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Leonardo DiCaprio in Inception

The Dark Knight's director makes business-class thriller

Inception is a chilling trip into the psyche...of writer-director Christopher Nolan, an Anglo-American action director who shattered the Tomatometer of mass consensus with The Dark Knight.

Dream warriors: Ken Watanabe (top) and Lukas Haas
Warner Bros.
Dream warriors: Ken Watanabe (top) and Lukas Haas

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Inception
directed by Christopher Nolan
area theaters, starts Friday

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Nolan's follow-up offers more muted colors, gift-wrapped themes, and GQ leading men with stockbroker comb-backs over the frowns carved in their brows—indicators of high-minded artistry, all. Leo DiCaprio has every reason to scowl, shackled with a character named "Dom Cobb." Fugitive Cobb is a corporate espionage hired-gun expert at "extraction": lifting secrets out of targets' minds. Drugging them, then joining them for naptime, Cobb can drop in to guest-star in their dreams, and there pick the locks of his marks' subconscious—often represented as an actual safebox, as everything in dreamlife is signified by genre-movie totems. Cobb is planning his "last job before he retires," a mind-cracking with the untested mission of leaving an idea in his mark's head. The target is the heir to a corporate dynasty, Robert Fischer Jr. (Cillian Murphy), who must be persuaded to abdicate his waiting throne. This will be achieved through running amok in his subconscious and prying in the desired suggestion, using Junior's daddy issues as a lever. (Do not linger long over the ethics of mental rape; Nolan doesn't.)

Following caper procedure, Cobb assembles a team: his researcher (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), mimic (Tom Hardy), apothecary (Dileep Rao), and a novice recruit, Ariadne (Ellen Page), the architect who will landscape the dreamworlds that they'll hunt. Tagging along on her debriefing, we get glimpses of Cobb's history, his unresolved anguish over the mysterious end of his marriage, from which spring his personal demons that inconveniently invade other people's dreams in the vengeful form of former wife "Mal" (Marion Cotillard). Cobb also lays down the rules of shared dreaming to us via Ariadne, explaining that "we only use a fraction of our brain's true potential"—a shopworn line that appears almost verbatim in this week's The Sorcerer's Apprentice, though it's a sure bet that only one of those movies will be buried in laurels. As Ariadne learns the ropes, we get teasing flexes of the effects budget, M.C. Escher stairs and Parisian streets folding over themselves like a crêpe. The Hans Zimmer score suggests we shouldn't be gassed on these images so much as, I dunno, respectful?

The introductions to placeholder characters, the taking notes through the tutorial scenes, it's all let's-put-on-a-show buildup to opening night—the heist, the stage for a moviemaker to show his stuff. Cobb slips Fischer Jr. his mickey on a Sydney-to-L.A. flight—it's like an Olivier Assayas business-class thriller, with context scrupulously removed. Nolan has blueprinted a palatial set piece inside Fischer's sleeping mind, an involuted whorl of dream stages leading to deeper dream stages. Team members break off in rear guards, defending one level so the rest can continue on in dreams-within-dreams. Nolan crosscuts between each stage as synchronized alarm clocks tick toward zero, while surface actions send rippling reactions along the chain.

Three set pieces in one! This Neapolitan ice-cream approach is ambitious—and pretty routine when taken apart. Cobb explains his art as "a chance to build cathedrals, entire cities, things that never existed." Those so inclined can follow the script's breadcrumbs and read Inception as a metaphor for the act of artistic creation, with Cobb as director-surrogate—but Cobb/Nolan aren't constructing things that never existed. Fischer Jr. dreams of a car-chase shoot-out in the pouring rain (better done in We Own the Night, where action was wired to character emotion) and a snowblind siege on a brutalist municipal building. The gun-wielding henchmen in Fischer's dreams are indistinct from the ones that earlier chased Cobb through picturesque Third-World streets in what was presumably reality. It's telling when one dream warrior quips, "You mustn't be afraid to dream a little bigger"—and pulls out a grenade launcher.

