âšď¸ Skipped - page is already crawled
| Filter | Status | Condition | Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| HTTP status | PASS | download_http_code = 200 | HTTP 200 |
| Age cutoff | PASS | download_stamp > now() - 6 MONTH | 1.1 months ago |
| History drop | PASS | isNull(history_drop_reason) | No drop reason |
| Spam/ban | PASS | fh_dont_index != 1 AND ml_spam_score = 0 | ml_spam_score=0 |
| Canonical | PASS | meta_canonical IS NULL OR = '' OR = src_unparsed | Not set |
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| URL | https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained |
| Last Crawled | 2026-03-10 03:20:10 (1 month ago) |
| First Indexed | 2021-02-01 10:37:49 (5 years ago) |
| HTTP Status Code | 200 |
| Meta Title | Shutter Island explained - Film Colossus |
| Meta Description | Welcome to our Colossus Movie Guide for Shutter Island. This guide contains everything you need to understand the film. Dive into our detailed library of |
| Meta Canonical | null |
| Boilerpipe Text | Welcome to our Colossus Movie Guide for Shutter Island . This guide contains everything you need to understand the film. Dive into our detailed library of content, covering key aspects of the movie. We encourage your comments to help us create the best possible guide. Thank you! What is Shutter Island about? Shutter Island initially presents itself as a cautionary tale about paranoia relating to government, psychology, and the powers that be. That all changes once you realize that Teddy Daniels really is Andrew Laeddis, has been a psych patient at Ashecliffe for the past 24 months, and is in extreme and aggressive denial about what happened to his wife, Dolores, and their kids. At the end of the movie, right before the lobotomy, Shutter Island reveals its true thesis. This happens when Teddy asks Dr. Sheehan (aka, Chuck), âWhich would be worse? To live as a monster or die as a good man?â That moment is meaningful as itâs a break from the delusional script that Sheehan and Dr. Cawley clearly know very well. Which is why Sheehan reacts with such surprise, saying, âTeddy?â with a questioning tone. This is Shutter Island indicating to the viewer we need to think about who is present in that moment. Teddy or Andrew. Teddy is the delusional and volatile persona created by Laeddis as a defense mechanism to escape the pain of knowing he murdered his wife after she annihilated their kids. Andrew is the smart, decent, good person who canât handle the guilt and pain of knowing what he lost. Once weâre clear that thereâs no sinister mystery, that Teddy wasnât tricked by the people at Ashecliffe to believe heâs Andrew, that the true twist is very simple and sad, we can easily explain the remaining questions. Movie Guide table of contents Cast Edward Daniels/Andrew Laeddis â Leonardo DiCaprio Dolores Chanal â Michelle Williams Chuck Aule/Dr. Sheehan â Mark Ruffalo Dr. Cawley â Ben Kingsley Dr. Naehring â Max von Sydow Deputy Warden â John Carroll Lynch Rachel Solando â Emily Mortimer Rachel in cave â Patricia Clarkson George Noyce â Jackie Earle Haley Based on â Shutter Island by Dennis Lehane Screenplay by â Laeta Kalogridis Directed by â Martin Scorsese Why is the movie called Shutter Island ? Book reference The movie never clarifies this but the novel doesâalmost immediately. Thereâs a prologue then Chapter 1. Chapter 1 opens by talking about Teddyâs father being a fisherman and how when Teddy was a young boy they had gone out to the islands. Teddy saw small, pastel-colored shacks lining the beach of one, a crumbling limestone estate on another. His father pointed out the prison on Deer Island and the stately fort on Georges. On Thompson, the high trees were filled with birds, and their chatter sounded like squalls of hail and glass. Out past them all, the one they called Shutter lay like something tossed from a Spanish galleon. Back then, in the spring of â28, it had been left to itself in a riot of its own vegetation, and the fort that stretched along its highest point was strangled in vines and topped with great clouds of moss. âWhy Shutter?â Teddy asked. His father shrugged. âYou with the questions. Always the questions.â âYeah, but why?â âSome places just get a name and it sticks. Pirates probably.â So the island is actually named Shutter. Definition As to the meaning of the word? You can see how Lehane uses slant dialogue to get around giving an actual definition, opting to leave it vague and somewhat menacing. It loads the place with a sense of unease. So we donât get a clear answer in the story. But. Lehane, as a writer, chose the word for a reason. That means itâs worth diving into some of the etymology and definitions. According to Etymonline , shutter came about in the 1540s and meant âone who shutsâ. The use to describe window-shutters came about in the 1720s. Lastly, the âphotographic sense of âdevice for opening and closing the aperture of a lensâ is from 1862.â Itâs a noun or verb. As in the thing that closes, like over a window or camera lens, or the act of closing. You could say, âAfter a bad year, Larry shuttered his business.â Or âAfter a bad year, the business shuttered.â Fun fact, most garage doors are roller shutters. In terms of Shutter Island , thereâs the poetic connection between the name and the fact that Ashecliffe Hospital is somewhere people end up shut away from society. Once youâre there, youâre there. Closed away from the world. Stuck in this psychiatric facility. Anagram theory Some fan theories have speculated that âshutter islandâ is an anagram for âtruths and liesâ or âtruth/denialsâ. As Jack Pooley points out for WhatCulture, there are a lot of âanagram shenanigansâ in the film. Edward Daniels = Andrew Laeddis. Rachel Solando = Dolores Chanal. That would be quite the coincidence. Of the words in the English language, Lehane chose shutter and island . They just happen to anagram perfectly to âtruth and liesâ. And he does that in a story where a character is lying to himself about the truth. And involves anagrams. Stranger things have happened. But thereâs definitely reason to believe it was intentional. The themes and meaning of Shutter Island Truth and lies: Teddyâs paranoia, guilt, self-loathing Shutter Island is tricky because Teddy is our perspective character. He frames the events of the movie for the viewer. That use of the subjective is what makes Shutter Island so effective and seemingly tricky. We think we should believe him. We want to believe him. About Ashecliffe. About the psychiatrists. About the lighthouse. That heâs a US marshal on a mission. His fantasy deludes us. Weâre not supposed to be smarter than him (at least not during the first viewing). Why? By having us identify with Teddy and see through his POV, it gives us a window into the mania, paranoia, guilt, hallucinations, and self-loathing heâs experiencing. When we find out heâs actually Andrew Laeddis and why heâs at Ashecliffe, itâs brutal. We donât want to believe it. Heck, some viewers still donât believe it. The truth is sad and awful. His poor kids. His poor wife. Poor him. That sense of resistance and doubt all of us feel (or should feel) when Drs. Cawley and Sheehan reveal the truth to Andrew mirrors exactly what Andrewâs feeling. We know itâs probably true, but we donât want it to be. So we look for excuses and reasons to believe the truth is false. This is powerful for multiple reasons. First, for anyone who hasnât experienced significant trauma and grief, Shutter Island provides an opportunity for a vicarious experience, a way to safely journey through those emotions and, hopefully, gain even a brief conceptualization of what it must be like. Second, itâs a reminder to have some compassion for those who have experienced trauma. Their world is a complicated one. You have to imagine most of the people in Ashecliffe have some similar story to Andrew. If they were the main character of a film, maybe weâd sympathize with them. One Flew Over the Cuckooâs Nest explored a similar theme. The idea of sympathy and empathy is funny because Teddy is so cruel to the patients. Early on, Cawley mentions how patients find some of the paintings calming. How does Teddy respond? âScrew their sense of calm.â Later on, Cawley explains the divide between old and new school therapy. The old school prefers surgical intervention, specifically the lobotomyâput an ice pick in the brain, tear out some nerves in the frontal lobe, patients calm downâwhile the new school likes drugs, psychopharmacology. Same effect, different method. Teddy asks Cawley which Cawley prefers. The doctor says something along the lines of âTry and understand, you might just reach them.â In the background, a patient throws a tantrum and needs to be restrained. That prompts Teddy to say, âThese patients, huh? Itâs derisive and condescending. In summation, Teddy lacks any kind of empathy for the mentally ill. Because, someone deep inside himself, he knows heâs one of them. And that self-loathing is manifesting. This happens two other times. One, when interviewing a patient who cut off the face of a young woman. The second in Ward C. The first instance is petty. As the patientâs speaking, Teddy drags a pencil across paper. The sound is consistent and grating. Itâs the kind of thing someone mentally healthy might be able to ignore, despite how annoying it is. But the patient isnât mentally healthy so freaks out. Teddy enjoys causing this. The second instance is violent. After the storm, power is out across the island. Teddy and Chuck sneak off to Ward C and encounter a dangerous patient on the loose. Separated from Chuck, Teddy gets jumped. The guy puts Teddy in a chokehold then takes the time to ramble and rave. Thereâs danger, but how much? The guy cares more about telling Teddy about the hydrogen bomb than he does hurting anyone. In response, Teddy beats the guy down then strangles him, only stopping because Chuck intervenes. Had Chuck not arrived in time⌠We come to find out that Teddy had also assaulted George Noyce, who we see a few minutes later. Itâs been weeks and Noyce still has bruises all over his face. Cut lip. Cut cheek. Itâs brutal. You donât have to be Freud to pick up on the fact Teddy is projecting self-hatred. Heâs a mentally unwell person who refuses to accept the reality of his own mental health so takes his self-loathing out on others. This means that everything he externalizes represents an internalization. With all that in mind, think about Andrew and the choice heâs faced with. Die a man or live as a monster? He truly doesnât believe heâll get better. And also canât stand what heâs become.  