Author Topic: Christopher Nolan’s Inception: the Man Behind the Dreamscape  (Read 57858 times)

Offline Aloysius J. Gleek

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http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/04/movies/04inception.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all


Film
The Man Behind the Dreamscape


In Christopher Nolan’s new film, “Inception,” Leonardo DiCaprio stars as an “extractor” who
can participate in and shape the dreams of others.




The director Christopher Nolan.


By DAVE ITZKOFF
Published: June 30, 2010


LOS ANGELES

NEARLY everything in Christopher Nolan’s world is more than it appears to be. In his hands his 2000 feature “Memento” became not only a taut thriller with a catchy psychological gimmick but also a calling card to a career of cinematic independence.

His most recent film, “The Dark Knight,” was not just a big-budget summer movie about a vigilante in a bat costume, but also a meditation on heroism and terrorism. Even the deceptively quaint home he keeps on an unassuming block in Hollywood has a dual identity: it doubles as his residence and the bunker where he has been finishing his first film since “The Dark Knight,” which in 2008 earned the all-time highest domestic gross for a motion picture not made by James Cameron.

Yet for all the fanfare that will accompany Mr. Nolan’s new film, “Inception,” when Warner Brothers releases it on July 16, most of its intended viewers will know almost nothing about it. At Mr. Nolan’s preference, trailers for “Inception” have shown little more than snippets of its star, Leonardo DiCaprio, and a nattily attired supporting cast in slow-motion action sequences. Intensifying the fantastical quality of these disconnected moments and their vaguely modern settings is the revelation that they are taking place inside a dream.

With these few bread crumbs Mr. Nolan and his studio are confident that their opaque and costly film will lure large crowds. They are betting that moviegoers have come to regard Mr. Nolan as a director who combines intimate emotions with outsize imagination and seemingly limitless resources — a blockbuster auteur who has made bigness his medium.

“When somebody’s spent years making a film and spent massive amounts of money — crazy amounts of money, really, that get spent on these huge films — then you want to see something extremely ambitious in every sense,” Mr. Nolan, 39, said a few weeks ago, sitting outside the garage that is now his editing suite.

“Of course,” he added with a dry chuckle, “there are all kinds of extremely ambitious failures as well.”

In “Inception” Mr. DiCaprio plays Cobb, the leader of a group of “extractors”: people who are able to participate in and shape the dreams of others. With these skills, extractors can teach clients how to safeguard secrets locked away in their subconscious, or how to steal them from unfortified minds. Presented with the inverse challenge of implanting an idea in someone’s head, Cobb assembles his team (including Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Ellen Page) and designs an intricate mind heist that leads them through layers of dreams within dreams, and to a mysterious woman (Marion Cotillard) from Cobb’s past.

Creating the film’s multiple valences of reality took seven months of principal photography in six cities — Tokyo; Carlington, England; Paris; Tangier, Morocco; Los Angeles; and Calgary, Alberta, at an estimated cost of $160 million.

For Mr. Nolan, a tall, well-mannered man who was raised in London and Chicago and who ritualistically dresses in an overcoat and dress shirts even on warm spring days, those statistics are humbling but necessary. “What I found is, it’s not possible to execute this concept in a small fashion,” he said, sipping tea at a picnic table in his backyard.

“As soon as you’re talking about dreams,” he added, “the potential of the human mind is infinite. It has to feel like you could go absolutely anywhere by the end of the film. And it has to work on a massive scale.”

With “Memento,” his independent film noir about a man (Guy Pearce) seeking an assailant who has robbed him of his short-term memory, Mr. Nolan capably demonstrated he could make compelling movies at smaller scales.


The 2000 independent thriller "Memento" with Guy Pearce.


But the experience of its release taught him a lesson about overnight success in Hollywood. Despite critical acclaim “Memento” was passed over by several American studios and, in an unusual move, was distributed domestically by the company that financed it.

“It was like riding a bike into a sand pit at full speed,” said Jonathan Nolan, the director’s brother, who wrote the short story from which “Memento” was adapted. “We thought we’ve got this place figured out completely, and then we had to rebuild.”

Having yearned from an early age to make big, sweeping films in the mode of directors like Ridley Scott and Michael Mann, Mr. Nolan became more committed to his elusive goal and cognizant of how rare these opportunities would be.

