Vin Diesel Goes Way, Way Off Script and 6 Other Things You May Have Missed at CinemaCon 2023ĥ1 Directors' Favorite Horror Movies: Bong Joon Ho, Quentin Tarantino, Guillermo del Toro, and More Paul Schrader Says He Hasn't Watched the Oscars in '10 or 15 Years' - and He Skips Most Categories When He Votes “Shutter Island,” the fourth collaboration between Scorsese and DiCaprio, was a box office hit with $295 million worldwide, the highest grossing Scorsese release until it was surpassed by “The Wolf of Wall Street.” While “Shutter Island” did not go on to have the awards success that the director and actor’s other projects did, it has continued to endure over the last 10 years because its blindside of a twist ending that both rivals and predates “Inception.” The movie opened February 19, 2010, making this month its 10th anniversary. Cut to February 2010, in which Paramount were gearing up to release Martin Scorsese’s psychological thriller “ Shutter Island,” based on Dennis Lehane’s 2003 novel of the same name. The “Inception” ending continues to stir up conversations a decade later, but it was not the first DiCaprio movie of 2010 to conclude with such an open-ended jaw-dropper. Christopher Nolan leaves Dominick Cobb’s totem spinning so as not to answer whether or not the character is still dreaming. The last shot of “Inception” is widely regarded as one of the best ambiguous endings in movie history.
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