Showing posts with label inception. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inception. Show all posts

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Inception



 
Inception
2010
Director: Christopher Nolan
Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Ellen Page, Ken Watanabe, Marion Cotillard

Christopher Nolan, I heart you so much.  You walk that line that so many other filmmakers don’t believe exists: that the American public will actually pay to see intelligent, original ideas.  Thank you, THANK YOU for proving that point with Inception.

The complex story of Inception is based on that most ineffable of ideas: dreams.  Cobb (DiCaprio) is an expert at extraction, or breaking into someone else’s dream in order to plunder their subconscious.  The technology has been developed to do this, and now corporate espionage is being taken to the subliminal level.  When international energy businessman Saito (Watanabe) hires Cobb, though, he does not want Cobb to steal an idea.  Rather, he wants Cobb to implant an idea in his enemy’s mind (the “inception” of the title).  It’s never been done successfully, but Cobb trusts in his partner Arthur (Gordon-Levitt) and the new girl on the team, dream architect Ariadne (Page).  Cobb’s past and his own subconscious begin to get in the way of their dream work, however, as manifested through Cobb’s dead wife Mal (Cotillard).

Inception made 300 million dollars US domestic, and over 800 million dollars worldwide.  I decided to start with this figure to make a big fatty point.  For as complex a narrative as Inception has, and hoo boy does it get convoluted at the end, people ate it up.  Inception found an audience, it was one of the biggest films of the 2010 summer, and it was an international success.  It is one of the precious few films that appealed to both critics (it was nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars) and the popcorn summer crowd.  The divide between these two audiences is growing ever greater with every passing year.  The Oscars is growing more and more out of touch with the rather lowbrow tastes of the American public at large.  I do not solely blame the Academy for this; the “big” summer films are getting bigger and stupider, and the “small” critical darlings are getting smaller and holding less general appeal.