“He’s always wanted to make these things really, really well,” Jonathan Nolan said of his brother. “Now the level of the audience’s scrutiny has roughly reached parity with his own scrutiny of what he’s doing.”


The 2008 blockbuster "Dark Knight" with Christian Bale.


Those expectations have been inflated by Christopher Nolan’s intricately woven thrillers “Insomnia” and “The Prestige,” but mostly by the runaway success of his superhero films “Batman Begins” and “The Dark Knight,” which earned more than $1 billion worldwide and a posthumous Academy Award for its co-star Heath Ledger. Figuring out how to follow that film, Mr. Nolan said, “could be paralyzing if you chose to take credit for the success rather than understanding that when you catch the zeitgeist in that way, that’s a very unique thing.” And, he added, “not possible to explain.”

Instead, after a monthlong vacation in Florida, he returned to the “Inception” screenplay he began almost a decade ago.

Though dreams have always been a staple of cinema, Mr. Nolan said that movies too often treat them like “a little TV program that we watch when we’re asleep.”

The crucial breakthrough to completing his “Inception” script was considering what could happen if multiple people could share the same dream. “Once you remove the privacy,” Mr. Nolan said, “you’ve created an infinite number of alternative universes in which people can meaningfully interact, with validity, with weight, with dramatic consequences.”

Warner Brothers, which has released all of Mr. Nolan’s films since “Insomnia” in 2002, had little hesitation committing to the enormous production he envisioned, knowing those details — and his involvement — would attract audiences.

“It’s being sold on the scale of the movie, the idea of the movie, the cast, the visuals,” said Jeff Robinov, president of the studio’s motion-picture group. “But Chris brings a lot to the party. There’s a big expectation around what his next movie’s going to be.”

For the “Inception” cast, the intricate screenplay Mr. Nolan wrote was tantalizing but occasionally perplexing. “It was a very well written, comprehensive script,” Mr. DiCaprio said, “but you really had to have Chris in person, to try to articulate some of the things that have been swirling around his head for the last eight years.”

During filming, Mr. DiCaprio said, it was sometimes necessary to set aside questions about how, say, an M. C. Escher-like cityscape would assemble itself or explode around him, and trust that Mr. Nolan would deliver on such promises.

“We get the basic gist of that,” Mr. DiCaprio said. “We see that it’s safe and we go do our work, and around us, you know, Paris disintegrates.”

Mr. Gordon-Levitt faced a singular set of challenges on the film, training for weeks to shoot a long zero-gravity sequence that evokes both the Fred Astaire musical “Royal Wedding” and “2001: A Space Odyssey.” He said the extra exertion was a small price to pay for helping Mr. Nolan realize his vision. “It’s just not that common that someone as creatively inspired as Chris just gets carte blanche to do whatever the hell he wants,” he said. “Anything he can think of — anything — he got to do it.”

In discussing “Inception,” Mr. Nolan occasionally became bogged down in long asides as he explained the intricate rules he devised for its dream world. (“I promise you, it’s not confusing in the film,” he said after unpacking one particularly Byzantine detail.) But he made no apologies for its ambiguous promotional campaign.

“It’s really, at its core, a big action heist movie, and it’s a movie that doesn’t try to bamboozle the audience continuously,” he said. Given the complexity of its universe, “it’s a lot harder to just put out a two-and-a-half-minute trailer, and everyone goes, ‘Oh, yeah, I know what that is.’ ”

Mr. Nolan took encouragement from the tradition of hit fantasy movies, from “Star Wars” to the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy, that hinted at vaster realities than the films could fully detail. In particular, he said, the 1999 mind bender “The Matrix” showed how a mass audience could embrace “a massively complex philosophical concept in some sense.”

Even the nightmare of a commercial failure for “Inception” seems unlikely to derail Mr. Nolan’s plans. He is set to direct a third Batman movie planned for 2012, and will produce a new film featuring that other sacred DC Comics hero, Superman.

Beyond that, “he’s a one-project-at-a-time person,” Mr. Robinov of Warner Brothers said. “He’s not under any contract to us, never mind an exclusive one.”

In the short term Mr. Nolan is looking forward to watching more movies by other directors, a pastime he has trouble enjoying while working on his own projects. Having been affectionately accused of ripping off elements of “Inception” from “Last Year at Marienbad,” Alain Resnais’s classic work of New Wave surrealism, Mr. Nolan said he watched that film for the first time only recently. When he also noticed some unintentional parallels, it prompted a bit of self-analysis.