What is a monster? The larger meaning of Shutter Island When Andrew talks about being a monster, itâs not meant as a general label for the mentally ill. Rather, itâs the culmination of one of Shutter Islandâs major themes. Think back over the movie. You may recall a lot of conversations about violence. Several times, characters wax philosophical about the ugliness and necessity of violence. Then we have an important juxtaposition between two events in Andrewâs life. Arriving at the liberation of Dachau, the concentration camp, and seeing the inhuman treatment of the Jewish people by the Nazis. And coming home to find his wife in the aftermath of drowning their children. In both cases, Andrew reacts with violence. Murderous violence. At Dachau, he and the other American soldiers lined up the Nazis who had surrendered. Then opened fire. At home, he has a moment of intense sadness with Dolores, who has clearly lost her mind, then shoots her in the stomach, after she asks him to âset me freeâ. Where is the line between good violence and bad violence? Does one even exist? Either way, once youâve crossed into the world of the violent, can you ever find redemption? This seems to be what Shutter Island means by its use of monster . Thatâs why you have Dr. Naehring with his quote about âMen like you are my speciality. Men of violence.â Itâs why you have the Ward C guy ranting about atolls and h-bombs, the result of science wielded by the violent. Itâs why you have the strange scene with the warden as he drives Teddy. Warden: Did you enjoy Godâs latest gift? Teddy: What? W: Godâs gift. The violence. When I came downstairs in my home and I saw that tree in my living room, it reached out for me a divine hand. God loves violence. T: I hadnât noticed. W: Sure you have. [Chuckles]. Why else would there be so much of it? Itâs in us. Itâs what we are. We wage war, we burn sacrifices, and pillage and plunder and tear at the flesh of our brothers. And why? Because God gave us violence to wage in his honor. T: I thought God gave us moral order. W: Thereâs no moral order as pure as this storm. Thereâs no moral order at all. Thereâs just this: can my violence conquer yours? T: Iâm not violent. W: Yes, you are. Youâre as violent as they come. I know this because Iâm as violent as they come. If the constraints of society were lifted and I was all that stood between you and a meal you would crack my skull with a rock and eat my meaty parts. Wouldnât you? Cawley thinks youâre harmless, that you can be controlled, but I know different. T: You donât know me. W: Oh, but I do. T: No, you donât, you donât know me at all. W: Oh, I know you. Weâve known each other for centuries. [Brief pause]. If I was to sink my teeth into your eye right now, would you be able to stop me before I blinded you? T: Give it a try. W: Thatâs the spirit. That scene can feel amazingly out of place. The warden isnât a character who is developed. We see him once before and not again after. You could have just shown the car pick Teddy up and drop him off, cutting the conversation entirely. So why include it? Because itâs thematically relevant. Teddy has, several times, rejected the idea heâs a violent person. He thinks of himself as decent. As an honorable marshal of the United States. but even he canât continue to ignore the evidence to the contrary. Thereâs an anger in him. A rage. And even though he refuses the wardenâs labeling, at the end, you see the switch flip. Teddy meets the final challenge of âwould you be able to stop me before I blinded youâ with an aura of intensity that pleases the warden. Teddy has, finally, stopped his denial. A foreshadow of whatâs to come. Violence is what makes monsters. Not illness. The warden is as much a monster as Teddy. And that kind of gets at one of the scariest parts of Shutter Island : monsters are everywhere. Not just in mental hospitals, asylums, and wards. They can be in positions of power. They can be in government. And what happens when they have time, influence, and resources? This is why the Ward C patient says, âI donât want to leave here, alright? I mean, why would anybody want to? We hear things here, about the outside world. About atolls. About H-bomb tests. Even though this guy is supposed to be âcrazyâ, heâs right. The âoutsideâ world, the world you and I exist in, is as crazy as anything going on in Ashecliffe. Crazier, even. So Shutter Island isnât just getting at the morality and psychologically of the clinically insane. Itâs speculating on the sanity of civilization at large and showing that the divide between the âpatientâ and the âwardenâ is actually very thin. Whether thatâs on the level of individuals or institutions or governments or world powers. The ending of Shutter Island explained Recap Shutter Islandâs ending begins with Teddyâs journey to the lighthouse. In a state of supreme paranoia, convinced that Ashecliffe wants to turn him into a patient to keep him quiet, our hero arrives at the lighthouse, ready to do anything he must to save his partner Chuck and himself. There, Drs. Cawley and Sheehan confront Teddy with the truthâheâs actually Andrew Laeddis and in deep denial about the fact his wife, Dolores, committed filicide then begged Andrew to end her suffering. Filled with anger, guilt, and empathyâhe did. Then went insane himself and fabricated the identity of Edward Daniels. Weâre told that over the last 24 months, Andrew has been, as Teddy, incredibly violent. Often harming other patients, like George Noyce. There have been a few times that Andrew has resurfaced. Except he always reverts. This was a last, radical attempt to convince Andrew of the truth. Otherwise, the Board of Overseers has decided the hospital will conduct a lobotomy. In a moment that shows the subjective nature of the film, Andrew picks up a gun and fires. We hear the concussions. See red splash on the walls. Only for Dr. Cawley to be perfectly okay. The weapon is wood. Fake. It breaks in Andrewâs hands. A final hallucinatory conversation with Dolores leads Andrew to the truth. His real memories unlock. He passes out. When Andrew wakes up, heâs back to himself. In front of the doctors and the warden, he answers a series of questions that prove his mental health. âAfter she tried to kill herself the first time, Dolores told me she had an insect living inside her brain. She could feel it clicking across her skull, just pulling the wires just for fun. She told me that. She told me that, but I didnât listen. I loved her so much, you know.â After a question. âBecause I canât take knowing that Dolores killed our children. And IâŚI killed them âcause I didnât get her help. You know? I killed them.â Cawley states that Andrew has been on a tape. After every breakthrough, he goes back into the Teddy character and the delusions. Saying the same things as if on a script. The hope is that this time the tape has been erased. In the final scene, Andrew and Sheehan talk on the steps of a building. Andrew, very pointedly recites his script as Teddy, mentioning needing to get off the island, and calling Sheehan âChuckâ. Sheehan signals to the doctors that the treatment didnât work. Andrew: Donât worry, partner, theyâre not gonna catch us. Chuck: [Sad] Thatâs right. Weâre too smart for âem. A: Yeah, we are, arenât we? A man approaches with the ice pick used for the lobotomy. Andrew: You know, this place makes me wonder. Chuck: Yeah, whatâs that, boss? A: Which would be worse? To live as a monster or to die as a good man? As Andrew walks to meet the staff, Sheehan stands up and says, âTeddy?â The suspenseful music returns. Then we see the coastline. Itâs sunset. The lighthouse looms. Meaning The twist ending relies on Cawley establishing that Andrew has been on a loop. That he goes through this whole performance as Teddy, wakes up as Andrew, then reverts to Teddy and says the exact same things. This idea of the loop sets up the final conversation. There, it initially seems like Andrew has already reverted. Except you can hear it in his voiceâitâs performative. This isnât the mental illness. Itâs Andrew. Why would he pretend to be Teddy though? Thatâs made clear when he goes off script to ask the question: Which would be worse? To live as a monster or die as a good man? Prior to that question, Dr. Sheehan had been crushed by Teddyâs reversion. But this moment of going off script, this self-awareness, surprises the doctor. He, of course, puts two and two together, which is why, as Andrew walks away, he says, âTeddy?â Itâs not Teddy. Itâs Andrew making a choice. Instead of being a monster kept in an asylum, heâs going to go out as a good man. Thereâs a tragedy to this because what if the treatment worked? Maybe Andrew is better now and could return to the world and start a new life. Instead of seeing if thatâs the case, he would rather go out on his own terms. Because the idea of reverting back to someone else, someone heâs not, is too much to bear. In that way, it doesnât matter if the treatment worked or not. Because even if it had, Andrew would still view himself as a monster. Heâd still be unable to live with what happened. So he makes a choice that protects other people from his outburst but also, in his own way, puts his mind at ease. To make this even more definitiveâthe question wasnât in the novel. Itâs only in the movie. In the novel version of Shutter Island , the opposite happens. Itâs pretty abundant that Andrew regressed. That he resumed thinking he was Teddy. No tricks. No moment of morality. The novel is a tragedy disguised as a psychological thriller. While the movie went with a little more of a silver lining. To be fair, Lehane did an interview with MTV in 2010 and said this: I would say that line, which comes across as a question, he asks it sort of rhetorically. Personally, I think he has a momentary flash. To me, thatâs all it is. Itâs just one moment of sanity mixed in the midst of all the other delusions. When he asks the question, he does it in such a way that, if he were to say it as a statementâŚthen thereâs no solution here but to stop the lobotomy. Because if he shows any sort of self-awareness, then itâs over, they wouldnât want to lobotomize him. My feeling was no, heâs not so conscious he says âOh, Iâm going to decide to pretend to be Laeddis so theyâll finally give me a lobotomy.