Saturday, July 17, 2010

Inception - The IMAX Experience Review

Rated PG-13 (Sequences of Violence and Action Throughout)

Running Time: 2 Hours & 28 Minutes

Cast-
Leonardo DiCaprio-Dom Cobb
Joseph Gordon-Levitt-Arthur
Ellen Page-Ariadne
Tom Hardy-Eames
Ken Watanabe-Saito
Cillian Murphy-Robert Fischer Jr.
Marion Cotillard-Mallorie 'Mal' Cobb
Dileep Rao-Yusuf
Michael Caine-Miles
Tom Berenger-Peter Browning
Pete Postlethwaite-Maurice Fischer
Lukas Haas-Nash
Tai-Li Lee-Tadashi

Directed by Christopher Nolan

One of the finest action scenes ever committed to film.
‘There's one thing you should know about me. I specialize in a very specific type of security…subconscious security.’ With the exception of a handful of films, many of this summer’s releases have either been forgettable or outright disappointments. Now, Christopher Nolan unleashes his sci-fi thriller “Inception” and it is nothing short of a mind-blowing cinematic experience. His usual trademarks—which include non-linear storytelling and psychological themes—have come to define the British auteur's work, making him one of the most acclaimed filmmakers of our time. 1996’s “Following” was his feature debut but it wasn’t until the cult hit “Memento” in 2000 that he started gaining fame. Since then he’s proved unstoppable. 2008's “The Dark Knight” was pretty much guaranteed to make big bucks at the worldwide box office yet no one could have predicted the impact it would have on the superhero genre. Nolan’s latest requires two things that are sorely lacking in today’s audience: attention and the willingness to actually think. This is the only way that you will understand the film but even then you still won’t grasp all the nuances, at least not on a first viewing. Is it too smart for the mainstream viewer? No, absolutely not and for the most part this is the director’s most linear work by far. Despite the copious amounts of action scenes, Nolan is not here to provide mere entertainment. He wants us to discuss and analyze everything about his film and I have no doubt in my mind that after the end credits roll, people will dissect every scene for years to come. In creating a wildly original and difficult idea, he has exceeded all of our expectations.

In the near future, a new type of corporate espionage has emerged where people skilled in the art of 'extraction' invade the dreams of the rich and powerful in order to steal their secrets and sell them to the highest bidder. The best is Dom Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his point man, Arthur (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) but after a botched extraction inside the mind of Japanese businessman Saito (Ken Watanabe), they are forced to go on the run. Unfortunately, Saito confronts them and reveals the he knew what they were trying to do as it was all an audition for a special job he had in mind. He wants Cobb to perform an 'inception' where he will plant an idea into the mind of Robert Fischer Jr. (Cillian Murphy), the son of a late corporate rival. If the job is a success, Saito will pull some strings to allow Cobb to return home to his children in the United States. Although an inception is believed to be impossible, Cobb is adamant that he can do it because he has done it before. With Arthur, he gathers a team that includes Ariadne (Ellen Page), the architect that will construct the world of the dream, Eames (Tom Hardy), a forger that can assume any identity within a dream, and Yusuf (Dileep Rao), a chemist who will produce a powerful enough compound that will allow the team to go deep enough into the subconscious to plant the idea. However, Cobb is haunted by images of his deceased wife, Mallorie (Marion Cotillard), which puts extreme risk on both the mission and the team.

“Inception” is incredibly difficult to describe in words but in rough, simple terms it boils down to being a heist film. The first half establishes the rules of the dream-world and our anchor is Ariadne. Anything is possible in constructing the dream, where the laws of reality and physics can be subverted. However, the more you manipulate the dream, the more that person’s 'projections'—physical representations of the subconscious—notice and try to drive you out, much as a white blood cell drives out foreign objects in your body. Dying in the dream merely wakes a person up but as you go deeper into the mind, death ends up trapping you in some sort of limbo, a state where you can no longer discern what is and what isn’t real. Escape is only possible through sheer willpower. In order to keep a person in touch with reality, he or she will hold a personal ‘totem’ that serves as a reminder that what they are seeing in the mind is not real. To escape from the dream, you need a ‘kick’ which is a stimulus that ranges from a simple smack to the face to falling into a tub of cold water (or a rain drenched river). What happens outside of the dream is manifested in logical ways such as falling through the air produces a weightless environment. While all this is told to the viewer, it never feels as if Nolan is pandering to the lowest common denominator and you do have to use that brain of yours to grasp what is being shown, especially when there are dreams-within-dreams all interacting with each other. Aspects of time and reality are also explored as mere hours in the real world can span decades in the subconscious.