“Basically what it means is, I’m ripping off the movies that ripped off ‘Last Year at Marienbad,’ ” Mr. Nolan said. Both films explore the relationship between dreams and memory, and seemingly impossible physical settings are crucial to the spells they cast — though one detail distinguished the two, he said: “We have way more explosions.”
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Offline Aloysius J. Gleek

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Re: Christopher Nolan’s Inception: the Man Behind the Dreamscape
« Reply #1 on: July 04, 2010, 02:21:27 pm »


http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/07/04/movies/20100704-inceptioninfluences-feature.html



Published: June 30, 2010
The Influences of 'Inception'

As a cinema enthusiast who grew up enamored of directors from Nicholas Roeg to George Lucas, Christopher Nolan said, “I’m mindful of the great filmmakers I carry with me.” That mélange of influences manifests itself in many ways in “Inception.” But as with any dream, who’s to say exactly where it came from? “Who knows?” Mr. Nolan said. “These things aren’t always conscious. Sometimes these things are suggested to you, and afterwards you go: ‘Oh, yeah. Maybe he’s got a point.’ I try not to be conscious in my influences. I try and just do what feels right.” Here, at least, are a few of the filmmakers he knowingly drew upon for “Inception.”
DAVE ITZKOFF


"Tu doives entendre je t'aime."
(and you know who I am...)


Cowboy Curtis (Laurence Fishburne)
and Pee-wee in the 1990 episode
"Camping Out"

Offline Marina

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Re: Christopher Nolan’s Inception: the Man Behind the Dreamscape
« Reply #2 on: July 05, 2010, 09:39:14 am »
Thanks for posting - so looking forward to this!  :)
“Only within the moment of time represented by the present century has one species -- man -- acquired significant power to alter the nature of his world.”
~Rachel Carson~

~Looking back on it, they both realized it was the best thing they ever had.~  - A Mother's Love

Offline Aloysius J. Gleek

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Re: Christopher Nolan’s Inception: the Man Behind the Dreamscape
« Reply #3 on: July 12, 2010, 10:31:13 am »



And the first review in the pipeline is....a clunker! Ooops. Maybe Edelstein had indigestion?

I still  want to see it.



http://nymag.com/movies/reviews/67155/

The Movie Review
Dream a Little Dream
Awakening to the leaden reality of Christopher Nolan’s Inception.
By David Edelstein
Published Jul 11, 2010




With its dreams, dreams within dreams, and dreams within dreams within dreams, Christopher Nolan’s Inception  manages to be clunky and confusing on four separate levels of reality—while out here, in this even more perplexing dream we call “life,” it’s being hailed as a masterpiece on the order of 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Slap! Wake up, people! Shalalala! Slap!

Leonardo DiCaprio plays Dom Cobb (the name sounds like it should evoke something—but what? Dummkopf?), who specializes in plunging into people’s “subconscious” minds while they sleep and extracting their corporate secrets. (I’m with Freud in preferring “unconscious.”) But his new client, Saito (Ken Watanabe), wants the impossible: for Cobb not to steal an idea but to plant one in a business rival’s head.

Why is an “inception” more difficult than an extraction? “The subject’s mind always knows the genesis of an idea,” explains one character—which strikes my unoriginal and highly suggestible mind as dead wrong. But that’s the premise, anyway. Cobb accepts the job because he longs to see his two little kids in the U.S. and is forbidden to return on account of a Crime to Be Revealed Later; and Saito says that with one phone call he can make the legal problems go away. (He just can.) Then Saito says what in this kind of thriller are magic words: “Assemble your team.”

A team of colorful specialists! Cool! So it’s, like, Mission: Impossible  in the Dreamscape-Matrix!  Cobb’s point man is Arthur, played by Joseph Gordon-Levitt, who also evokes The Matrix:  He looks like Keanu Reeves’s runty little brother. Eames (Tom Hardy) is the “forger,” who can impersonate people in dreams without those dumb M:I rubber masks. The chemist, Yusuf (Dileep Rao), will create the badass sedatives that will hold the fragile three-dream edifice together. The brilliant architecture student Ariadne (Ellen Page) has two functions: dreamworld designer and exposition magnet. She’s a newbie, so Cobb has to explain to her how the science works. It takes a lot of explaining.