â That would just be far more s**cidal than I think this character is. I think that in one moment, for half a second sitting there on that island, he remembered who he was and then he asks that question and he quickly sort of lets it go. That was my feeling on that line. While hearing from the author of the source material is important, itâs not the end all be all. This is Scorseseâs version, DiCaprioâs version. Given how they delivered that final scene, it seems like it was more than a momentary flash. But, either way, the result is the same. Andrew made a choice. Thereâs a larger, stranger question here. What is the effect of a lobotomy? NPR has an article about this. One section is called âWhat effect did the ice pick lobotomy have on patients?â The answer: Freeman believed that cutting certain nerves in the brain could eliminate excess emotion and stabilize a personality. Indeed, many people who received the transorbital lobotomy seemed to lose their ability to feel intense emotions, appearing childlike and less prone to worry. But the results were variable, according to Dr. Elliot Valenstein, a neurologist who wrote a book about the history of lobotomies: âSome patients seemed to improve, some became âvegetables,â some appeared unchanged and others died.â In Ken Keseyâs novel One Flew Over the Cuckooâs Nest , McMurphy receives a transorbital lobotomy. As much as Shutter Island implies that Andrew wonât survive the lobotomy, itâs possible he did. More than that, itâs possible that he improved. As curious as that is to think about, this is a situation where the reality of what could happen can interfere with the poetic intention. Because the movie makes such a point that this is the end of Andrew, we should probably assume the lobotomy did not go well. That the result was vegetation or fatality. Why end on the lighthouse? Over the course of Shutter Island , we were told the lighthouse was where all the bad stuff happened, including lobotomies. When Teddy finally broke in, he discovered it was mostly empty. Nothing shocking happened there. It was a normal, practical lighthouse. That means itâs unlikely the lobotomy takes place in the lighthouse. So why show it? Because itâs poetic. As weâve associated that place with the act itself, by showing it as the final scene, after Andrew walked off with the staff for the lobotomy, the lighthouse serves as symbolism for the act itself. Itâs confirmation without the actual, terrible visual of the pick up the nose and in the brain.  There is, however, another deeper layer that no other explanation or analysis has ever discussed. A lighthouse is supposed to serve as a beacon in darkness for those who are out at sea. Itâs artificial light. False fire. Given how much Shutter Island focused on fire and water, thereâs something deeply poetic in the image of a darkened lighthouse on the verge of the sea. That represents Andrew in the aftermath of the lobotomy. Empty. Darkened. Capable of light but not flame. Itâs a fate in-between the extremes of water and fireâthe two most important motifs in Shutter Island . Important motifs in Shutter Island Water and fire and Rachel Solando Rachel Solando is incredibly important to understanding Shutter Island . Initially, the film presents Rachel Solando as a patient who went missing, returns, then thinks Teddy is her husband. We eventually find out this was a nurse pretending as part of Cawleyâs extreme treatment. Later, though, Teddy ends up in a seaside cave and finds the ârealâ Rachel Solando. Itâs easy to chalk her up to a figment of Teddyâs poor, strained psyche. Heâs already been having visions of Dolores and full on conversations with her in very cinematic fever dreams. We know heâs readily capable of hallucinations. The whole reason he discovers the cave is because he thinks he sees Chuckâs body on some rocks at the bottom of a cliff. The difference with Rachel is that all the previous hallucinations were momentary. They last less than a minute. Like the pistol is real. Then itâs fake. Dolores appears in places she couldnât possibly be, like inside Noyceâs cell. Rachel, though, is there when Teddy enters the cave and there when he wakes up the next morning. Maybe sheâs a figment. If so, itâs a figment way more subtle than Dolores standing unnoticed in the middle of a psych ward in a bright yellow sundress. Itâs for one reason and one reason only that we see Rachel wake Teddy upâto make us believe sheâs real. Itâs the only thing in Shutter Island thatâs up for debate. Especially when you go back through the movie a second or third time. You pick up a lot of little things that confirm Teddyâs a patient and everyone is in on Cawleyâs performance. Itâs why the Deputy Warden is so on edge around Teddy. Itâs why none of the guards actually search for Rachel when Teddyâs out looking for her. Itâs why the one patient waves at Teddy when he first steps on the groundsâthey know each other. Itâs why Naehring is such a jerk: he doesnât believe Cawleyâs treatment will work. Itâs why multiple people look at Chuck when they mention Dr. Sheehan. Yet Rachel-in-the-cave is the one detail that isnât telegraphed. Itâs the only detail thatâs seemingly left open for interpretation. Again, itâs easy to declare it a figment. Her name is an anagram of Dolores Chanal, Andrewâs wife. Just like Edward Daniels is an anagram of Andrew Laeddis. And it seems Andrew is at least somewhat aware of what he says and does as Teddy. Otherwise he wouldnât be able to say the normal Teddy things to Sheehan at the end. Youâd think if psychiatrist-on-the-run Rachel was real, weâd have some acknowledgement of it. Like Andrew admitting his illness but telling Cawley that Rachel didnât feel part of it. But thereâs nothing like that. Which means we can assume Andrew accepts Cawleyâs declaration that Rachel was a hallucination. That makes sense. He had been off his meds and not handling it particularly well. Especially after the Ward C confrontation, the Dolores hallucination, and Chuckâs body on the rocks. Seeing Rachel would, narratively, fall into the â rule of 3 â (not to be mistaken with the movieâs rule of 4) that states things should happen in groups of three. Rachel would be the climax in this string of active imagingings. And because Teddy is alone and weâre isolated in his perspective, itâs easy to say Rachelâs presented more believably to the viewer because Teddy has no one to challenge his perception. Itâs that subjective perspective impacting the way the viewer sees events. This is a Martin Scorsese movie, after all, so leaning into the nuance of cinematic language isnât out of the question. With all that said, it would be fitting if Rachel were real. As it stops the movie from being solely one-dimensional. As in, if Rachel is a hallucination then Andrew is the problem and Ashecliffe is pretty innocent. Being one-dimensional is not a bad thing or an impossible thing. Not everything has to be Donnie Darko or Fight Club or Mulholland Drive . For the most part, Scorsese has been a straightforward filmmaker. His movies have twists and turns in terms of what happens and how (like The Departed ), but they never leave you guessing. As opposed to Christopher Nolan with Memento or The Prestige or Inception . So there is an argument to be made that Rachel being real adds an important dimensionality to the story. And that her speech about âonce youâre declared insane, then anything you do is called part of that insanityâreasonable protests are denial, valid fears [are] paranoiaâ supports this by showing that not everything an insane person believes and experiences is false. That there can be truth in madness. It just gets dismissed. That argument is reinforced by Cawley having a script for everything else Teddy says but being surprised about the woman in the cave. His response is, âYour delusions are more severe than I thought.â Not: âYou always bring her up.â As much as that theory may appeal to some people, and as much as Rachelâs points about government experiments, MK Ultra, and the creation of âghostsâ fits the thematics of Shutter Island , it would be wild for her to actually be named Rachel Solando. That anyone would have a name thatâs an exact anagram of Andrewâs wife? Thatâs hard to believe. Of course, thatâs more believable if you buy into the theory that Edward was tricked and was never a patient. But you shouldnât buy into that theory. So is there an answer about Rachel? Thankfully, yes. Water and fire and Rachel Solando part 2 You may notice that water is ever-present in Shutter Island . And that fire appears a lot, too. Remember, water and fire are poetically considered opposites. Given that the movie is based on a dichotomy between Teddy and Andrew, the water/fire dynamic should read as a purposeful contrast thatâs part of the core tension between Teddy and Andrew. That connection is made pretty explicit. In Teddyâs (made up) memory, the tragedy occurred in fire. Someone burned down their apartment when Dolores was inside. In reality? The tragedy involved water. We even have that dream where Dolores is soaking wet but ash falls all around her and Teddy. Dolores even turns to ash. Then Andrew wakes up with water leaking on him. Fire is heavily present in most of Teddyâs dreams and versions of events. Meaning that we should associate fire, in any form, with fiction. And water with reality. When you keep these motifs in mind when re-watching, Shutter Island takes on a whole new layer of depth. The storm becomes symbolic. Chuck lighting Teddyâs cigarettes is symbolic (as Chuck is fueling the delusion). Teddy approaching Noyceâs cell in the near total darkness of Ward C and lightning match after matchâthatâs symbolic. Those matches going out is perfect, as Noyce is the first person to tell Teddy the truth rather than keeping up the performance. âBut Teddy saw Chuckâs body on the rocks. It was swept away by the tide. That was a hallucination involving water.