US director Martin Scorsese and US actor Leonardo DiCaprio
pose at the photo call for the film 'Shutter Island' at the
International Film Festival Berlinale in Berlin, Germany,
Saturday, February 13, 2010. Photo by AP.
Martin Scorsese and Leonardo DiCaprio celebrated nearly a
decade working together as they presented the director's latest
film,
Shutter Island, at the Berlin film festival
Saturday.
Based on a novel by Mystic River author Dennis
Lehane, the 1950s psychological thriller is the fourth film
pairing Scorsese with DiCaprio, after Gangs of New
York (2002), The Aviator (2004) and the
Oscar-winning The Departed (2006).
"Each experience has been unique. It's been a progression,
now it's been 10 years," DiCaprio, 35, said at a news
conference with the director as their new film premiered out
of competition in Berlin.
The two heaped praise on one another, with DiCaprio saying
"the biggest gift that he's given me is an appreciation for
cinema and cinema's history, and an entirely new perspective
on my view of this art form."
"I grew up on his work, really," he said. "As a younger
actor, you'd be a fool not to jump at the opportunity to work
with somebody who I consider and many consider the definitive
director of our time."
The 67-year-old director, for his part, said working with
DiCaprio has lead to a special relationship.
"Trust is really the key" and was built up over time,
Scorsese said, adding that they "really reached a kind of
comradeship in The Departed."
"I see him as a young man developing as a wonderful actor,"
he said. "I'm very happy to be around when this is happening
with somebody with such extraordinary talent, to be able to
focus that and perfect it."
Shutter Island also stars Ben Kingsley, Patricia
Clarkson, Mark Ruffalo and Michelle Williams. It is set in
1954, a time of Cold War paranoia, when Scorsese himself was
growing up.
It follows the investigation into the disappearance of a
murderess from a mental institution on an island. DiCaprio
plays a U.S. Marshal in Boston looking for the woman, and his
involvement in the case starts to make him question his own
sanity.
"This was a complex jigsaw puzzle of emotional back stories
and dream sequences and truth and fiction," DiCaprio said.
"It was challenging and fulfilling."
Scorsese said he was attracted to the material in part
"because it's set in the 50s and because of the tone of fear
and paranoia and secrecy and trauma."
"I grew up during the 50s, I grew up during the Cold War, I
grew up expecting air raids every day," he said. "That's what
we were told."
Scorsese and DiCaprio may not be done collaborating yet.
"We're always talking about different projects," DiCaprio
said. "If I'm lucky enough to work with him, I would consider
it a gift."
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