Hahaha I totally put the wrong fucking link there! Clipboard fail!
― Captain Ostensible (Scik Mouthy), Monday, 19 July 2010 11:57 (fifteen years ago)
http://drnorth.wordpress.com/2010/07/17/inception/
That's the real link!
― Captain Ostensible (Scik Mouthy), Monday, 19 July 2010 11:59 (fifteen years ago)
is the name dom cobb a reference to anything?
― just sayin, Monday, 19 July 2010 12:02 (fifteen years ago)
I kind of assume so, but I dunno what.
― Captain Ostensible (Scik Mouthy), Monday, 19 July 2010 12:09 (fifteen years ago)
it was so literal. too literal.
A banal espionage plot, lots of people running around with guns, and DiCaprio as usual barely convincing as an adult. Reminded me a lot of that forgotten J-Lo pic The Gift, only that one was at least boring in a stylized way. I guess it's provoking "discussion" among people who don't usually go to movies because, like The Celestine Prophecy and The Alchemist, the movie offers a taste of something Deep and Spiritual along with the usual thrills.
― I'm never gonna do it without the Lex on (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 19 July 2010 12:09 (fifteen years ago)
The Cell, I meant.
― I'm never gonna do it without the Lex on (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 19 July 2010 12:10 (fifteen years ago)
Cobb was the name of a character from Nolan's first film. Figured he just liked the name. Or Ty Cobb. xposts.
― orakle-krake (Gukbe), Monday, 19 July 2010 12:28 (fifteen years ago)
lolling at the "WORST FILM EVER!" hyperbole
guys, there's a Cats Vs Dogs sequel coming out, you have to ration the ire so that it lasts all summer
― HI DERE, Monday, 19 July 2010 13:02 (fifteen years ago)
if cats and dogs sequel goes around masquerading as high art cinema, and the critics buy it, i'll worst film ever that too
― cutty, Monday, 19 July 2010 13:37 (fifteen years ago)
seems a bit unfair to rip on inception for 'masquerading as high art' just because a few critics and fanboys claim it as such. i don't think there's anything particularly pretentious about it, nor does it seem to make any claims to be anything other than a summer action/heist film.
― orakle-krake (Gukbe), Monday, 19 July 2010 13:41 (fifteen years ago)
as I said before I feel like the studio's secrecy about it did it a disservice. anyway, of the movies I've seen this summer, this ranks below toy story 3 and well above, uh, eclipse.
― akm, Monday, 19 July 2010 13:54 (fifteen years ago)
Mouthy, I'm glad to see an article that notes the DiCraprio character's odd similarity to Nolan himself! I thought I was nuts for noticing that.
― Simon H., Monday, 19 July 2010 14:01 (fifteen years ago)
ha this movie took in over $60M this weekend, I guess trippy trailers that don't really tell you the story are a good marketing angle
― HI DERE, Monday, 19 July 2010 14:04 (fifteen years ago)
This interview with Dileep Rao (the Chemist) = top notch:
http://nymag.com/daily/entertainment/2010/07/inceptions_dileep_rao_answers.html
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 19 July 2010 14:05 (fifteen years ago)
There aren't many actors -- hell, many people -- able to tackle a question like this:
Q. What if Leo is the one being "incepted" with an idea? We keep hearing the phrase "Do you want to become an old man, filled with regret?" and it's like someone — maybe Ellen Page's character because she's the catalyst of his emotional catharsis — has set this all up so he can let go of his regret over Mal's death. That's why at the end with Saito he offers to come back and be young again (not old, full of regret). Even the Edith Piaf song they use to signal ten seconds before kick translates to "No, I regret nothing." And there's so many scenes where Ellen Page is talking to Leo, getting him to reveal his issues, in the same way that Eames tricks Fischer into revealing his issues. Also, Leo's kids are the same age at the end, right?A. I'm not trying to be authoritative, so this is just my understanding of how I approached it from my work on it. But you're saying it's like some sort of crazy-ass psychotherapy session where the whole thing is a constructed narrative of massive complexity only to distract Cobb so that he will achieve his change? I mean sure, you could totally say that that's what it is. In a way, that's what we're doing to Fischer, so it's not unfounded.The problem for me is that you're using negative evidence to support a story that isn't there. I don't know what to say about a character who only exists before and after the movie. You're talking about a character who isn't on screen. And I mean on one hand, it's awesome that this movie can sustain that kind of discussion. It shows you just how well-though-through and comprehensive it is, but I mean I don't know where that kind of speculation ends. It's like people who are convinced 9/11 is an inside job. It's a mental heuristic failure to think that one or two minor details explain absolutely everything. I mean, kids wear the same clothes all the time.To me, it's a far more elegant story if it's a vast job that Leo has to pull off. The threat is real, the growth is real, the adversary is real. The weakness of "It's all a dream" — why we hate that, why we feel cheated when narratively anything is revealed to be all a dream — is that you've just asked me to spend so much time and emotional capital investing in the stakes of this, and you've now swept it away with the most anti-narrative structuralism that doesn't have anything to substitute in its place. It's laughing at you for even taking it seriously. You don't want to feel like a victim of the narrative, and I don't think Christopher Nolan would do that.