â Great point. But Chuck was a lie, right? He was just a character played by Sheehan. So the body on the rocks, swept away by the tide, only reinforces the symbolism of water representing truth, as we never actually see Chuck again. The next time the character appears is in the lighthouse, as Dr. Sheehan. With all that in mind, letâs return to the scene with Rachel. The two of them are in a cave. Huddled aroundâŚa fire. Given what we know of the intentionality of the symbolism and motifs, we canât ignore the fire and what that insinuates. Especially given the fact Teddy was just trying to find Chuckâs body, on the rocks, at the edge of the water. That he would seek refuge from the water by sitting next to the fire is the embodiment of the whole Andrew and Teddy dynamic. Whenever he gets too close to reality, he finds comfort in delusion. And this is the big one. The conspiracy thatâs all-encompassing and goes right to the very top of the U.S. government. âRachelâ feeds into every fear and paranoia and delusion Teddy has. This is just another match heâs lit to keep the fiction going. Which is what makes that final shot of the lighthouse so powerful. Questions and answers about Shutter Island Who is George Noyce? The short answer is that George Noyce was just another patient who Teddy happened to beat up. Thatâs it. The longer answer has to do with Andrewâs denial. Andrew was in such tremendous denial about what happened to his family that he created an entire personality to protect himself from ever thinking about it. That was Teddy. It seems Teddy reacted with extreme violence whenever someone challenged his delusion. We see moments of this at the end, in the lighthouse. That also explains the wardenâs speech to Teddy about violence and why the guards and everyone else were so on edge. Noyce happened to call Teddy by his real name. That caused an attack. It seems Noyce is kept in Ward C specifically because of the tension between the two of them and Cawley doesnât want to risk Noyce throwing a wrench into the illusion. Did Andrew really liberate Dachau in World War II and take part in the reprisals? It seems Andrew may have served in the military. But so much of what we learn about him as Teddy is fiction. Itâs likely that the Dachau backstory and reprisals are nothing more than his way of fictionalizing what happened with Dolores and the kids and the way in which Andrew took her life in a mixture of mercy and payback. That is the most straightforward interpretation. The more dramatic and poetic interpretation would be that yes, Dachau did happen, the reprisals happened, and thatâs why Andrew responded how he did to Dolores. The combination of being part of that larger horrible thing and the more personal horrible thing is what caused him to break so badly. |
| Markdown | 
[Film ColossusUnderstand Movies](https://filmcolossus.com/)
- [Movies Explained](https://filmcolossus.com/movies/)
- [How to Watch a Film](https://filmcolossus.com/how-to-watch-a-movie/)
- [Movie Club](https://filmcolossus.com/movie-club/)
- [Podcast](https://filmcolossus.com/podcast/)
- [About us](https://filmcolossus.com/about/)
[Film ColossusUnderstand Movies](https://filmcolossus.com/)
[Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/FilmColossus/ "Facebook")
[Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/filmcolossus/?hl=en "Instagram")
[Linkedin](https://www.linkedin.com/company/film-colossus "Linkedin")
[Patreon](https://www.patreon.com/filmcolossus "Patreon")
[Pinterest](https://www.pinterest.com/FilmColossus "Pinterest")
[Reddit](https://www.reddit.com/r/filmcolossus/ "Reddit")
[Spotify](https://open.spotify.com/show/3LyB1eHGPTePlkGUFy8aN6 "Spotify")
[TikTok](https://www.tiktok.com/@filmcolossus "TikTok")
[Twitter](https://twitter.com/filmcolossus "Twitter")
- [Movies Explained](https://filmcolossus.com/movies/)
- [How to Watch a Film](https://filmcolossus.com/how-to-watch-a-movie/)
- [Movie Club](https://filmcolossus.com/movie-club/)
- [Podcast](https://filmcolossus.com/podcast/)
- [About us](https://filmcolossus.com/about/)
More
# Shutter Island explained
By [Chris](https://filmcolossus.com/author/chris/)
on
January 17, 2024
\|
2247
views
and
[15](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#comments)
comments

### Table of Contents
- [What is Shutter Island about?](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#what-is-shutter-island-about)
- [Movie Guide table of contents](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#movie-guide-table-of-contents)
- [Cast](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#cast)
- [Why is the movie called Shutter Island?](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#why-is-the-movie-called-shutter-island)
- [Book reference](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#book-reference)
- [Definition](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#definition)
- [Anagram theory](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#anagram-theory)
- [The themes and meaning of Shutter Island](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#the-themes-and-meaning-of-shutter-island)
- [Truth and lies: Teddyâs paranoia, guilt, self-loathing](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#truth-and-lies-teddy-s-paranoia-guilt-self-loathing)
- [What is a monster? The larger meaning of Shutter Island](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#what-is-a-monster-the-larger-meaning-of-shutter-island)
- [The ending of Shutter Island explained](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#the-ending-of-shutter-island-explained)
- [Recap](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#recap)
- [Meaning](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#meaning)
- [Why end on the lighthouse?](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#why-end-on-the-lighthouse)
- [Important motifs in Shutter Island](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#important-motifs-in-shutter-island)
- [Water and fire and Rachel Solando](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#water-and-fire-and-rachel-solando)
- [Water and fire and Rachel Solando part 2](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#water-and-fire-and-rachel-solando-part-2)
- [Questions and answers about Shutter Island](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#questions-and-answers-about-shutter-island)
- [Who is George Noyce?](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#who-is-george-noyce)
- [Did Andrew really liberate Dachau in World War II and take part in the reprisals?](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#did-andrew-really-liberate-dachau-in-world-war-ii-and-take-part-in-the-reprisals)
Welcome to our Colossus Movie Guide for *Shutter Island*. This guide contains everything you need to understand the film. Dive into our detailed library of content, covering key aspects of the movie. We encourage your comments to help us create the best possible guide. Thank you\!
## What is *Shutter Island* about?
*Shutter Island* initially presents itself as a cautionary tale about paranoia relating to government, psychology, and the powers that be. That all changes once you realize that Teddy Daniels really is Andrew Laeddis, has been a psych patient at Ashecliffe for the past 24 months, and is in extreme and aggressive denial about what happened to his wife, Dolores, and their kids. At the end of the movie, right before the lobotomy, *Shutter Island* reveals its true thesis. This happens when Teddy asks Dr. Sheehan (aka, Chuck), âWhich would be worse? To live as a monster or die as a good man?â
That moment is meaningful as itâs a break from the delusional script that Sheehan and Dr. Cawley clearly know very well. Which is why Sheehan reacts with such surprise, saying, âTeddy?â with a questioning tone. This is *Shutter Island* indicating to the viewer we need to think about who is present in that moment. Teddy or Andrew.
Teddy is the delusional and volatile persona created by Laeddis as a defense mechanism to escape the pain of knowing he murdered his wife after she annihilated their kids. Andrew is the smart, decent, good person who canât handle the guilt and pain of knowing what he lost.
Once weâre clear that thereâs no sinister mystery, that Teddy wasnât tricked by the people at Ashecliffe to believe heâs Andrew, that the true twist is very simple and sad, we can easily explain the remaining questions.
## Movie Guide table of contents
## Cast
- Edward Daniels/Andrew Laeddis â Leonardo DiCaprio
- Dolores Chanal â Michelle Williams
- Chuck Aule/Dr. Sheehan â Mark Ruffalo
- Dr. Cawley â Ben Kingsley
- Dr. Naehring â Max von Sydow
- Deputy Warden â John Carroll Lynch
- Rachel Solando â Emily Mortimer
- Rachel in cave â Patricia Clarkson
- George Noyce â Jackie Earle Haley
- Based on â *Shutter Island* by Dennis Lehane
- Screenplay by â Laeta Kalogridis
- Directed by â Martin Scorsese
## Why is the movie called *Shutter Island*?
### Book reference
The movie never clarifies this but the novel doesâalmost immediately. Thereâs a prologue then Chapter 1. Chapter 1 opens by talking about Teddyâs father being a fisherman and how when Teddy was a young boy they had gone out to the islands.
*Teddy saw small, pastel-colored shacks lining the beach of one, a crumbling limestone estate on another. His father pointed out the prison on Deer Island and the stately fort on Georges. On Thompson, the high trees were filled with birds, and their chatter sounded like squalls of hail and glass.*
*Out past them all, the one they called Shutter lay like something tossed from a Spanish galleon. Back then, in the spring of â28, it had been left to itself in a riot of its own vegetation, and the fort that stretched along its highest point was strangled in vines and topped with great clouds of moss. âWhy Shutter?â Teddy asked.*
*His father shrugged. âYou with the questions. Always the questions.â*
*âYeah, but why?â*
*âSome places just get a name and it sticks. Pirates probably.â*
So the island is actually named Shutter.
### Definition
As to the meaning of the word? You can see how Lehane uses slant dialogue to get around giving an actual definition, opting to leave it vague and somewhat menacing. It loads the place with a sense of unease. So we donât get a clear answer in the story. But. Lehane, as a writer, chose the word for a reason. That means itâs worth diving into some of the etymology and definitions.
According to [Etymonline](https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=shutter), *shutter* came about in the 1540s and meant âone who shutsâ. The use to describe window-shutters came about in the 1720s. Lastly, the âphotographic sense of âdevice for opening and closing the aperture of a lensâ is from 1862.â Itâs a noun or verb. As in the thing that closes, like over a window or camera lens, or the act of closing. You could say, âAfter a bad year, Larry shuttered his business.â Or âAfter a bad year, the business shuttered.â Fun fact, most garage doors are roller shutters.
In terms of *Shutter Island*, thereâs the poetic connection between the name and the fact that Ashecliffe Hospital is somewhere people end up shut away from society. Once youâre there, youâre there. Closed away from the world. Stuck in this psychiatric facility.
