBC documentary about George Harrison. “We’ve talked to everyone. We did Paul and Ringo, and Olivia Harrison. She’s the one who gave us the rights for this.” Scorsese has also interviewed Ravi Shankar and most of George’s friends. BBC will air the film in the U.K. but it may have a theatrical release in the U.S., he says.

The reason for Scorsese’s appearance last night was the restoration of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s 1948 masterpiece, “The Red Shoes.” The film has been painstakingly restored and will now have a run at the Film Forum in New York starting Friday. The restoration is amazing, as demonstrated by Thelma Schoonmaker, Powell’s widow, before the screening. Now Scorsese and Schoonmaker will continue to release more Powell films on their crusade to re-establish his and Pressburger’s reputation.

In fact, “The Red Shoes” is mesmerizing. In 1949 it won two Oscars and was nominated for three others including Best Picture. With the Film Foundation’s restoration, you can see why. Powell’s film is epic and so richly textured you wonder how they pulled off such an accomplishment in 1948. Even though most of it was shot on sound stages at London’s Pinewood Studios, the story of a ballet dancer, her producer, and her lover feels real. Every scene is involving. And the production values are startling down to the smallest detail.

“Even the musical scores — the sheets of paper have tape on them,” Scorsese marveled. “You can see they were used scores.” Scorsese told me that the main antagonist, Boris Lermontov (played by Anton Walbrook) has appeared in his own movies over and over. “He’s been a big influence on me,” he said. Scorsese is next going to restore another Powell movie, “The Life and Times of Colonel Blimp,” also starring Walbrook.

And what of “Shutter Island”? Scorsese’s film with DiCaprio was supposed to be released now, but Paramount has pushed it off to February. “It’s something to do with money.” he told me. “But whenever they release, I know they’ll do a good job.” He told me that DiCaprio does his best work yet, “going deeper” than he ever has.

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