Nolan, who wrote the script, thinks like a mechanical engineer, and even when you can’t follow what’s happening, you can admire in theory the multiple, synchronized narrative arcs and cute little rules for jumping around among different flights of consciousness. He has two fresh ideas. In a dream, you can fall asleep and have another dream, in which you can fall asleep and have another dream—except time works differently at different depths. A minute up top might be, say, ten minutes in the dream, an hour in the dream within a dream, and, below that, years. Although the different levels look the same (too bad), the gimmick allows Nolan to have three clocks ticking down instead of one, and the editor, Lee Smith, has cut among them in ways so ostentatious that he’s all but sewn up this year’s editing Oscar.

The other neat touch is the Freudian monster femme who keeps popping up: Cobb’s wife, Mal (Marion Cotillard), who emerges from his own unconscious (even in other people’s dreams) to sabotage his schemes. Cotillard is clock-stoppingly gorgeous and has a great first scene. She surveys the debris raining down with glittering eyes, laughing in delight. But after that, the tone of her appearances is funereal. Mal is the key to the mysterious tragedy that eats away at Cobb. Up top, in the waking world, Ariadne worries to Arthur: “Cobb has some serious problems that he has buried down there”—the sort of thing Tattoo would say to Mr. Roarke, who would nod and reply, “Well, on Fantasy Island, he will have a chance to confront them.”

Actually, Ariadne herself says, later, “You’re going to have to forgive yourself and confront her”—an empty line and the only kind Page gets. Gordon-Levitt doesn’t have much livelier material, but he does fight a bad guy in a zero-gravity corridor and tie together a group of sleeping people with cords, then float the human assemblage into an elevator. (I had no clue what he was doing, but it’s one of the few wittily irrational images.) Hardy starts amusingly, talking tactics for taking down “the mark” in the language of an empathetic therapist, but then turns as grim as everyone else. As that mark, a mogul’s unloved son, Cillian Murphy is so preternaturally sensitive you’re not sure what to think about what’s being done to him. You can’t tell from DiCaprio, who wears the same haunted face throughout. He’s excellent—he usually is. But he’s weighing himself down with guilt-trip roles.

Inception is full of brontosaurean effects, like the city that folds over on top of itself, but the tone is so solemn I felt out of line even cracking a smile. It lacks the nimbleness of Spielberg’s Minority Report  or the Jungian-carnival bravado of Joseph Ruben’s Dreamscape  or the eerily clean lines and stylized black-suited baddies of The Matrix—or, for that matter, the off-kilter intensity of Nolan’s own Insomnia.  The attackers in Inception  are anonymous, the tone flat and impersonal. Nolan is too literal-minded, too caught up in ticktock logistics, to make a great, untethered dream movie.

For the record, I wanted to surrender to this dream; I didn’t want to be out in the cold, alone. But I truly have no idea what so many people are raving about. It’s as if someone went into their heads while they were sleeping and planted the idea that Inception is a visionary masterpiece and—hold on … Whoa! I think I get it. The movie is a metaphor for the power of delusional hype—a metaphor for itself.
"Tu doives entendre je t'aime."
(and you know who I am...)


Cowboy Curtis (Laurence Fishburne)
and Pee-wee in the 1990 episode
"Camping Out"

Offline Marina

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Re: Christopher Nolan’s Inception: the Man Behind the Dreamscape
« Reply #4 on: July 12, 2010, 10:40:22 am »
:)  Me too!   I'm loving the names of the characters - an evil character simply called "Mal".   Fantastic! 
“Only within the moment of time represented by the present century has one species -- man -- acquired significant power to alter the nature of his world.”
~Rachel Carson~

~Looking back on it, they both realized it was the best thing they ever had.~  - A Mother's Love

Offline southendmd

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Re: Christopher Nolan’s Inception: the Man Behind the Dreamscape
« Reply #5 on: July 28, 2010, 10:44:28 pm »
Just got back from seeing this tonight, mostly to escape the oppressive heat.  I found more oppressiveness.

No spoilers here.

Like most of Nolan's work, it left me cold.  I was expecting imagination--it is about dreams, after all.  Instead, endlessly silly rules and explanations.  The film is a slave to its own dull logic, not to mention simplistic psychology.