### Anagram theory
Some [fan theories](https://movies.stackexchange.com/questions/91504/meaning-of-the-title-shutter-island) have speculated that âshutter islandâ is an anagram for âtruths and liesâ or âtruth/denialsâ. As [Jack Pooley](https://whatculture.com/film/20-things-you-didnt-know-about-shutter-island?page=3) points out for WhatCulture, there are a lot of âanagram shenanigansâ in the film. Edward Daniels = Andrew Laeddis. Rachel Solando = Dolores Chanal. That would be quite the coincidence. Of the words in the English language, Lehane chose *shutter* and *island*. They just happen to anagram perfectly to âtruth and liesâ. And he does that in a story where a character is lying to himself about the truth. And involves anagrams. Stranger things have happened. But thereâs definitely reason to believe it was intentional.
## The themes and meaning of *Shutter Island*
### Truth and lies: Teddyâs paranoia, guilt, self-loathing
*Shutter Island* is tricky because Teddy is our perspective character. He frames the events of the movie for the viewer. That use of the subjective is what makes *Shutter Island* so effective and seemingly tricky. We think we should believe him. We want to believe him. About Ashecliffe. About the psychiatrists. About the lighthouse. That heâs a US marshal on a mission. His fantasy deludes us. Weâre not supposed to be smarter than him (at least not during the first viewing). Why?
By having us identify with Teddy and see through his POV, it gives us a window into the mania, paranoia, guilt, hallucinations, and self-loathing heâs experiencing. When we find out heâs actually Andrew Laeddis and why heâs at Ashecliffe, itâs brutal. We donât want to believe it. Heck, some viewers *still* donât believe it. The truth is sad and awful. His poor kids. His poor wife. Poor him. That sense of resistance and doubt all of us feel (or should feel) when Drs. Cawley and Sheehan reveal the truth to Andrew mirrors exactly what Andrewâs feeling. We know itâs probably true, but we donât want it to be. So we look for excuses and reasons to believe the truth is false.
This is powerful for multiple reasons. First, for anyone who hasnât experienced significant trauma and grief, *Shutter Island* provides an opportunity for a vicarious experience, a way to safely journey through those emotions and, hopefully, gain even a brief conceptualization of what it must be like. Second, itâs a reminder to have some compassion for those who have experienced trauma. Their world is a complicated one. You have to imagine most of the people in Ashecliffe have some similar story to Andrew. If they were the main character of a film, maybe weâd sympathize with them. *One Flew Over the Cuckooâs Nest* explored a similar theme.
The idea of sympathy and empathy is funny because Teddy is so cruel to the patients. Early on, Cawley mentions how patients find some of the paintings calming. How does Teddy respond? âScrew their sense of calm.â
Later on, Cawley explains the divide between old and new school therapy. The old school prefers surgical intervention, specifically the lobotomyâput an ice pick in the brain, tear out some nerves in the frontal lobe, patients calm downâwhile the new school likes drugs, psychopharmacology. Same effect, different method.
Teddy asks Cawley which Cawley prefers. The doctor says something along the lines of âTry and understand, you might just reach them.â In the background, a patient throws a tantrum and needs to be restrained. That prompts Teddy to say, âThese patients, huh? Itâs derisive and condescending.
In summation, Teddy lacks any kind of empathy for the mentally ill. Because, someone deep inside himself, he knows heâs one of them. And that self-loathing is manifesting.
This happens two other times. One, when interviewing a patient who cut off the face of a young woman. The second in Ward C. The first instance is petty. As the patientâs speaking, Teddy drags a pencil across paper. The sound is consistent and grating. Itâs the kind of thing someone mentally healthy might be able to ignore, despite how annoying it is. But the patient isnât mentally healthy so freaks out. Teddy enjoys causing this.
The second instance is violent. After the storm, power is out across the island. Teddy and Chuck sneak off to Ward C and encounter a dangerous patient on the loose. Separated from Chuck, Teddy gets jumped. The guy puts Teddy in a chokehold then takes the time to ramble and rave. Thereâs danger, but how much? The guy cares more about telling Teddy about the hydrogen bomb than he does hurting anyone. In response, Teddy beats the guy down then strangles him, only stopping because Chuck intervenes. Had Chuck not arrived in timeâŚ
We come to find out that Teddy had also assaulted George Noyce, who we see a few minutes later. Itâs been weeks and Noyce still has bruises all over his face. Cut lip. Cut cheek. Itâs brutal.


You donât have to be Freud to pick up on the fact Teddy is projecting self-hatred. Heâs a mentally unwell person who refuses to accept the reality of his own mental health so takes his self-loathing out on others. This means that everything he externalizes represents an internalization.
With all that in mind, think about Andrew and the choice heâs faced with. Die a man or live as a monster? He truly doesnât believe heâll get better. And also canât stand what heâs become.
### What is a monster? The larger meaning of *Shutter Island*
When Andrew talks about being a monster, itâs not meant as a general label for the mentally ill. Rather, itâs the culmination of one of *Shutter Islandâs* major themes.
Think back over the movie. You may recall a lot of conversations about violence. Several times, characters wax philosophical about the ugliness and necessity of violence. Then we have an important juxtaposition between two events in Andrewâs life. Arriving at the liberation of Dachau, the concentration camp, and seeing the inhuman treatment of the Jewish people by the Nazis. And coming home to find his wife in the aftermath of drowning their children.
In both cases, Andrew reacts with violence. Murderous violence. At Dachau, he and the other American soldiers lined up the Nazis who had surrendered. Then opened fire. At home, he has a moment of intense sadness with Dolores, who has clearly lost her mind, then shoots her in the stomach, after she asks him to âset me freeâ.
Where is the line between good violence and bad violence? Does one even exist? Either way, once youâve crossed into the world of the violent, can you ever find redemption?
This seems to be what *Shutter Island* means by its use of *monster*. Thatâs why you have Dr. Naehring with his quote about âMen like you are my speciality. Men of violence.â Itâs why you have the Ward C guy ranting about atolls and h-bombs, the result of science wielded by the violent. Itâs why you have the strange scene with the warden as he drives Teddy.
Warden: *Did you enjoy Godâs latest gift?*
Teddy: *What?*
W: *Godâs gift. The violence. When I came downstairs in my home and I saw that tree in my living room, it reached out for me a divine hand. God loves violence.*
T: *I hadnât noticed.*
W: *Sure you have. \[Chuckles\]. Why else would there be so much of it? Itâs in us. Itâs what we are. We wage war, we burn sacrifices, and pillage and plunder and tear at the flesh of our brothers. And why? Because God gave us violence to wage in his honor.*
T: *I thought God gave us moral order.*
W: *Thereâs no moral order as pure as this storm. Thereâs no moral order at all. Thereâs just this: can my violence conquer yours?*
T: *Iâm not violent.*
W: *Yes, you are. Youâre as violent as they come. I know this because Iâm as violent as they come. If the constraints of society were lifted and I was all that stood between you and a meal you would crack my skull with a rock and eat my meaty parts. Wouldnât you? Cawley thinks youâre harmless, that you can be controlled, but I know different.*
T: *You donât know me.*
W: *Oh, but I do.*
T: *No, you donât, you donât know me at all.*
W: *Oh, I know you. Weâve known each other for centuries. \[Brief pause\]. If I was to sink my teeth into your eye right now, would you be able to stop me before I blinded you?*
T: *Give it a try.*
W: *Thatâs the spirit.*
That scene can feel amazingly out of place. The warden isnât a character who is developed. We see him once before and not again after. You could have just shown the car pick Teddy up and drop him off, cutting the conversation entirely. So why include it?
Because itâs thematically relevant. Teddy has, several times, rejected the idea heâs a violent person. He thinks of himself as decent. As an honorable marshal of the United States. but even he canât continue to ignore the evidence to the contrary. Thereâs an anger in him. A rage. And even though he refuses the wardenâs labeling, at the end, you see the switch flip. Teddy meets the final challenge of âwould you be able to stop me before I blinded youâ with an aura of intensity that pleases the warden. Teddy has, finally, stopped his denial. A foreshadow of whatâs to come.
Violence is what makes monsters. Not illness. The warden is as much a monster as Teddy. And that kind of gets at one of the scariest parts of *Shutter Island*: monsters are everywhere. Not just in mental hospitals, asylums, and wards. They can be in positions of power. They can be in government. And what happens when they have time, influence, and resources? This is why the Ward C patient says, âI donât want to leave here, alright? I mean, why would anybody want to? We hear things here, about the outside world. About atolls. About H-bomb tests. Even though this guy is supposed to be âcrazyâ, heâs right. The âoutsideâ world, the world you and I exist in, is as crazy as anything going on in Ashecliffe. Crazier, even.
So *Shutter Island* isnât just getting at the morality and psychologically of the clinically insane. Itâs speculating on the sanity of civilization at large and showing that the divide between the âpatientâ and the âwardenâ is actually very thin. Whether thatâs on the level of individuals or institutions or governments or world powers.
## The ending of *Shutter Island* explained
### Recap
*Shutter Islandâs* ending begins with Teddyâs journey to the lighthouse. In a state of supreme paranoia, convinced that Ashecliffe wants to turn him into a patient to keep him quiet, our hero arrives at the lighthouse, ready to do anything he must to save his partner Chuck and himself. There, Drs. Cawley and Sheehan confront Teddy with the truthâheâs actually Andrew Laeddis and in deep denial about the fact his wife, Dolores, committed filicide then begged Andrew to end her suffering. Filled with anger, guilt, and empathyâhe did. Then went insane himself and fabricated the identity of Edward Daniels.