A. I'm not trying to be authoritative, so this is just my understanding of how I approached it from my work on it. But you're saying it's like some sort of crazy-ass psychotherapy session where the whole thing is a constructed narrative of massive complexity only to distract Cobb so that he will achieve his change? I mean sure, you could totally say that that's what it is. In a way, that's what we're doing to Fischer, so it's not unfounded.
The problem for me is that you're using negative evidence to support a story that isn't there. I don't know what to say about a character who only exists before and after the movie. You're talking about a character who isn't on screen. And I mean on one hand, it's awesome that this movie can sustain that kind of discussion. It shows you just how well-though-through and comprehensive it is, but I mean I don't know where that kind of speculation ends. It's like people who are convinced 9/11 is an inside job. It's a mental heuristic failure to think that one or two minor details explain absolutely everything. I mean, kids wear the same clothes all the time.
To me, it's a far more elegant story if it's a vast job that Leo has to pull off. The threat is real, the growth is real, the adversary is real. The weakness of "It's all a dream" — why we hate that, why we feel cheated when narratively anything is revealed to be all a dream — is that you've just asked me to spend so much time and emotional capital investing in the stakes of this, and you've now swept it away with the most anti-narrative structuralism that doesn't have anything to substitute in its place. It's laughing at you for even taking it seriously. You don't want to feel like a victim of the narrative, and I don't think Christopher Nolan would do that.
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 19 July 2010 14:10 (fifteen years ago)
the last paragraph of that interview encapsulates almost exactly how I felt about the movie
― HI DERE, Monday, 19 July 2010 14:13 (fifteen years ago)
okay someone splain this to me because I had a tough time with it. Maybe I am missing something. When Joshua Jordan Lovett is floating around in zero gravity in the fancy-schmancy hotel, gathering up all his bundled-together buddies, he explodes the elevator. AND IT FALLS? BUT HE IS IN ZERO GRAVITY. I DON'T GET IT, CAN SOMEONE EXPLAIN PLS.
I am getting more and more annoyed at this movie as more time passes and more people post status updates on Facebook and make LJ icons about it.
― homosexual II, Monday, 19 July 2010 14:18 (fifteen years ago)
also Ellen Page was a terribly miscast.
― homosexual II, Monday, 19 July 2010 14:19 (fifteen years ago)
the answer to that = physics + movie handwaving
he first disconnected the elevator car from the supporting cable with the emergency brake on it so it would move in the shaft, then put explosives on the opposite side to act as rocket propulsion to shove it down the shaft
― HI DERE, Monday, 19 July 2010 14:22 (fifteen years ago)
I still don't get why people who are espousing the "all a dream" theory aren't looking at middle ground. Why does it either have to be "all a dream"? Why couldn't some sequences that we thought were 'real' potentially be a dream, while others (such as the end) be real?
It's "all a dream" is lazy thinking IMO, and likely a product of our exposure to such lazy writing as depicted on Dallas, Roseanne, other tv shows ad nauseam. To be quite honest, the only part I even really thought was up for debate were the events after Cobb met with Saito in limbo. There were other pieces I interpreted (see thread above), but they were mostly attached to the 'alternate ending'. I mean it's not completely unrealistic either to think the events did all happen too, it's just fun to theorize alternates since Nolan left an 'out'.
― San Te, Monday, 19 July 2010 14:23 (fifteen years ago)
curse the lazy writing of "Roseanne", it has ruined us all
― HI DERE, Monday, 19 July 2010 14:24 (fifteen years ago)
And this was so it would hit the top/bottom of the shaft and generate the kick that they would not otherwise get in zero-g, right?
― Bill A, Monday, 19 July 2010 14:26 (fifteen years ago)
Correct.
― HI DERE, Monday, 19 July 2010 14:26 (fifteen years ago)
xxpost well I specifically meant how they ended their last season by saying it was all a dream and Dan died, etc....
― San Te, Monday, 19 July 2010 14:26 (fifteen years ago)
O WATE SORRY FOR NOT SAYING *SPOILER* GUYS...for those of u who don't no how roseanne ended yet :( :( :(
― San Te, Monday, 19 July 2010 14:27 (fifteen years ago)
Damn you, San Te!