While all this can feel like a bunch of psychological mumbo-jumbo, Nolan knows that the subconscious often harbors guilt or regret and this provides the necessary emotional depth that allows the viewer to identify what Cobb is going through. Due to an unknown tragedy that the story slowly reveals, his wife Mallorie took her own life and Cobb feels responsible. In a shared dream-state, the character's guilt uncontrollably manifests as his two children (always without their faces revealed) or his wife, who is locked away in a prison deep in his mind, but sometimes escapes to disrupt and kill anyone shared in her husband’s subconscious. Perhaps the scene that will invite the most intense scrutiny is the ending, which is left ambiguous to the viewer. I won’t reveal what happens but it might leave some viewers dissatisfied with the lack of proper closure. Still, not everything needs to have a definitive ending in a pretty bowtie as some stories just work better it leaves something to the imagination.

Always impressive is the cast that Nolan manages to bring together for his films and he has assembled an excellent team of thespians. It’s amazing how Leonardo DiCaprio has grown from being just another pretty face to one of the most serious actors working today. As Dom Cobb, the conflict his character must resolve is similar to Teddy Daniels from Martin Scorsese's “Shutter Island.” Dom bears the full weight of his guilt like Atlas holds up the heavens but he is unwilling to come to terms and face it. To succeed in the job and see his children again, he has to confront why he did what he did in order to move on. The rest of the cast deliver strong performances, even if their roles aren’t as developed beyond their functions in the story. Joseph Gordon-Levitt is the point man, Arthur, who shares a friendly rivalry with the suave Eames, played by Tom Hardy. You may recognize him as Praetor Shinzon from 2002's “Star Trek: Nemesis.” Ellen Page serves as our window to how the dream-world operates as college student Ariadne. Cillian Murphy's role as Robert Fisher Jr. provides one of the film's clever twists, where Cobb’s team uses the strained relationship the character shares with his father to fake his epiphany. Cobb’s deceased wife Mallorie is played by Marion Cotillard, who is obsessed with trying to keep her husband trapped in limbo for reasons unknown. Ken Watanabe is Saito, a greedy captain of industry who's out to ruin another man’s life. Playing small roles are Michael Caine as Miles, Cobb’s former mentor, and Tom Berenger as Robert’s godfather, Peter Browning.

The action in “Inception” can best be described as bearing a similarity to “The Matrix.” The mind can apparently be trained to mentally fight off invaders, which is manifested as gun-toting mercenaries. There’s an intense car chase through a rain drenched street that continues throughout the film but the highlight is by far the heavily-advertised zero gravity fight between Arthur and Fisher’s projections. By the end, Nolan is juggling four concurrent dream-states: the car chase, Arthur in the hotel, the large shootout at a snowy base at the top of a mountain, and the apocalyptic limbo that Cobb’s wife inhabits. Any other director would’ve botched it but all of it comes together and feels in sync—like a symphony. The use of CG is kept to an absolute minimum while Hans Zimmer delivers with another excellent score.

“Inception” was released on July 16, 2010 in conventional and IMAX theaters. Reception has been positive with 86% on Rotten Tomatoes. Barring a few contrarians (like Armond White), critics called it ‘smart, innovative and thrilling…that rare summer blockbuster that succeeds viscerally as well as intellectually.’ In his review, Roger Ebert writes that ‘the movies often seem to come from the recycling bin these days: sequels, remakes, franchises. Inception does a difficult thing. It is wholly original, cut from new cloth, and yet structured with action movie basics so it feels like it makes more sense than (quite possibly) it does.’ Christopher Nolan loves making films and the reason why people love him is because he engages the audience in an intelligent manner while his detractors just fumble around struggling to grasp his concepts. He is not here to provide just entertainment but to make you think and this is why I watch movies, because it is not enough to just throw millions of dollars at a bunch of CG effects. A film should make you dissect what the director is trying to convey. That’s not to say that there’s no place for mindless flicks but there’s a reason why a feature like “Inception” is critically acclaimed. With that in mind, run and go see “Inception” because I doubt anyone would come as close to exploring dreams the way Christopher Nolan has. With Hollywood plagued by unoriginality and obsessed with making a profit, this is the only man left who is willing to take the risks necessary to tell an engaging story.

Final Rating: 5 out of 5

"Dreams feel real while we're in them. It's only when we wake up that we realize something was actually strange."