Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio, Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Ellen Page
Directed by: Christopher Nolan
Rated: PG 13
Running time: 2 hours 28 mins
Warner Brothers
Mike Smith’s Score: 4 1/2 out of 5 Stars
If you asked me to name the top 10 directors working today, I’m sure you’d recognize many of the names on my list. Spielberg. Scorsese. Eastwood. And one you might not: Christopher Nolan. Creator of “Memento” and director of one of the best comic book films ever, “The Dark Knight,” Nolan has proved himself to be an effective filmmaker, able to draw his audience into his films like a spider with a fly. His latest endeavor, “Inception,” is no “Dark Knight”…but it ain’t bad!
Cobb (DiCaprio) is an Interceptor. He and his team are able to read your mind…literally. They get you when you’re sleeping, actually entering and manipulating your dreams. Once inside your head they learn your every thought. Your every secret. Your every idea. A new client has a unique request. He wants Cobb and his people to “put” an idea into someone. A tough request.
Visually brilliant “Inception” suffers from the same ailment that has afflicted other films this year: it’s TOO LONG! Like the last film in the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy, you never know when the film is over. Thank goodness for the closing credits. But I would be lying if I didn’t say that for a majority of the almost two and a half hours spent in the dark “Inception” grabs hold of you and doesn’t let go! Of course the credit for this praise falls directly on Nolan, who not only directed the film but wrote it as well. Like “Memento,” “Inception” relies on the audience paying attention to everything, no matter how small the detail. The script is strong, with just the right amount of humor thrown in to give the adrenaline running through your body time to pause. The visual effects are outstanding, including a fight scene that rivals any ever put on film. The performances are just as outstanding, with fine supporting work from Gordon-Levitt, Page, Tom Hardy and Ken Watanabe. Oscar winner Marion Cotillard shines as someone from Cobbs’ past while Lukas Haas, Pete Postlethwaite and Michael Caine stand out in extended cameos. But the glue holding it all together is DiCaprio, who I praised earlier this year by calling his work in “Shutter Island” the “performance of his career.” Allow me to welcome you to outstanding performance #2. If DiCaprio, who already has three acting Oscar nominations to his credit, isn’t nominated for one of these films then there truly is no justice in Hollywood. Were the film able to wrap itself up thirty minutes sooner, that extra half star may have made an appearance. According to the film, five minutes of actual time equals one hour in “dream land.” The last half hour of the film more than proves that notion.
Inception turns the viewer into a participant. You can’t afford to blink, or miss a second. A film that challenges its audience. Bravo!
“Inception” was a great movie. I absolutely loved it. It has a very sculpted message. It slightly resonates for me with some ideas from Eastern philosophies about self realization and, to some degree, about reincarnation. Directing and cinematography were great, script was great, cast did a great job. Loved it!!!!!!!!!!!!!