It's a great point to bring up, isn't it? I remember wondering about that a bit in that brief few seconds between when he leaves the top behind him and the cut to black, then all of a sudden my mind was elsewhere...
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 19 July 2010 14:30 (fifteen years ago)
dan, i'll trust your explanation because yr smart and went to harvard
― homosexual II, Monday, 19 July 2010 14:31 (fifteen years ago)
Correct
Thank god. Because otherwise that whole sequence made me feel like I'd been on the gin all afternoon ("wait, he's now bundling them up in electrical flex, whaaaa?"), the amount I understood it. Let alone that the explosives would just have torn the liftcar to pieces rather than propelling it so daintily. As you say, "movie handwaving", still loved this film.
xp.
― Bill A, Monday, 19 July 2010 14:33 (fifteen years ago)
― I'm never gonna do it without the Lex on (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, July 19, 2010 8:09 AM (2 hours ago) Bookmark
where are these plebian, non-moviegoing-people "discussions" of how Deep and Spiritual this movie is? not on this thread.
― al-goreda (s1ocki), Monday, 19 July 2010 15:01 (fifteen years ago)
there's really nothing spiritual in this movie AFAICT. fuckin' tomb raider movies are more spiritual.
i mean there's a lot of ways nolan COULD have fudged it with some lame spirituality, like introducing some ambiguity about whether marion cotillard's character was 'real,' like a ghost inhabiting leo's mind, but he dismisses that pretty soundly and thank god for that
― al-goreda (s1ocki), Monday, 19 July 2010 15:04 (fifteen years ago)
yeah if anything, this movie is super clinical (one of the things I really liked about it)
― HI DERE, Monday, 19 July 2010 15:06 (fifteen years ago)
the threat is real, the growth is real, the adversary is real
wait who is the adversary
― cutty, Monday, 19 July 2010 15:13 (fifteen years ago)
a bunch of faceless, nameless projections? his crazy dead wife?
where the fuck is robert englund when u need him
― cutty, Monday, 19 July 2010 15:14 (fifteen years ago)
I don't think the end says "it was all a dream" so much as "it was all a film". Which I think Nolan does very, very well, and why I think he's a great film-maker. I don't think this has ANYTHING in common with The Alchemist at all.
― Captain Ostensible (Scik Mouthy), Monday, 19 July 2010 17:10 (fifteen years ago)
maybe Nolan leaving the audience without seeing the ending, as well as Leo (who abandons the totem to go see his kids) is his way of saying "Leo doesn't have to be paranoid anymore and can trust reality without looking at his totem".
But yea this movie is one definitely that was worth seeing twice.
― San Te, Monday, 19 July 2010 17:17 (fifteen years ago)
how come the bus makes the hotel zero gravity but the zero gravity has no effect on the snow layer?
― r (ico), Monday, 19 July 2010 17:23 (fifteen years ago)
Easy -- all the dreamers in the zero gravity hotel are floating around calmly.
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 19 July 2010 17:24 (fifteen years ago)
oh my god
― homosexual II, Monday, 19 July 2010 17:29 (fifteen years ago)
It's "all a dream" is lazy thinking IMO, and likely a product of our exposure to such lazy writing as depicted on Dallas, Roseanne, other tv shows ad nauseam.
you forgot juicy
― hot dub grime machine (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 19 July 2010 17:43 (fifteen years ago)
haha!
― San Te, Monday, 19 July 2010 17:44 (fifteen years ago)
actually maybe "limbo" is actually biggie's pool party from the video...woah....
― hot dub grime machine (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 19 July 2010 17:46 (fifteen years ago)
but wait if it was a dream did he really read Word Up magazine? or...did it exist?
― San Te, Monday, 19 July 2010 17:47 (fifteen years ago)
the rappin' duke is actually the kid from 3rd rock from the sun! *passes out*
― hot dub grime machine (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 19 July 2010 17:48 (fifteen years ago)
never thought this thread would take it this far
― al-goreda (s1ocki), Monday, 19 July 2010 18:14 (fifteen years ago)
Meanwhile, a really, really sharp -- and moving -- piece by Hua Hsu here that specifically addresses the question about whether/why Inception is not really about dreams, and whether that's a flaw:
http://www.theatlantic.com/culture/archive/2010/07/inception-ghost-town-ghost-faces/60016/
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 19 July 2010 20:50 (fifteen years ago)
slim thug weighs in:
http://28.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_l5sgo28Oqw1qz7f9to1_500.jpg
― hot dub grime machine (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 19 July 2010 21:56 (fifteen years ago)
what was the first tv drama to do the "it was all a dream" conclusion? st elsewhere? or was there something earlier?
― 不合作的方式 (r1o natsume), Monday, 19 July 2010 22:18 (fifteen years ago)