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Inception Review – The Emperor Has No Clothes

If you’re having trouble making sense of Inception, you’re not alone.

Guess what?

Even Inception’s stars are having a hard time understanding the plot.

No kidding, folks.

How much more ridiculous can it get!

Here’s an excerpt from the WSJ’s interview with Tom Berenger, who has a supporting role in the film:

What was your first impression of the story?

I went, whoa. I took my time with it. I didn’t race. But I have to say, after I finished it, if anybody had interrogated me under torture to tell them what exactly the plot was, I’d be hard put.

Did shooting demystify the material?

One time I started laughing on set. The little girl, Ellen [Page], she goes, ‘Wait a minute, is this a dream within a dream?’ I went, ‘oh, yeah, good question.’ I kind of lost it. I talked to one of the other actors and he said, ‘I’ve seen it three times and it takes a couple of times for you to nail it.’
Source: Wall Street Journal, July 15, 2010

Related Comments:
Inception Review – The Emperor Has No Clothes
Christopher Nolan’s Insomnia Review – Delightful

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The emperor marched in the procession under the beautiful canopy, and all who saw him in the street and out of the windows exclaimed: “Indeed, the emperor’s new suit is incomparable! What a long train he has! How well it fits him!”

Nobody wished to let others know he saw nothing, for then he would have been unfit for his office or too stupid. Never emperor’s clothes were more admired.

“But he has nothing on at all,” said a little child at last. “Good heavens! listen to the voice of an innocent child,” said the father, and one whispered to the other what the child had said. “But he has nothing on at all,” cried at last the whole people.
- Hans Christian Andersen in the fairy tale The Emperor’s New Clothes (1837)

Given all the hype and hoopla surrounding Christopher Nolan’s latest film Inception and the hyperbolic praise heaped on the movie, you have to ask yourself what the f*ck is going on here.

Group-think triggered hallucinatory hysteria? Possible.

Insane desire to equate confusion with genius? Certainly possible.

Folks, we just returned from the midnight show of Inception at a theater on the East Coast.

And, here’s our verdict – the wildly over-hyped Inception just does not live up, either, to the stratospheric expectations or the fulsome praise lavished upon it.

Inception Review Sponsored by Air-Savings.com

As the bard would have exclaimed, Much ado about nothing.

Cockamamie Nonsense – Well, Almost
Unlike our Indian film-makers, it’s not every day that you find big-name Hollywood directors trying to pull the wool over the viewers’ eyes.

But for some decent visual effects and Hans Zimmer’s soundtrack, we’d have been readily forthcoming to completely dismiss Inception as a cockamamie flight of fancy.

Alas, those twin saving graces cannot totally salvage the film from the rubble-heap of a gibberish story, self-inflicted damage wrought by the astonishing hubris of director/writer Christopher Nolan of Memento, Insomnia and Dark Knight fame. Continue reading »

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Inception Review – The Emperor Has No Clothes

Over the last decade, so much attention has been focused, first on Memento, then on Batman Begins and finally on Dark Knight that many movie buffs are unaware that in-between the first two movies Christopher Nolan also directed a fine movie called Insomnia.

Hey, some moviegoers are so consumed with Memento and its unusual, non-linear narrative style that they almost come in their undies jetties at the mere mention of this movie.

Here’s what one gushing SI reader ejaculated about Memento recently:

Memento was faaaar better than Insomnia.. so faaar that they can’t be in the same sentence….plot-wise, Memento was better than TDK.. much better

Ha ha ha.

Guess the wifey had to use a double-spoon of Tide to wash off the stains. ;)

Folks, far be it for us to say that Memento is a bad movie because it’s not. Memento is a good movie that deserved the hype and hoopla bestowed on it.

But at the same time let’s not lose sight of the fact Insomnia is a very engaging film too and one that made almost three times the money at the box-office that Memento did (Source: Christopher Nolan’s Filmography on Wiki).

Memento was not every one’s cup of tea but Insomnia certainly seemed so (at least going by the box-office numbers).

Dark Knight
Given the imminent release of Christopher Nolan”s new movie Inception (Leonardo DiCaprio), we’ve been watching/rewatching some of his movies.

Last week, we rewatched Dark Knight on DVD and were swept away by the Joker’s viciousness and his total lack of rules.

As Alfred explains to Batman:

Some men aren’t looking for anything logical, like money. They can’t be bought, bullied, reasoned or negotiated with.

Some men just wanna watch the world burn.

Who having watched Dark Knight can forget the image of the Joker in the nurse’s uniform and the weird gait looking back at the chaos he has wrought in the hospital and pressing a few buttons on the cell-phone brings it all down in a fiery explosion.

Burn baby, burn.

Ah, the stuff of legend.

Insomnia – Sleepless in Alaska
Yesterday, we got a chance to see Nolan’s 2002 film Insomnia (Al Pacino, Hilary Swank and Robin Williams), a movie we hadn’t seen before.

And what a delightful treat Insomnia turned out to be.

Sure, Insomnia doesn’t have the gee whiz narrative tricks of Memento but it amply makes up for its conventional treatment with a gripping story, a fine setting in Port Alberni, British Columbia (standing in for the Alaskan town of Nightmute) and the nonpareil Al Pacino.

And the ever-present tension.

Two Los Angeles cops, the legendary Will Dormer (Al Pacino) and his younger colleague Hap Eckhart (Martin Donavan) arrive in Nightmute, Alaska to assist in the investigation of a 17-year old girl’s brutal murder.

Both cops are already tense and under considerable pressure since they are under investigation back home by their fellow officers for planting evidence in a different case.

There’s also tension between the two cops with Hap making it clear to Will that he intends to cut a deal with the investigators.

Plus the tension of investigating the horrifying murder.

As Will and Hap, along with the local cops, get close to nabbing the murderer, the killer escapes but tragedy strikes when one of the cops is killed in the chase amidst thick fog in the area. Continue reading »

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