Weâre told that over the last 24 months, Andrew has been, as Teddy, incredibly violent. Often harming other patients, like George Noyce. There have been a few times that Andrew has resurfaced. Except he always reverts. This was a last, radical attempt to convince Andrew of the truth. Otherwise, the Board of Overseers has decided the hospital will conduct a lobotomy.
In a moment that shows the subjective nature of the film, Andrew picks up a gun and fires. We hear the concussions. See red splash on the walls. Only for Dr. Cawley to be perfectly okay. The weapon is wood. Fake. It breaks in Andrewâs hands.
A final hallucinatory conversation with Dolores leads Andrew to the truth. His real memories unlock. He passes out.
When Andrew wakes up, heâs back to himself. In front of the doctors and the warden, he answers a series of questions that prove his mental health. âAfter she tried to kill herself the first time, Dolores told me she had an insect living inside her brain. She could feel it clicking across her skull, just pulling the wires just for fun. She told me that. She told me that, but I didnât listen. I loved her so much, you know.â After a question. âBecause I canât take knowing that Dolores killed our children. And IâŚI killed them âcause I didnât get her help. You know? I killed them.â
Cawley states that Andrew has been on a tape. After every breakthrough, he goes back into the Teddy character and the delusions. Saying the same things as if on a script. The hope is that this time the tape has been erased.
In the final scene, Andrew and Sheehan talk on the steps of a building. Andrew, very pointedly recites his script as Teddy, mentioning needing to get off the island, and calling Sheehan âChuckâ. Sheehan signals to the doctors that the treatment didnât work.
Andrew: *Donât worry, partner, theyâre not gonna catch us.*
Chuck: \[Sad\] *Thatâs right. Weâre too smart for âem.*
A: Yeah, we are, arenât we?
A man approaches with the ice pick used for the lobotomy.
Andrew: *You know, this place makes me wonder.*
Chuck: *Yeah, whatâs that, boss?*
A: *Which would be worse? To live as a monster or to die as a good man?*
As Andrew walks to meet the staff, Sheehan stands up and says, âTeddy?â
The suspenseful music returns. Then we see the coastline. Itâs sunset. The lighthouse looms.


### Meaning
The twist ending relies on Cawley establishing that Andrew has been on a loop. That he goes through this whole performance as Teddy, wakes up as Andrew, then reverts to Teddy and says the exact same things. This idea of the loop sets up the final conversation. There, it initially seems like Andrew has already reverted. Except you can hear it in his voiceâitâs performative. This isnât the mental illness. Itâs Andrew. Why would he pretend to be Teddy though?
Thatâs made clear when he goes off script to ask the question: Which would be worse? To live as a monster or die as a good man?
Prior to that question, Dr. Sheehan had been crushed by Teddyâs reversion. But this moment of going off script, this self-awareness, surprises the doctor. He, of course, puts two and two together, which is why, as Andrew walks away, he says, âTeddy?â Itâs not Teddy. Itâs Andrew making a choice. Instead of being a monster kept in an asylum, heâs going to go out as a good man.
Thereâs a tragedy to this because what if the treatment worked? Maybe Andrew is better now and could return to the world and start a new life. Instead of seeing if thatâs the case, he would rather go out on his own terms. Because the idea of reverting back to someone else, someone heâs not, is too much to bear. In that way, it doesnât matter if the treatment worked or not. Because even if it had, Andrew would still view himself as a monster. Heâd still be unable to live with what happened. So he makes a choice that protects other people from his outburst but also, in his own way, puts his mind at ease.
To make this even more definitiveâthe question wasnât in the novel. Itâs only in the movie. In the novel version of *Shutter Island*, the opposite happens. Itâs pretty abundant that Andrew regressed. That he resumed thinking he was Teddy. No tricks. No moment of morality. The novel is a tragedy disguised as a psychological thriller. While the movie went with a little more of a silver lining.
To be fair, Lehane did an interview with MTV in 2010 and said this: *I would say that line, which comes across as a question, he asks it sort of rhetorically. Personally, I think he has a momentary flash. To me, thatâs all it is. Itâs just one moment of sanity mixed in the midst of all the other delusions. When he asks the question, he does it in such a way that, if he were to say it as a statementâŚthen thereâs no solution here but to stop the lobotomy. Because if he shows any sort of self-awareness, then itâs over, they wouldnât want to lobotomize him. My feeling was no, heâs not so conscious he says âOh, Iâm going to decide to pretend to be Laeddis so theyâll finally give me a lobotomy.â That would just be far more s\*\*cidal than I think this character is. I think that in one moment, for half a second sitting there on that island, he remembered who he was and then he asks that question and he quickly sort of lets it go. That was my feeling on that line.*
While hearing from the author of the source material is important, itâs not the end all be all. This is Scorseseâs version, DiCaprioâs version. Given how they delivered that final scene, it seems like it was more than a momentary flash. But, either way, the result is the same. Andrew made a choice.
Thereâs a larger, stranger question here. What is the effect of a lobotomy? [NPR](https://www.npr.org/2005/11/16/5014565/frequently-asked-questions-about-lobotomies#:~:text=Elliot%20Valenstein%2C%20a%20neurologist%20who,McMurphy%20receives%20a%20transorbital%20lobotomy.) has an article about this. One section is called âWhat effect did the ice pick lobotomy have on patients?â
The answer: *Freeman believed that cutting certain nerves in the brain could eliminate excess emotion and stabilize a personality. Indeed, many people who received the transorbital lobotomy seemed to lose their ability to feel intense emotions, appearing childlike and less prone to worry. But the results were variable, according to Dr. Elliot Valenstein, a neurologist who wrote a book about the history of lobotomies: âSome patients seemed to improve, some became âvegetables,â some appeared unchanged and others died.â In Ken Keseyâs novel* One Flew Over the Cuckooâs Nest*, McMurphy receives a transorbital lobotomy.*
As much as *Shutter Island* implies that Andrew wonât survive the lobotomy, itâs possible he did. More than that, itâs possible that he improved. As curious as that is to think about, this is a situation where the reality of what could happen can interfere with the poetic intention. Because the movie makes such a point that this is the end of Andrew, we should probably assume the lobotomy did not go well. That the result was vegetation or fatality.
### Why end on the lighthouse?
Over the course of *Shutter Island*, we were told the lighthouse was where all the bad stuff happened, including lobotomies. When Teddy finally broke in, he discovered it was mostly empty. Nothing shocking happened there. It was a normal, practical lighthouse. That means itâs unlikely the lobotomy takes place in the lighthouse. So why show it?
Because itâs poetic. As weâve associated that place with the act itself, by showing it as the final scene, after Andrew walked off with the staff for the lobotomy, the lighthouse serves as symbolism for the act itself. Itâs confirmation without the actual, terrible visual of the pick up the nose and in the brain.
There is, however, another deeper layer that no other explanation or analysis has ever discussed.
A lighthouse is supposed to serve as a beacon in darkness for those who are out at sea. Itâs artificial light. False fire.
Given how much *Shutter Island* focused on fire and water, thereâs something deeply poetic in the image of a darkened lighthouse on the verge of the sea. That represents Andrew in the aftermath of the lobotomy. Empty. Darkened. Capable of light but not flame. Itâs a fate in-between the extremes of water and fireâthe two most important motifs in *Shutter Island*.
## Important motifs in *Shutter Island*
### Water and fire and Rachel Solando
Rachel Solando is incredibly important to understanding *Shutter Island*.
Initially, the film presents Rachel Solando as a patient who went missing, returns, then thinks Teddy is her husband. We eventually find out this was a nurse pretending as part of Cawleyâs extreme treatment. Later, though, Teddy ends up in a seaside cave and finds the ârealâ Rachel Solando.
Itâs easy to chalk her up to a figment of Teddyâs poor, strained psyche. Heâs already been having visions of Dolores and full on conversations with her in very cinematic fever dreams. We know heâs readily capable of hallucinations. The whole reason he discovers the cave is because he thinks he sees Chuckâs body on some rocks at the bottom of a cliff.
The difference with Rachel is that all the previous hallucinations were momentary. They last less than a minute. Like the pistol is real. Then itâs fake. Dolores appears in places she couldnât possibly be, like inside Noyceâs cell. Rachel, though, is there when Teddy enters the cave and there when he wakes up the next morning. Maybe sheâs a figment. If so, itâs a figment way more subtle than Dolores standing unnoticed in the middle of a psych ward in a bright yellow sundress.
Itâs for one reason and one reason only that we see Rachel wake Teddy upâto make us believe sheâs real.
Itâs the only thing in *Shutter Island* thatâs up for debate. Especially when you go back through the movie a second or third time. You pick up a lot of little things that confirm Teddyâs a patient and everyone is in on Cawleyâs performance. Itâs why the Deputy Warden is so on edge around Teddy. Itâs why none of the guards actually search for Rachel when Teddyâs out looking for her. Itâs why the one patient waves at Teddy when he first steps on the groundsâthey know each other. Itâs why Naehring is such a jerk: he doesnât believe Cawleyâs treatment will work. Itâs why multiple people look at Chuck when they mention Dr. Sheehan.
