Review: Inception
Filed under: Action, Drama, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, New Releases, Warner Brothers, Theatrical Reviews

Not to sound like one of those super-cool hipsters, but I've been a Christopher Nolan fan since Memento, which I thought was the best film of 2001 and maybe the whole decade. You people who didn't start loving him until he made some Batman movies ... well, I'm better than you, is my point.
Insomnia, The Prestige, and the Batman films were all worthy followups, but it's with Inception that Nolan re-achieves artistic greatness. Like Memento, it's a fascinatingly complex story about memory, perception, and the untrustworthiness of our own minds. It's also extremely inventive and entertaining; highly intelligent but not baffling or inaccessible. Like the other great film of the summer, Toy Story 3, it wins points for trying to convey difficult, ambitious themes, and even more points for actually succeeding. Many films try to do a lot less than this and still don't meet their goals.
We learn in the first ten minutes or so that people have developed technology allowing them to get inside your subconscious mind and poke around in your dreams. Ideas can be stolen this way, so it's appealing to governments, militaries, and corporations that want to get a leg up on their competitors.
Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio) and Arthur (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) are "extractors" for a company that undoubtedly charges a great deal of money for their services. It's no easy thing, gaining access to someone when he's asleep, plugging yourself into his brain, and so forth. (Think Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, dealing with dreams rather than memories.) And so far, you can only take a person's existing ideas. You can't plant a brand-new one, i.e., create "inception": the person's subconscious will realize it's being messed with and evict you. Inception is impossible. OR IS IT????
The capital letters and extra question marks may have clued you in to Inception's central plot line. It's a lot like a heist film, except that instead of breaking into a bank, Cobb, Arthur, and their cohorts are breaking into someone's mind. You wouldn't think this would be as dangerous as a bank job -- what's the worst that can happen when you're in a dream and nothing is real? -- but you'd be surprised. Tom Hardy, Ellen Page, and Dileep Rao play members of the team with various areas of expertise; Ken Watanabe is the client who has hired them; and Cillian Murphy is the target.
Nolan, who also wrote the screenplay, lays out the rules of his world deftly. A ton of exposition is needed, yet it never feels like exposition. Things are explained plausibly, and in just enough detail for us to get it -- the last thing Nolan wants to do is over-explain himself. The information is parceled out carefully, not all at once, but not in a way that's maddening or cryptic, either. Again, I marvel at how many films with concepts far simpler than this one never make sense at all, or else only make sense because they repeat themselves clumsily.
The special effects are also noteworthy, in that they are 1) very good, and 2) related to the story. Nothing is done just to show off. (OK, maybe the low-gravity sequence, just a little. But holy crap, it's cool.) Much of the film takes place in various people's subconscious minds, and these dreamscapes are presented like real life, only weirder. The people and objects are familiar; they just behave in unusual ways. Manipulating reality like this can be more exciting than using CGI to create dragons or monsters, and it's more in line with what our real dreams are like anyway.
There is an emotional side to all of this, too. Dreams can be therapeutic, our subconscious minds helping us heal our conscious wounds. DiCaprio's character has grief issues that are at least superficially similar to those of his Shutter Island character. But the film's flaw is that it doesn't have the emotional impact that it ought to. Even though we spend a lot of time in these people's heads -- literally, almost -- there's still a certain detached coldness to it all.
Mind you, the overall excellence is more than enough to compensate for this shortcoming. It's not a deal-breaker -- not for me, not when it's surrounded by such narrative agility and thrilling set pieces and ingenious plotting. I'm eager to see it again as soon as possible. I haven't felt that way about a movie since ... well, it was only Toy Story 3, a month ago. But still!









Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
7-16-2010 @ 3:31AM
Damen Stephens said...
Yeah ... well Chris Nolan's mother has been a fan since BEFORE he was born, AND she has a vagina - I'm afraid you just can't compete ...
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7-16-2010 @ 5:08AM
Ticker said...
And just because it's all so gee-wow cool and "clever," we don't have to worry our pretty little heads over the ethics or legality of what's being done to "the target"? He's got it coming, right...? He deserves to have his brain violated and his company ruined, and all his employees can just find work elsewhere. Oh, and I'm absolutely sure that his board of directors wouldn't have a single solitary thing to say, either.... Try again, Mr. Nolan.
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7-16-2010 @ 9:25AM
Shane said...
Who cares about ethics? It's a movie.
7-16-2010 @ 10:35AM
TeddyKGB said...
When was the last time you saw a heist movie where the parties involved all sat around and frowned about the ethical quandaries involved? Is this Armond White?
It was so much better than my already-high expectations; I can't wait to see it again. Nolan is a god.
7-18-2010 @ 1:37PM
Dorv said...
No, Shane, he's got a point. While I don't agree with it to the point of throwing out an incredibly good movie (Let's not let the "ethics" of Ellen Page's Hard Candy ruin the fact that the movie blows you away with two incredibly difficult performances), this is a film with no good guys.
