Oakland Raider
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Drunk? It is a very stupid movie pretending to be intelligent.
Jut cause you said I was drunk & my review was bad I am removing two points.
it's now a 4/10 movie instead of 6/10.

Disagree on the sequel bit. Nolan doesn't strike me as the type to do a sequel "just because". Only sequel he's done was The Dark Knight, and he HAD to do that one.I saw Inception today (had the day off) at a VMAX session.
The movie didn't confuse me at all, although it didn't really "blow me away" either.
I think the concept was genius, but that the final result just lacks a little bit of polish.
Overall the pace of the movie was very good, there wasn't a scene where I thought "hurry up", but it still didn't grab me the way some great movies do.
It's hard to explain why I didn't love it, maybe it was the Ellen Page casting, which to me was bordering on ridiculous and unbelievable, or maybe because you always knew there wasn't going to be a real final conclusion to the film.
I'd watch it again, but will probably wait for DVD/Blu-Ray release.
I can smell a sequel though, especially as it has been so successful, but I hope they leave it where it is, a sequel wouldn't have anything "new" to really tell us or explore that this film didn't.
I'd give the film 7.5/10, great concept, just lacking a little bit in execution and some casting choices.
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Definately worth seeing, but not perfect.
One thing I wasn't sure about was <spolier>....
how the 'other people' got into the dream and acted according to the plan.
Two examples:
Browning (Fischer's sidekick). How did he get into the dream and why was he playing along with the kidnap sting? When they ungagged him at the hotel he made the false confession to Fischer.
Fischer Senior, the dieing father. On his death bed he uttered "disappointed... you tried". The "you tried" bit was inserted so Fischer would feel that his dad was actually proud of him as a person but didn't want him to sustain the empire. In reality the father thought his son was just an unworthy person, which obviously p***ed him off (the son). So again, who was this dad in the dream and how were his strings pulled by the other guys?
That wasn't Browning. It was Eames. He's "The Forger". He pretends to be other people in "The Mark"'s dreams to get them trusting him
What about the father though? I recall Eames standing at the door when Fischer Jr was leaning in to hear what his father was saying, so he wasn't taking a different form then. Had they manipulated his dreams enough to make his sub-conscious create this altered projection of his dying father.
That wasn't Browning. It was Eames. He's "The Forger". He pretends to be other people in "The Mark"'s dreams to get them trusting him
OK, this was a visual masterpiece but an at times mess conceptually. I think it could either have been culled by about 30 minutes or flesh out a few characters more, especially Gordon-Levitt's.
There is one thing that is bugging me and if I don't ask this question (and I know I am risking looking rather foolish) I will not get it out of my head, butis this whole movie a figment of Cobb's (Di Caprio) imagination? The final shot of the spinny thing not falling down (or was it about to when they cut) leads me to believe that the entire thing was a dream. Am I wrong?
HTR >Thanks, I just read that on another review, I must have missed it in the film. So he was like one of the Super Heroes with his special skill, a bit too convenient that but I'll accept it.
Still leaves the dad but it won't kill me if there isn't an obvious explanation - it's that kind of movie.
Highlight> Because the asian guy died in the snow level (3rd) and went to limbo. Dicaprio's character dies in the 4th level and goes into limbo. As the different levels work on different timelines, it meant that the asian guy had been in limbo alot longer than dicaprio, hence the different aging. >
p.s. I thought having Murphy find the
'wind-sail toy' in the safe was a brilliant addition. Part of the reason I'd label this as a great 'thinking' film
(no spoilers below)
I wasn't sure about it before and just did some reading. I still don't get why it would rate as requiring much thinking to get it's significance, so I might be missing something.
What's your take on it?
Agreed also.Reveal to highlight<<<<<<<<Joseph Gordon-Levitt