There were a few pleasures, however.  Joseph Gordon-Levitt did indeed remind me of Fred Astaire in the anti-gravity scene. 

A small, delightful detail:  Ellen Page fashions a chess piece as a "totem".   This sadly reminded me that Heath might well have cast her in "The Queen's Gambit", had he lived to direct it. 

I'm not a Leo fan, and this performance did nothing to change my mind. 

A guilty pleasure:  Tom Hardy is damned  cute, with lips that I'll dream about.


Offline Kelda

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Re: Christopher Nolan’s Inception: the Man Behind the Dreamscape
« Reply #6 on: July 29, 2010, 04:04:19 am »
I quite liked it although I'm not sure I understood it completely.

I think its definitely a film for the big screen with all the very clever CGI stuff.

Paul... I thought of Heath and the film when she used a chess piece too...  :-\

And yes..... JGL - I can totally see the Fred Astaire thing!

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Offline Penthesilea

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Re: Christopher Nolan’s Inception: the Man Behind the Dreamscape
« Reply #7 on: July 29, 2010, 04:50:15 am »





Am I the only one who thinks LDC and Nolan totally look alike?

Offline southendmd

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Re: Christopher Nolan’s Inception: the Man Behind the Dreamscape
« Reply #8 on: July 29, 2010, 07:00:28 am »
Here's a short clip of Fred Astaire from "Royal Wedding" (1951):

[youtube=425,350]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DDLfOz9hmQY[/youtube]

Offline Front-Ranger

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Re: Christopher Nolan’s Inception: the Man Behind the Dreamscape
« Reply #9 on: July 29, 2010, 09:15:57 am »
There is certainly a resemblance, Chrissi! But LDC's features are arranged more interestingly. Thanks for the review, friend Paul. Maybe seeing this film will awaken an urge in some people to go back and watch films where the dreaming concept (and the idea of getting into another's head) is explored more creatively with more imagination and style. The Peter Pan stories, Spielberg's AI, and...and...The Imaginarium, of course!!
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Offline serious crayons

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Re: Christopher Nolan’s Inception: the Man Behind the Dreamscape
« Reply #10 on: July 29, 2010, 09:31:06 am »
Am I the only one who thinks LDC and Nolan totally look alike?

No, I've thought the same thing! And I have wondered if that was part of why Nolan cast him, just as Robert Redford cast Brad Pitt in A River Runs Through It, back when BP looked exactly like a young RR.

LDC's features are arranged more interestingly.

That's true, too. I sometimes wonder how two people can look superficially similar except that one is more beautiful than the other. It's often really hard to pin down. Here are two men with basically the same face, but one is far more interesting. Maybe the eyes? I'm not the world's hugest LDC groupie, but he does have beautiful eyes.


     


Offline Clyde-B

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Re: Christopher Nolan’s Inception: the Man Behind the Dreamscape
« Reply #11 on: July 29, 2010, 09:53:38 am »
I enjoyed the movie, because, like Memento, you have to pay close attention.  But I wished there had been more use made of the mutable nature of dreams.  Dreams change, suddenly, abruptly, but the dreams in the movie behaved too consistently, like real life. 

I remember a sequence in Cocteau's Orphaeus where Death is played by a woman in a black and white suit.  Every time there is a camera cut, the black and white parts of Death's suit reverse positions.  The effect is very subtle, surreal and unsettling.  I wished the dream sequences had more of that kind of dream inconsistency.


Offline serious crayons

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Re: Christopher Nolan’s Inception: the Man Behind the Dreamscape
« Reply #12 on: July 29, 2010, 10:08:35 am »
I thought the movie was OK, but I don't think I can give it a fair assessment because I kept dozing off. I have dozed off in only three other movies in my life (The Seven Percent Solution, The Hudsucker Proxy and Rugrats in Paris, if you must know!), but I can't tell in this case if it was Inception's fault or just the fact that I hadn't had enough sleep the night before. It did seem like there was a long stretch in the middle, where JGL was fighting with somebody or other and LDC was off doing something or other, that contained a lot of action but not much else. But again, that might have just been me. As Clyde points out, it requires that you pay close attention, and I wasn't in good shape to do so. I might try it again sometime.