Hell, it didn't even have anti-heroes. The only pure motivation was Cobb's desire to get back to his kids (Which, including Mal, was the weakest part of the whole movie). Other than that, everything was driven by money.
I have no problem with this, my point is more along the lines that the film was so good, I didn't even notice it until I left the theatre.
7-16-2010 @ 9:29AM
Tim Irwin said...
I also thought Inception is his best work since Memento, which I concur has to be one of the best films of the decade. And it is rather straightforward, rewarding a viewer who has the brain capacity to pay attention. (I wrote a tad about the film here: http://thistooismeaningless.com/2010/07/inception/)
I would disagree with you, however, on the emotional coldness. I thought Cobb's story acted as the emotional core of the film, and was rather moving for me. It's hard to beat a man wanting to see his kids again. However, with the visuals and mind-consuming heist plot, I could understand how one might think Cobb's story doesn't hold its own.
Thanks for the review!
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7-16-2010 @ 11:52AM
andrew said...
Yes! It's finally here! I am soo watching this on the big screen. Memento is one of the best films that came out in the last decade, I became a fan of Nolan after that film and watched every movies he has directed.
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7-16-2010 @ 1:50PM
Cnole said...
I've been a fan since The Following.
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7-16-2010 @ 2:22PM
Ryan said...
I've been a fan since Doodlebug...
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7-16-2010 @ 9:55PM
Breeze said...
Look I thought Inception was a very good film, but I dont think it was nearly as good as his own, The Prestige not Angel Heart or Videodrome which are all similar movies...
Nolan runs in to problems because he's too humble... he makes personal stories with limitations???
What ethics???? you dont really know what's at stake fot Cillian Murphy or 'The Corporation' just like you dont really know anything about Christian Bale and Hugh Jackman's London...
ON THE OTHER HAND
Everyone in the world knows what Alan Parker is talking about when he tackles a deal with the devil...
everyone in the world knows what Cronenberg means when he says the only lasting redemption from sin is to become bigger than one's self and if you dont want to take the path of organized religion then you better jump in wholeheartedly on the side of intellectual independence
DEATH TO VIDEODROME ! LONG LIVE THE NEW FLESH !!!
Those guys really believed in their stories they got the absolute soul of their lead characters Mickey Rourke and James Woods PERFECTLY no flaws cause the passion was right there 100%...
Nolan on the otherhand tells very clever stories... Inception is a story of a guy that coulda been told with the same moral 12 different ways... it just so happens he dreams of an asian corporation vs some other one.. it just so happens he dreams of skiers shooting at him from distance... THAT'S JUST NOT A VERY HUMAN DREAM... automatic weapon fire is not very meaningful to the human psyche... the way the Matrix did it which links it back to the constant very human feelings of helplessness and trying everything humanly or in dreams super humanly possible to elude danger was sooo much more on target than all of the extraneous scenes that Nolan throws in...
Nolan's biggest problem (which is not so big that i dont think he is great, because he is very good) but his stories seem to let the audience in on the storytelling waay too much... The stories dont really believe in themselves
like an Angel Heart, Eternal Sunshine, Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, Unbreakable, etc films that make you believe that the moral is all encompassing...
SPOILER ALERT
in the end... Inception is just a story...
a good one... but if friends are on a plane at the end and happy for a guy that may or may not have gotten his kids back even though they dont really have much of a real life connection to each other unlike the fountain, being john malkovich, etc... that to me is a lot of wasted scenes compared to Videodrome or some other real classics in this genre... I think that Shutter Island was a far better concept film but maybe that proves that Nolan is very talented because Inception is just as entertaining...
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7-16-2010 @ 10:33PM
brosea said...
Just curious, but does anyone who has seen the film, think that there could definitely be an opening for a extended edition of the film? Perhaps in the 3rd act when Cobb goes for Saito?
Just curious if anyone else was feeling that.
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7-16-2010 @ 10:56PM
Phanxine said...
If you just know him from Memento, then you are such a loser compare to us, who watched his movies since Following. And since You didn't mention about that movie at all, I assume you haven't seen Following. Well...we are better than you, is my point.
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7-16-2010 @ 11:58PM
sombra said...
The hallway scene... the premise... this still sounds and looks a lot like Paprika. I haven't seen it yet- did anyone who's seen it notice a similarity?
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7-17-2010 @ 3:46AM
Breeze said...
i would also go as far as to say that Nolan the very polished director not only pays homage repeatedly to films like The Matrix, Angel Heart, Jaccob's Ladder and Videodrome BUT he also winks at Soderbergh type films in to me the best scene of the whole film...
