Yes. Quite liked the movie – Inception. Mostly because I found the concept (dream incubation, lucid dreaming) interesting and because it forced me to pay attention. Sometimes, movies like that can be refreshing. Of course, it helped that the visuals were very watchable too, and the last shot added to the charm.
For those who haven’t seen the movie, not to worry, the post only refers to it in terms of concept. At a very basic level, its about planting an idea (Inception) inside a person’s head. Only, he shouldn’t know it was planted by someone else, he should think it’s his idea. In a world where a lot of people anyway falsely claim an idea as their own, you might wonder why this is interesting, but ignore that for now. 🙂 Meanwhile, since the person needs to think its his idea, a basic version of the idea is planted in a dream state, in the subconscious.
Like the movie maker has said about the end, its whatever you want it to be, so here goes. The other reason I liked the movie was because of the ‘life subtext” – the part that makes comparisons to The Matrix inevitable. I thought many acts of ‘Inception’ happen to us too, over a period of time – sometimes done by others, sometimes by ourselves – conditioning. And since we don’t really contemplate why we choose to do a certain thing/in a certain way, we end up thinking that what we’re doing is what we really want.
Half my life
Is in books’ written pages
Lived and learned from fools and
From sages
You know it’s true
All the things come back to you
And just like how in the movie, the ‘projections’ (things and people used by a dream-architect to populate the dream world) turn hostile when the person detects an external presence in their sub conscious, in life, the problem starts when we suddenly realise the existence of the conditioning, and realise that perhaps, much time has been spent on chasing an ‘inception’.
Every time that I look in the mirror
All these lines on my face getting clearer
The past is gone
It went by, like dusk to dawn
And yet, some would say that their lives have been made better by pursuing that one idea. So how do we really know? In the movie, the people who carry out ‘inception’ and the lower forms of the art (extraction) have a totem that helps them distinguish dreams from reality. I wonder if we have something comparable, but then, I wonder, if life would be as interesting as it is if I did have a spinning top or a rolling dice to give me a better grip on reality. 🙂
until next time, deception 🙂
Lyrics: Dream On, Aerosmith.
Hmm, pretty much what I have been dealing with, in my life, of late.
..
Also, how have you been?
Great to see you.. its been such a long while 🙂
It was a great film, it exceeded my expectations, it was a fun thriller and a great brain twister too, its usage of mazes was fitting as the film itself felt like one.
I did like two aspects of the film. First the idea that our experience of reality is perception and creation all at the same time, second: we can never really know we are in “the real world” and have to choose to believe we are in reality based on our own set of rules and logic. Event though you finally get you totem to work, wouldn’t you ask yourself – is that all or I’m still missing something?
My point here is once you get in to a hostile dream/virtual reality I can hardly see a way off proving you got out on 100%. 😀
In the movie’s context, the totem works, which is why the last scene is left that way. In our lives, I think the challenge is that there is no totem which can stand the test of objectivity over time. 🙂