Memento is one of my favorite movies of all time, though. Just a notch or two below you know what.



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Re: Christopher Nolan’s Inception: the Man Behind the Dreamscape
« Reply #13 on: August 08, 2010, 06:04:44 pm »
No, I've thought the same thing! And I have wondered if that was part of why Nolan cast him, just as Robert Redford cast Brad Pitt in A River Runs Through It, back when BP looked exactly like a young RR.

That's true, too. I sometimes wonder how two people can look superficially similar except that one is more beautiful than the other. It's often really hard to pin down. Here are two men with basically the same face, but one is far more interesting. Maybe the eyes? I'm not the world's hugest LDC groupie, but he does have beautiful eyes.

     
It can be just small things like the fact that LDC's mouth is smaller and thus there is more contrast between the browline and the mustache line. Also, his eyebrows are more arched and the more eyebrow real estate, the more expression. Although when I saw this movie last night, I thought LDC's face was remarkably flat and featureless for much of the movie. I'm afraid I concur with reviewers here that the film was a disappointment for me. None of the lyricism and metaphor that is present in my dreams. I feel sorry for the dreamer in this case, he has oppressive dreams despite the best efforts of the dream team that invaded his head. I was tempted to doze off too Katherine. Part of the problem is that the movie just starts without any credits or fanfare, and I wasn't paying attention because I thought it was another trailer. Then when LDC showed up, I realized that this was the feature, but I had already missed some plot points.

What I did like was the role of Ariadne as the redeemer. She not only crafted the foundations of the dreams, but she dignosed and prescribed the remedy for what was impeding LDC from carrying out his mission and also was stymying him in his read/dream life. She was something like Trinity that way.
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Offline Aloysius J. Gleek

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Re: Christopher Nolan’s Inception: the Man Behind the Dreamscape
« Reply #14 on: August 15, 2010, 08:35:02 am »


http://holykaw.alltop.com/the-christopher-nolan-flowchart



The Christopher Nolan flowchart
Posted Aug 13th, 2010 at 9:00 AM




The lighting is dimmed, the film score is dark and piercing,
and suddenly you’ve forgotten which Christopher Nolan movie you’re watching.
Don’t worry. It happens to the best of us.
Just follow this handy flowchart to help you remember.






"Tu doives entendre je t'aime."
(and you know who I am...)


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and Pee-wee in the 1990 episode
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Offline serious crayons

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Re: Christopher Nolan’s Inception: the Man Behind the Dreamscape
« Reply #15 on: August 15, 2010, 11:24:25 pm »

http://holykaw.alltop.com/the-christopher-nolan-flowchart



The Christopher Nolan flowchart
Posted Aug 13th, 2010 at 9:00 AM



Good one! Thanks for posting that, John. I love those flow-charty things.

Hmm ... I wonder if someone could do one about BBM.

So you're Ennis Del Mar, deciding whether to spend time with Jack Twist. Do you have the girls for the weekend? Yes -----> No -----> ... When you're out on the pavement, is everybody lookin at you? Yes -----> No ------> ... Do you have to work? Yes -----> No -------> ... Is it August? Yes -----> No -----> ... How about November? Yes -----> No ----->



Offline Aloysius J. Gleek

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New York Magazine 's Year End Wrap-Up


A Very, Very Big Year
In 2010, over-the-top was often just right.

By Adam Sternbergh
Published Dec 5, 2010



If you were to gather the culture stars of 2010 in a room and ask them to retroactively pitch their biggest ideas, it would sound like an inmate’s meeting at an asylum for the delusionally grandiose....Yet if there was one thread that connected the highlights (and a few failures) of the last year, it was this: the Grand Gesture, the Big Gamble, the all-out Swing for the Fences....




Inception

Here’s an idea: Why not follow up your sure-thing, box-office-topping Batman movie The Dark Knight  with a convoluted, complicated, based-on-nothing-but-your-own-twisted-imagination thriller with a title that sounds like a movie about IVF treatments? Yet Warner Bros. gambled $160 million on Christopher Nolan’s Inception,  the only 2010 summer blockbuster that wasn’t a sequel, a franchise, or a reboot. It made $823 million globally.
"Tu doives entendre je t'aime."
(and you know who I am...)


Cowboy Curtis (Laurence Fishburne)
and Pee-wee in the 1990 episode
"Camping Out"