Like Nolan, the dreamweavers work from their movie memories (the center of Fischer Jr.'s labyrinth is the intersection of Citizen Kane and 2001) and narrative formula. Planning how to get through to Fisher Jr., one conspirator who's obviously attended a few screenwriting seminars offers: "The stronger the issues, the more powerful the catharsis." Inception is a spectacle about creating a spectacle, and Nolan keeps giving behind-the-scenes glimpses—here, he's suggesting how we filter life through storytelling, while intending to use these same dramatic rules to move his audience.

That's the idea, at least. With his inability to let actors occupy a scene together, Nolan couldn't pass Pathos 101, and here he's trying graduate-seminar stuff. The "catharsis" at the center of Inception is based on Cobb's choice: whether to go on permanent vacation with his dream memory of Mal or to return to real life. It's deciding between eternity with a bitchy wraith, presumably sexless, like all of Inception's subconscious, or...that recurring sentimental snapshot memory of his children? Dad Michael Caine, who drifts through the production? Ellen Page, barely considered for romantic-emotional counterbalance? There's no push-pull around Leo's torrid emoting, and when the "We're awake now—or are we?" kicker catches you in the pants, who cares? It's obvious that Nolan either can't articulate or doesn't believe in a distinction between living feelings and dreams—and his barren Inception doesn't capture much of either.

 
  • 06/24/2011 4:13:00 AM

    In ‘The Last Book of Astrology’ which is the greatest book ever on astrology as per us and which some natives do not want to be published as everyone can gain benefit from it, there is a dialogue between a student and the Yogi whose name is Babaji, whose name is featured in our credits list. Babaji gives a chart to the student and asks him to predict when the marriage will happen and how he will go about deducing it.

  • Blip 08/04/2010 12:43:00 PM

    Hey, Elliot, let me see if I understand your puzzle-maze-test for reviewers: "Inception" is supposed to be (note the phrasing: "supposed to be") a thinking-person's movie, but if we do, indeed, think about it and find what we're thinking about not to our liking, instead of just going "OMG!!! CHRISTOPHER NOLAN!!!! 'DARK KNIGHT'!!!! OMG!!!!", then we are bad people, or dumb people, or, for immediate-context purposes, bad reviewers. Was that "layered" enough...? (I can spew out Henry James-knockoff sentences 'til the cows come home.) Oh, and I thought this review was spot-on. "Inception" has plenty of ambition, but it's wilfully obfuscatory (sorry, Elliot: Big Word Alert), its morals are thoroughly lacking (centering your ostensible plot around the violation of an innocent man's thoughts, even if that man is, loosely and at a great stretch-- hell, he seemed like a nice guy to me-- the embodiment of Big Business and, therefore, E-VIL? Ick.), and it has no emotional core. I will now join Nick in the Getting Over Oneself queue. See you at "Machete," everyone.

  • ElliotParkRes 07/21/2010 12:51:00 AM

    I am trying to remember the last time I read a positive review for a mainstream movie on this site. We get it, you are too deep and intelligent to enjoy anything that is played at your local multiplex. If you can actually find the movie to see it or it does not have subtitles it is not worth watching I guess. Get over yourself.

  • Joe 07/19/2010 1:49:00 PM

    So instead of movie reviews you like to write a synopsis that tells the reader almost everything about the movie. Sounds like you failed Criticism 101. Go home, you're fired.

  • Ray Butlers 07/14/2010 9:40:00 PM

    Joseph Banegas- "Anglo" refers to his nationality, not his race. He is both English (Anglo) and American.

  • T-Paz 07/14/2010 11:14:00 AM

    Inception still isn't the full economic recovery.

  • Joseph Banegas 07/14/2010 10:45:00 AM

    any particular reason why the director has to be referred to as: "Anglo-American" why is skin color important?

 

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