SPOILER ALERT
at the end of the film when Leo wakes up on the plane you can really feel the exhiliration and his personal passion/fear/obsession with getting back home but most importantly the shared experience... the wink to Gordon Levitt, Ellen Page, etc etc
much like the ending poker scene in Ocean's Twelve or the wrap up in the Sting, Basic and typical con movies....
but once again the brilliance of that scene as it is crafted to me also highlights Nolan's repeated limitations... He never goes after an all encompassing script...
see Steven Soderbergh takes you on a joy ride in Ocean's Twelve with a great plot twist that all fits together cause they tell the story of how part of winning the con is always who you know and it's almost a nature vs nurture thing throughout highlighted by the briliiant cameos with Albert Finney, Bruce Willis, etc etc so in the end it makes perfect sense that they would get together and play cards because it reinforces the whole theme of the movie which is some guys just got it! we can wow you with the details of the con (nurture) we can work the con (nurture) but in the end after bagging millions, after setting the world right, we'd get the most joy just conning each other with a round of poker because the real con is that it's all about nature and the winning side already knows who they are... that's the real con... and it's fun and it all pieces together because the concept is bigger than life...
yet when Nolan has these guys wake up on the plane you feel the same exhiliration for a brief moment, you get the story telling with Leo's trip home but i think you also have to feel the limitation of the story itself... which to me is a reoccuring flaw in Nolan's films... i think it's what in my mind makes The Dark Knight his masterpiece still... i think in that movie he breathed life into the relationships between the characters that did approach the larger scope of the great films... which is odd because he was basically recycling ideas, it was a sequel and it's brilliance is in part enhanced by it's blockbuster status...
in contrast, Inception had a lot of characters who werent fully developed with a story that is barely even meaningful to all the characters in the ensemble cast much less my neighbor down the street ...
If you notice early on in the film Leo throws a roll of cash at some kid and tells his guys to split the money, everyone's on their own... but then when they wake up on the plane all this great journey kinda topples on itself because it's not all about the money... it's not all about Leo getting home and everyone just giving their all for that shared purpose because they certainly hadnt developed that kinda group dynamic... in the end there were a few winks but it's just a story.. it's not the worldly story about how some guys just got it... it's not the story about cheating death or classic redemption or something overwhelmingly archetypal that applies to everyone ever... so when he goes through the airport check which to me pays homage to Midnight Express and then gets home for the classic horror/twilight zone ending ... it's impactful and well told, but it's just a story... it's not Jaccob's ladder... it's not Midnight Express it's not even the Matrix which kinda got diluted by the sequels...
it was a fun well crafted movie that didnt mean much... not even as much as The Dark Knight with it's comic origins... oddly enough...
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7-19-2010 @ 12:19AM
bob said...
I think that they were smiling @ Leo on the plane b/c he was their job not the C. Murphy. He kids were in the same spot w/ the same clothes. They got him to let go of his wife.
7-17-2010 @ 8:09PM
Broaden said...
I liked it. It didn't do for me what the Matrix did for me the first time I saw it (With it's "..you've been living in a dream world..", and "..I know kungfu..", and bullet time et. etc.), still easily one of the best films of the year. I do however want to strangle the s#*t out of Mr. Nolan for the very last scene just before the credits, but hey it's cool(No free lunch with that guy.). This will definetly make it on my top 10 all time favorite movies list.. just behind the first Matrix.
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7-20-2010 @ 12:44AM
Louis said...
I agree on the top 10 best movie ever list for "Inception", but I'd put this movie well beyond The Matrix. To tell the truth the previews made me think that this movie was going to be a cross between "DreamScape" and "The Matrix", but when I finally got to the last scene (and actually long before the last scene) I thought that "Inception", at least in terms of writing kind of put "The Matrix" to shame. I loved "Memento" as well and wondered how Chris could ever really top that, but he just proved that he can. What happens when you take an awesome screenwriter and great director and give them all the money they need to do whatever they want? "Inception" is pretty much it, in my book. Oh, and yeah, it's an action movie too...
7-18-2010 @ 3:07PM
Jack2211 said...
It sure felt like exposition to me. I was hoping for even one lame "what if I slowly realize I'm naked while in a costco staffed by every girl who rejected me in high school" joke. Okay, that was my dream last night. But there wasn't a lot of heart in it all.
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7-19-2010 @ 3:03PM
ML said...
Don't worry, I'd only think you were trying to sound like a super-cool hipster if you said you were a fan since Following.
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7-23-2010 @ 4:59AM
Riggald said...
@Broaden
The scene before the titles saved the film for me, back from "tediously overlong" to "at least it had a brilliant ending".
The thing about Nolan is that he's never heard the old showbiz adage "Always leave them wanting more".
I remained thoroughly unengaged from the characters, so as it dragged on and on and on, my brain was about half-filled with "hmmm, I reckon they achieved that effect that way", about a third with "who cares", and maybe about a tenth with "that doesn't even follow the film's own internal logic", and only the rest was following the film.
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