Inception movie review, video trailer and synopsis, Visionary filmmaker Christopher Nolan (Memento, The Dark Knight) writes and directs this psychological sci-fi action film about a thief who possesses the power to enter into the dreams of others. Dom Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio) doesn’t steal things, he steals ideas. By projecting himself deep into the subconscious of his targets, he can glean information that even the best computer hackers can’t get to. In the world of corporate espionage, Cobb is the ultimate weapon. But even weapons have their weakness, and when Cobb loses everything, he’s forced to embark on one final mission in a desperate quest for redemption. This time, Cobb won’t be harvesting an idea, but sowing one. Should he and his team of specialists succeed, they will have discovered a new frontier in the art of psychic espionage. They’ve planned everything to perfection, and they have all the tools to get the job done. Their mission is complicated, however, by the sudden appearance of a malevolent foe that seems to know exactly what they’re up to, and precisely how to stop them.
Inception movie review 2010
Sometimes the first adjective spoken in a movie speaks volumes. The first one you hear in the new thriller “Inception” is “delirious,” describing the psychological state of a man, played by Leonardo DiCaprio, who has washed up (or awakened) on a beach and is brought into the home of a wealthy man he has known in other circumstances, somewhere in time.
“Delirious” describes the movie as well, which assuredly offers audiences sights heretofore unseen. Despite riffs on everything from “2001: A Space Odyssey” to “Blade Runner” to “Strange Days” to “The Matrix,” the best of this elegant brain-bender — a heist picture with a frame designed by Salvador Dali and M.C. Escher — affirms the prodigious imagination and clout of writer-director Christopher Nolan, whose previous film, “The Dark Knight,” made a billion, putting him into a position where such a dreamscape could be attempted.
Like any commercial enterprise exploring more than one level of reality, this one oscillates between willful disorientation and catch-up explanation. DiCaprio’s character, Dom Cobb, works as an “extraction” expert, able to enter someone’s subconscious and purloin valuable information for a fee. (He’s the Carnac the Magnificent of corporate espionage, albeit working with more electronics and pharmaceuticals.) Ken Watanabe’s impossibly rich industrialist hires Cobb not to extract but to implant an idea in the brain of a rival businessman ( Cillian Murphy). If this idea to break up his family company succeeds, Watanabe’s empire expands, and Cobb — an international fugitive, sought by extradition authorities — can go home to America and his beloved kids.
Inception Movie Trailer
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