Yet Rachel-in-the-cave is the one detail that isnât telegraphed. Itâs the only detail thatâs seemingly left open for interpretation.
Again, itâs easy to declare it a figment. Her name *is* an anagram of Dolores Chanal, Andrewâs wife. Just like Edward Daniels is an anagram of Andrew Laeddis. And it seems Andrew is at least somewhat aware of what he says and does as Teddy. Otherwise he wouldnât be able to say the normal Teddy things to Sheehan at the end. Youâd think if psychiatrist-on-the-run Rachel was real, weâd have some acknowledgement of it. Like Andrew admitting his illness but telling Cawley that Rachel didnât feel part of it. But thereâs nothing like that. Which means we can assume Andrew accepts Cawleyâs declaration that Rachel was a hallucination.
That makes sense. He had been off his meds and not handling it particularly well. Especially after the Ward C confrontation, the Dolores hallucination, and Chuckâs body on the rocks. Seeing Rachel would, narratively, fall into the â[rule of 3](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_of_three_\(writing\))â (not to be mistaken with the movieâs rule of 4) that states things should happen in groups of three. Rachel would be the climax in this string of active imagingings.
And because Teddy is alone and weâre isolated in his perspective, itâs easy to say Rachelâs presented more believably to the viewer because Teddy has no one to challenge his perception. Itâs that subjective perspective impacting the way the viewer sees events. This is a Martin Scorsese movie, after all, so leaning into the nuance of cinematic language isnât out of the question.
With all that said, it would be fitting if Rachel were real. As it stops the movie from being solely one-dimensional. As in, if Rachel is a hallucination then Andrew is the problem and Ashecliffe is pretty innocent. Being one-dimensional is not a bad thing or an impossible thing. Not everything has to be [*Donnie Darko*](https://filmcolossus.com/single-post/2017/06/01/Explaining-the-end-of-DONNIE-DARKO-the-many-implications-of-deus-ex-machina-and-the-relationship-with-INCEPTION) or [*Fight Club*](https://filmcolossus.com/fight-club-explained) or [*Mulholland Drive*](https://filmcolossus.com/mulholland-drive-2001-explained). For the most part, Scorsese has been a straightforward filmmaker. His movies have twists and turns in terms of what happens and how (like *The Departed*), but they never leave you guessing. As opposed to Christopher Nolan with *Memento* or *The Prestige* or [*Inception*](https://filmcolossus.com/inception-2010-explained).
So there is an argument to be made that Rachel being real adds an important dimensionality to the story. And that her speech about âonce youâre declared insane, then anything you do is called part of that insanityâreasonable protests are denial, valid fears \[are\] paranoiaâ supports this by showing that not everything an insane person believes and experiences is false. That there can be truth in madness. It just gets dismissed. That argument is reinforced by Cawley having a script for everything else Teddy says but being surprised about the woman in the cave. His response is, âYour delusions are more severe than I thought.â Not: âYou always bring her up.â
As much as that theory may appeal to some people, and as much as Rachelâs points about government experiments, MK Ultra, and the creation of âghostsâ fits the thematics of *Shutter Island*, it would be wild for her to actually be named Rachel Solando. That anyone would have a name thatâs an exact anagram of Andrewâs wife? Thatâs hard to believe. Of course, thatâs more believable if you buy into the theory that Edward was tricked and was never a patient. But you shouldnât buy into that theory.
So is there an answer about Rachel?
Thankfully, yes.
### Water and fire and Rachel Solando part 2
You may notice that water is ever-present in *Shutter Island*. And that fire appears a lot, too. Remember, water and fire are poetically considered opposites.
Given that the movie is based on a dichotomy between Teddy and Andrew, the water/fire dynamic should read as a purposeful contrast thatâs part of the core tension between Teddy and Andrew.
That connection is made pretty explicit.
In Teddyâs (made up) memory, the tragedy occurred in fire. Someone burned down their apartment when Dolores was inside. In reality? The tragedy involved water.
We even have that dream where Dolores is soaking wet but ash falls all around her and Teddy. Dolores even turns to ash. Then Andrew wakes up with water leaking on him.


Fire is heavily present in most of Teddyâs dreams and versions of events. Meaning that we should associate fire, in any form, with fiction. And water with reality. When you keep these motifs in mind when re-watching, *Shutter Island* takes on a whole new layer of depth. The storm becomes symbolic. Chuck lighting Teddyâs cigarettes is symbolic (as Chuck is fueling the delusion). Teddy approaching Noyceâs cell in the near total darkness of Ward C and lightning match after matchâthatâs symbolic. Those matches going out is perfect, as Noyce is the first person to tell Teddy the truth rather than keeping up the performance.
âBut Teddy saw Chuckâs body on the rocks. It was swept away by the tide. That was a hallucination involving water.â
Great point. But Chuck was a lie, right? He was just a character played by Sheehan. So the body on the rocks, swept away by the tide, only reinforces the symbolism of water representing truth, as we never actually see Chuck again. The next time the character appears is in the lighthouse, as Dr. Sheehan.
With all that in mind, letâs return to the scene with Rachel. The two of them are in a cave. Huddled aroundâŚa fire.
Given what we know of the intentionality of the symbolism and motifs, we canât ignore the fire and what that insinuates. Especially given the fact Teddy was just trying to find Chuckâs body, on the rocks, at the edge of the water. That he would seek refuge from the water by sitting next to the fire is the embodiment of the whole Andrew and Teddy dynamic. Whenever he gets too close to reality, he finds comfort in delusion. And this is the big one. The conspiracy thatâs all-encompassing and goes right to the very top of the U.S. government. âRachelâ feeds into every fear and paranoia and delusion Teddy has. This is just another match heâs lit to keep the fiction going.
Which is what makes that final shot of the lighthouse so powerful.
## Questions and answers about *Shutter Island*
### Who is George Noyce?
The short answer is that George Noyce was just another patient who Teddy happened to beat up. Thatâs it.
The longer answer has to do with Andrewâs denial. Andrew was in such tremendous denial about what happened to his family that he created an entire personality to protect himself from ever thinking about it. That was Teddy. It seems Teddy reacted with extreme violence whenever someone challenged his delusion. We see moments of this at the end, in the lighthouse. That also explains the wardenâs speech to Teddy about violence and why the guards and everyone else were so on edge.
Noyce happened to call Teddy by his real name. That caused an attack. It seems Noyce is kept in Ward C specifically because of the tension between the two of them and Cawley doesnât want to risk Noyce throwing a wrench into the illusion.
### Did Andrew really liberate Dachau in World War II and take part in the reprisals?
It seems Andrew may have served in the military. But so much of what we learn about him as Teddy is fiction. Itâs likely that the Dachau backstory and reprisals are nothing more than his way of fictionalizing what happened with Dolores and the kids and the way in which Andrew took her life in a mixture of mercy and payback.
That is the most straightforward interpretation.
The more dramatic and poetic interpretation would be that yes, Dachau did happen, the reprisals happened, and thatâs why Andrew responded how he did to Dolores. The combination of being part of that larger horrible thing and the more personal horrible thing is what caused him to break so badly.
[](https://filmcolossus.com/author/chris/ "Chris")
[Chris](https://filmcolossus.com/author/chris/)
[Chris Lambert](https://filmcolossus.com/author/chris/) is co-founder of Colossus. He writes about complex movie endings, narrative construction, and how movies connect to the psychology of our day-to-day lives.
Share
[Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Ffilmcolossus.com%2Fshutter-island-ending-explained "Facebook")
[Twitter](https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?text=Shutter+Island+explained&url=https%3A%2F%2Ffilmcolossus.com%2Fshutter-island-ending-explained&via=FilmColossus "Twitter")
[Pinterest](https://pinterest.com/pin/create/button/?url=https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained&media=https://filmcolossus.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/p1.jpg&description=Shutter+Island+explained "Pinterest")
Movie Explanations
Trending Now
### [One Battle After Another Explained \| What Time Is It?](https://filmcolossus.com/one-battle-after-another-explained/ "One Battle After Another Explained | What Time Is It?")
### Read on
#### [One Battle After Another Explained \| What Time Is It?](https://filmcolossus.com/one-battle-after-another-explained/ "One Battle After Another Explained | What Time Is It?")
To understand One Battle After Another, I want you to think about a garden. If you put time and effort into a garden, it will...
#### [The Best Movies of 2025 \| Chris Lambert](https://filmcolossus.com/best-movies-2025-chris-lambert "The Best Movies of 2025 | Chris Lambert")
This is a live list where I rank the movies of 2025. If something isn't on the list, I haven't seen it. Leave your...
#### [Weapons Explained \| Naruto Run Down The Street](https://filmcolossus.com/weapons-explained-2025-cregger/ "Weapons Explained | Naruto Run Down The Street")
Weapons \| Quick Explanation If you want a quick, practical explanation of Weapons in terms of story, let me get that out of the way for you. Gladys...
#### [All-Time Movie Rankings \| Travis Bean](https://filmcolossus.com/best-movies-ever-travis-bean "All-Time Movie Rankings | Travis Bean")
Hi, my name is Travis Bean. And I haveâŚwell. I have what some people say is âuniqueâ taste in movies. Other people would use...
