Inception – Review

What is Inception? Well. It’s a special-effects movie; a summer blockbuster; a heist flick; espionage thriller, but at its very core it is a tragic love story with vague, albeit familiar, echoes of DiCaprio’s other cinematic outing this year, Shutter Island.

Both films play with – and distort – the “reality” of each scenario and feature haunted heroes trapped by overwhelming feelings of guilt which they try to repress. Inception and Shutter Island are gothic films set in the realms of the unreal, where the femme fatales surface from the subconscious to wreck havoc.

Christopher Nolan may have made the most complex and thrilling blockbuster since The Matrix. He’s currently being touted as the next Kubrick, but that doesn’t add up. Kubrick was an iconoclast. Nolan is more a mainstream variant of an Alain Resnais-like director obsessed with cine-experiments on identity, time and memory. Let’s call Inception, “Last Year in Marienbad meets Heat”.

DiCaprio’s character, Dom Cobb, is a man so troubled he cannot tell what is real and what is not – much like Teddy Daniels. There’s the vague suspicion Inception is one great con and nothing more than a glimpse into a man’s dream world from start to end. Nolan and his DP Wally Pfister make no distinction between the perceived realities of the everyday and dreamtime. The astonishing special effects kick in, but there are some very subtle moments too.

There are clues through out the film in which Nolan could be saying, ‘look closely, look closer. It’s all in the head of Cobb’. Sharp eyes might notice architectural and interior design preferences emerge in supposedly different locales and time frames. One moment we are watching a simple scene of Dom describing to Ellen Page’s dream designer their plans only for Dom to inform his new protégé that they are dreaming. What happens next is truly jaw-dropping as the city around them explodes, expands and folds over. The layers of reality are constantly in question and can be manipulated.

Opening with Hans Zimmer’s droning score, Inception, is ominous and mysterious from the get-go. It’s a fast-paced movie – perhaps too fast – but there’s a lot going on. A Hollywood summer blockbuster that engages the audience on an intellectual and emotional level should not be sniffed at.

Although Nolan enjoys flitting between time-frames and locales (very dreamlike) there is a clear narrative trajectory. The grandiosity does ignore the average dream cycle – ninety minutes – and spreads the film up two and a half hours. Yet every moment is compelling and exciting.

Dom Cobb is the world’s best extractor. When a recent job goes wrong, he’s offered a chance of redemption by a Japanese businessman (Ken Wanatabe) to plant an idea inside the head of a rival (Cillian Murphy) in order for him to dismantle his empire and cede control. That’s the heist part.

The major problem Cobb faces is his own subconscious and the appearance of Mal (Marion Cotillard). She’s dead and been dead for some time, but turns up in Cobb’s dreams and jobs, botching them out of spite. Cotillard plays her character as part vengeance seeking fury and part Ophelia.

We soon learn that Cobb believes he’s responsible for her death, and it would be terribly remiss to further explore that avenue without ruining things. Inception, upon first viewing, is likely to completely knock you for six.

Nolan, like his character, can dream big. There are a handful of scenes that will have you open-mouthed with wonder. Other moments are positively surreal. Wrapping it around an action film could have been too silly, but he makes it work.

For example, the fight scene between Joseph Gordon-Levitt and a gunman in a corridor that is losing gravity is astonishing. But what is more astonishing is the aftermath in which Arthur (Gordon-Levitt) floats down a corridor with the entire cast strapped together one on top of the other as if he’s a hospital porter taking his charge somewhere.

Despite its glorious points there are some inevitable weaknesses. There is too much ‘complex ideas for dummies’ style dialogue and Nolan isn’t quite brave enough to be too ambiguous. The ending is also less effective than it could be. It offers a tingle instead of a jolt.

Packed with inventive action, high drama, ideas and emotion, Inception is Nolan’s masterpiece and whether it makes a billion dollars or not, it’s a triumph for mainstream cinema. The dream isn’t real – far from it – but you won’t leave the cinema disappointed. You’ll more than likely want to talk and talk and talk about what it all means. That’s the sign of great cinema, no?

Rating: ★★★★½

UK Release: 16th July

Torchwood Season Four Confirmed?

**UPDATE – We now know that Torchwood: The New World will be hitting screens some time in 2011, head over HERE for the full low-down**

This year’s five day event, “Torchwood: Children of Earth” was such a monumental success that I was left speechless when it seemed the future of the franchise was uncertain. At the time, John Barrowman (Jack Harkness), Eve Myles (Gwen Cooper) and even Torchwood creator Russell T. Davies seemed clueless as to whether or not the BBC would commission a fourth series of the show.

But finally Torchwood fans and WHOvians alike can breath a sigh of relief – as it seems that Torchwood Season 4 may finally be confirmed! Russell T. Davies broke the news exclusively to Torchwood Magazine, saying:

“I could write you scene one of series four right now. I know exactly how to pick it up. I’ve got a shape in mind, and I’ve got stories. I know where you’d find Gwen and Rhys, and their baby, and Jack, and I know how you’d go forward with a new form of Torchwood.”

While Davies is still uncertain what shape the series will take – another mini series or a full on 13-episode season, he seems very confident indeed that he knows which direction Torchwood will take. It’s his final sentence from that quote that stands out – “A new form of Torchwood,” I’d say we’re looking at a brand new team!

Of course it’d be difficult to carry on without a new team, the deaths of Owen and Tosh in season 2, and the controversial death of Ianto in Children of Earth has left the Torchwood agents a little thin on the ground!

**UPDATE** Russell T. Davies also gave strong indication at this year’s Comic Con that Torchwood would return for a fourth season, based on the success of Children of Earth. Dark Horizons attended the panel back in July:

Asked about a fourth season of “Torchwood”, Davies wouldn’t confirm any specifics but indicated the success of ‘Children of Earth’ means its a certainty and he sounded excited to be involved. Fans though hoping for the return of some previously deceased cast members should not hold out hope.

I thought I’d throw that one in for the naysayers, make no mistake, Torchwood is far too big a property for the BBC to let slide – season four will be made, and we won’t be waiting too long either!

Source: TV Squad.

UK Cinemas Could Boycott Alice In Wonderland

Looks like there’s trouble a’ brewing between Disney and cinema chains in the UK. Disney want to cut the gap between the cinema release of Alice In Wonderland and the DVD release from 17 weeks to 12 weeks. Odeon, Vue and Cineworld have said they will boycott the film if the window tightens. Representatives of the cinema chains argue that closing the window could impact on their revenue as it would deter people from going to see the film on the big screen if it was out on DVD two months later.

This could all be just a storm in a tea cup, but Disney have told them they were given plenty of notice and argue the fact 97 per cent of box office takings occur within an eight week period. Disney are looking at a projected loss of around £40 million if the cinemas go ahead with the boycott.

The Guardian quote Disney exec, Bob Chapek, who explained the current state of affairs:

“We feel that it’s important for us to maintain a healthy business on the exhibition side and a healthy business on the home video side… We remain committed to theatrical windows, with the need for exceptions to accommodate a shortened time frame on a case-by-case basis, such as with Disney’s Alice in Wonderland.”

There are pros and cons to this argument but Odeon and Vue have currently pulled all promo material, the trailer from their cinemas and stopped ticket bookings. The world premiere is still going ahead as it’s not a commercial screening.

Who will win this battle? Remember it’s the film fans this affects the most. Could a major film like Tim Burton’s Alice In Wonderland not get distributed and screened in the UK? It is madness and near inconceivable, so let’s hope they can agree to settle the matter. The game of brinkmanship continues…