Monday, July 19, 2010

Inception

Whew! What a ride! This 2-1/2 hour film flew by, and though the plot and action can seem (and sound) complicated, if you really pay attention - not hard to do - it all hangs together and can be followed without confusion. The story takes place in a future where people can be put to sleep and hooked up in some bizarre way so that they share dreams. And the main character in the film has perfected a system where he and a group of fellow operators use this method to extract information from someone's mind, a form of corporate espionage; not only that, he also claims to a potential "employer" to be able to plant an idea into someone's mind in such a way that that person believes it's his own idea. So the film follows them as they attempt to carry this out. And yes, there are lots of action scenes: things blowing up, impossible gun battles, but because they're taking place in a dream with no attempt to make them seem possible, they didn't bore or bother me the way these kinds of scenes in traditional action movies usually do. As well as the story itself, it's about dreams and reality, what's real and what isn't, how can you tell the difference. These questions are somewhat similar to what's presented in the wonderful 2001 Richard Linklater film Waking Life, though Inception doesn't have the philosophical/spiritual feel of that one. Rather, this one has a much more cerebral feel, and so the pleasure and admiration I experienced were intellectual rather than emotional, and as well, I have great appreciation for Christopher Nolan's skill as a director. He has definitely lived up to my enjoyment of his previous films Memento and The Prestige. He also has directed two of the Batman films, most famously The Dark Knight. Though the only character that brought out some emotional or heartfelt connection was the main character's wife, played by Marion Cotillard, I still felt this was an excellent film.

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