#### [28 Years Later Explained \| A Trip To The Bone Temple](https://filmcolossus.com/28-years-later-explained-2025/ "28 Years Later Explained | A Trip To The Bone Temple")
The 28 movies all use the opening prologue to introduce the core thesis of the film. 28 Days Later uses the primate forced to watch...
#### 15 COMMENTS
Subscribe
[Login](https://filmcolossus.com/wp-login.php?redirect_to=https%3A%2F%2Ffilmcolossus.com%2Fshutter-island-ending-explained)
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. [Learn how your comment data is processed.](https://akismet.com/privacy/)
15 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Nwana
2 years ago
Rachel is not real and it fits perfectly to the plot.
Notice that snapping Andrew back to reality didnât just happen in the lighthouse but a gradual process digging his subconscious, until the breakthrough moment at the lighthouse. As Dr. Cawley struggled to restore him, he started having subtle changes in his hallucinations to help alter his perception and thatâs how he gradually drove along. Notice when he finally met his fantasy Laeddis. Laddies turned to Chuck and what did Chuck say?: Something like⌠â We donât have much time left, we have to goâ.
His case was already too notorious that even some fellow patients understood his recursion, like George Noyce. He told Andrew: âU canât dig out the truth and kill Laeddis at the same timeâ⌠Youâre not investigating anything, youâre a f\*cking rat in a maze â⌠itâs all about you. U ever worked with chuck before?ââŚ
You can notice how Andrew was a little sceptical with chuck the next day. Now, the Rachel in the cave hallucination gave him everything to understand his true self a complete understanding of whatâs going on in his head. However he only misunderstood as he was only hallucinating from his Teddy persona and Rachel not only was talking in parables but was also somehow ambiguous. Knowing that he will always relapse, Rachel told him he will never leave this island. He insisted to talk about his friend Chuck, to his dismay, Rachel also told him: âyou have no friendâ.
Rachel and Teddy was a scene going in in Andrews subconscious to bring him back to reality or at least bring him closer to breakthrough.
0
Reply
Dave
2 years ago
Another interesting thing: The patient form Chuck wanted to hand Teddy, later on flying next to the cliff, has Laeddis and US Marshall written on it. That much I could tell with a 1080p resolution.
0
Reply
[Chris](https://filmcolossus.com/members/chris/)
Author
Reply to [Dave](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#comment-8981)
2 years ago
Ah, thank you. Thatâs a really great note\!
0
Reply
Dave
2 years ago
Also worth mentioning that in reality, his wife had burnt down their apartment in the city before moving to the cabin, so to him, seeing Dolores in ashes is a reminder that her spirit was long gone before the lake incident. However, he coped with that âfireâ of the past decent enough, so still, the memory of his own behavior in that regard is uplifting.
0
Reply
[Chris](https://filmcolossus.com/members/chris/)
Author
Reply to [Dave](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#comment-8980)
2 years ago
Hey, Dave! Thanks for the additional view\!
0
Reply
Juan
3 years ago
Hi Chris\!
My gf and I just watched this movie and itâs definitely a fun one to ponder. I love your thoughts because they confirm my beliefs and they provide way more support for what I made the movie out to be. We are left with two questions, though: 1) In the scene where Teddy is interviewing the patient who âaxedâ her husband, and Chuck gets up to get her water, why does she write âRunâ in his notebook? Is that just a patient being afraid of Dr. Sheehan? Not trusting him? 2) In that same scene, Chuck brings her a glass full of water, which she accepts with her right hand. We then see her mime drinking it with the same right hand. Then we see her place and empty cup down with her left hand. Is that just a huge continuity mess up? Or is that supposed to mess with us? How does this fit into the water being associated with reality theory youâve pointed out?
Iâd LOVE to hear your thoughts on it. Especially on question 2!\!
Thanks again. Really appreciate all your thoughts on this movie\!
0
Reply
[Chris](https://filmcolossus.com/members/chris/)
Author
Reply to [Juan](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#comment-7324)
3 years ago
Hey Juan! For the first question, thereâs at least a couple readings. You could view it as just a patient helping another patient (even though Teddy doesnât realize heâs a patient), like, âYou have this opportunity. Escape while you can.â Or âTheyâre doing this thing to you, you need to run.â It could also be part of her assignment in the whole production to wake Teddy up. As in she was told to write it. Either way, the end result is the same: Teddy is more paranoid about whatâs going on. As to the second question, itâs interesting. I donât think thereâs a definitive reading at the moment. Itâs such a strange thing because itâs pretty subtle. And there is an argument to be made that itâs just continuity errors. But thenâŚwhy all in that one scene? And you could argue that itâs one of the few times Scorsese puts the viewer in Teddyâs POV, messing with our heads a bit, giving us these fractured details similar to how they would be for Teddy. It would foreshadow the cave encounter with Rachel. But if Scorsese meant to do that, youâd expect a few more instances of things like that. Like in Fight Club when they foreshadow Tyler Durden. We get these flashes of him appearing before he actually appears. Or American Psycho increases the amount of insanity until you wonder if anything was ever real. Maybe Scorsese is being more subtle about it. But to only have shifting details in this one scene with the glass is strange. But. As you said. Water is associated with reality. So the idea of drinking water would be associated with accepting reality. And Teddy just avoids seeing the water at all because of the negative associations with the lake and reality. So the glass being empty is like his sense of reality being empty. And the glass being half full on the table at the end of the scene is more like âThe truth is somewhere in the middle of all of us.â Iâll absolutely need to add a section about this to the article.
0
Reply
Olfa
Reply to [Chris](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#comment-7340)
3 years ago
The word âRunâ was deleted by rain and later on in the movie when he opened his small notebook the word wasnât there.
0
Reply
[Chris](https://filmcolossus.com/members/chris/)
Author
Reply to [Olfa](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#comment-7397)
3 years ago
Good catch\!
0
Reply
lyss
3 years ago
The fire is also present i think when heâs talking to authority figures/medical professionals who are off duty. Having a drink with the two doctors, thereâs candles lit when theyâre talking about shackling up the inmates for the storm, and when heâs talking to the nurses and staff there isnât any fire but it shot with a much warmer lighting đ loved this thank you hehe xo
0
Reply
[Chris](https://filmcolossus.com/members/chris/)
Author
Reply to [lyss](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#comment-7038)
3 years ago
Thatâs a good point about it being a bit of a motif\!
0
Reply
Linny
3 years ago
Just watched this on Netflix w the BF. We loved it! And r discussing heavily about it, particularly the Rachel in cave part. Thx for this article! Lots of points to ponder~
0
Reply
Nic White
3 years ago
Two things I still find curious. Why does Cawley tell Teddy he doesnât have a partner when the latter arrives at the facility just after âthe big meetingâ? Is Andrewâs hallucinated narrative so predictable that it includes the idea Teddy had a partner that goes missing? I guess I answered my question, and it explains why âchuckâ disappears- they have to follow Andrewâs story.
Would the doctor have been willing to let Andrew blow up his car for the sake of the charade? That doesnât seem worth it or wise ?
0
Reply
Jesse
4 years ago
Interesting take on the story,well thought out and insightful, particularly the part about fire representing a falsehood n water representing truthâŚUnfortunately though, the scene with patient/nurse ârachel soldanoâ in the cell not the cave ,breaks the story and creates a horrible plot holes, thus ruining the believability. Nevermind the woman in the cave for a moment. You see Rachel canât be both the patient and the nurse. The scene where Dicaprioâs character along with Kingsleyâs character and Ruffalos character,are all in the cell with Rachel when she lashes out emotionally at Dicaprio and Kingsley even apologizes for it,shows us that she is indeed mental because even if she was pretending to be psycho, that is going 2000% above expectations, and a nurse wouldnât have the acting talent nor motivation to put on that level of performance. Also it wasnât a hallucination because like 3 other people including Kingsley witnessed it. So when we see her again towards the end of the movie dressed as a nurse, the story has now completely broken its own logic. I wonder if the novel handles that scene any differenly.
0
Reply
Nic White
Reply to [Jesse](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#comment-4432)
3 years ago
I wondered about that scene as well. It seemed like pretty extreme crazy behavior for a nurse to put on. But, because Andrew is hallucinating so intensely, it is possible some of the content of that encounter was fabricated in his mind. Just because thereâs others in the room doesnât meant Andrew isnât experiencing something different from reality
0
Reply
wpDiscuz
Insert
[](https://www.web-stat.com/)
[](https://statcounter.com/free-web-stats/ "web stats")
[Skip to toolbar](https://filmcolossus.com/shutter-island-ending-explained#wp-toolbar)
- About WordPress
- [WordPress.org](https://wordpress.org/)
- [Documentation](https://wordpress.org/documentation/)
- [Learn WordPress](https://learn.wordpress.org/)
- [Support](https://wordpress.org/support/forums/)
- [Feedback](https://wordpress.org/support/forum/requests-and-feedback)
- [Log In](https://filmcolossus.com/wp-login.php?redirect_to=https%3A%2F%2Ffilmcolossus.com%2Fshutter-island-ending-explained) |
| Readable Markdown | null |
| Shard | 37 (laksa) |
| Root Hash | 8201735230179984437 |
| Unparsed URL | com,filmcolossus!/shutter-island-ending-explained s443 |