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| I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan | |
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Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Lun 5 Juil - 22:42 | |
| Critique retrouvée sur Imdb grace à Jackson et Athesit_Dude - Citation :
- Inception is a masterpiece. Making a huge film with big ambitions, Christopher Nolan never missteps and manages to create a movie that, at times, feels like a miracle. And sometimes it doesn't even feel like a movie; while presented in woefully retro 2D, Inception creates a complete sense of immersion in another world. The screen before you is just another layer of the dream.
I don't even know what's the most remarkable aspect of Inception. It's huge-budget filmmaking harnessed to tell a personal story that's smart and uncompromising. That's certainly remarkable in this age of Hollywood. It's a production that brought its cameras to six countries, never allowing a backlot to do when a shot could be achieved in a real location. That's starting to feel unheard of in this day and age. It's a movie where Christopher Nolan manages to bring together all of his obsessions and quirks, where his personal issues are the life and death issues at the center of the story, and where he has managed to turn every single one of his directorial weaknesses into massive strengths. That, perhaps, is the truest miracle - the auteur finally completed before our eyes.
Every single movie Christopher Nolan has made until now has led to Inception. The fractal, recursive nature of Following and Memento informs the structure of reality in Inception. The exploration of narrative and storytelling in The Prestige leads to this film. And the obsession with control, a throughline that leads from Insomnia to Batman Begins and fully blooms in The Dark Knight, takes Nolan directly to the drama at the heart of Inception.
The advertising for Inception presents the film as a dream-based heist thriller, which is true enough in a larger sense. But the heart of the movie is psychoanalysis presented as kick ass action. Nolan's interest in dreams doesn't come from the surreal nature of them (in fact very early on Nolan, who wrote the script, presents an in-universe rule that makes the dreams be as realistic as possible) but from what they say about the dreamer. Nolan is looking at dreams as the entryway to the subconscious. They're the gate through which a repressed, emotionally distanced person can access the feelings that trouble them deep inside.
And that's the genius of the film. Nolan is a director who has always been chilly; some may kindly call him restrained. While visually he is an unabashed pupil of Ridley Scott, Nolan is a student of the Stanley Kubrick school of emotion, and Inception reminds me of The Shining in that the emotional content isn't subtext or nuanced but rather blaring, plot-motivating text. Leonardo DiCaprio is Cobb, the best extractor in the world. A dream thief, Cobb and his team get into your mind during sleep, when it's most vulnerable, and they find and steal information they need. But Cobb has a problem - he can't keep his own subconscious under control, a- Spoiler:
nd his repressed feelings about his wife keep manifesting themselves in the dream space, becoming more and more aggressive and dangerous.
In another film that's the subtext, the subtle motivation behind Cobb's character. In Inception it gradually becomes everything, and it is explicitly dealt with as a part of the plot. By making the pain deep inside Cobb another element of the heist movie structure, Nolan is free to deal with it analytically, with a cold eye for what it means to Cobb as a contained man. Like in The Dark Knight the greatest danger isn't external, it's completely internal - the loss of control. In The Dark Knight that loss of control was represented by the dual figures of The Joker and Two-Face, while in Inception that loss of control - the scariest thing Nolan can imagine, it seems - Spoiler:
- is represented in the haunting beauty of Marion Cotillard .
All of this happens against the backdrop of a gripping thriller. Cobb has been hired by a mysterious businessman, played by Ken Watanabe, to perform the most difficult dream job there is: they are not going to steal something - Spoiler:
from the mind of industrialist heir Cillian Murphy but rather leave something there. They are going to go deep into his subconscious and plant an idea that will blossom into something that will benefit Watanabe; it turns out that the planting of an idea - inception - is markedly more difficult than the stealing of one. And so Cobb must gather a crackerjack team of dream experts to get deep into the mark's mind - many layers deep into his subconscious - and give him an idea so firmly rooted that when he awakes he'll be convinced it's his own.
Joseph Gordon-Levitt is Arthur, Cobb's usual point man. His job is to do the research into the mark, to get to understand the target intimately so that the team can create a dream that will feel convincing and real. Tom Hardy is Eames the forger, the team member who impersonates people within the dream, making the dreamer think that certain thoughts or ideas come from his own subconscious. Dileep Rao is Yusuf the chemist, the guy whose specially concocted sedatives allow the team the freedom and flexibility to move throughout the mind. And Ellen Page is Ariadne the architect*, perhaps the most important member of the team. She actually builds the dream world, creating a space for the team to work and where the mark will feel comfortable. In the world of Inception the worst thing that can happen during a mission is that the mark begins to realize he's dreaming.
The cast that Nolan has assembled is just as crackerjack as Cobb's team. These are among the best young actors; beautiful faces to be sure (and I don't know that anyone has photographed Ellen Page as angelically as Wally Pfister does here), but also among the most serious actors of their generation. Structurally Inception is a heist film, and as in a heist film most of the characters are defined by their functions, as opposed to anything deeper. But with a cast as great as this, Nolan is able to get characterization out of the smallest moments. He knows that he can trust this cast to round these people out, that they will become more than just their job description, and that they're interrelationships will take on a life of their own. That's exactly what happens; while the greater pleasures of Inception have to do with epic action scenes and satisfying psychological catharses, the smaller joys come in moments where Arthur and Eames bounce off of each other, or where the troubled, weary Cobb slowly warms when dealing with the fresh-faced, talented Ariadne. Nolan shows a facility for maintaining the team dynamics while also keeping the central story focused on Cobb, as his inability to keep control over his deep-seeded issues begins to endanger his team.
The first half of the film is set up: the explication of the world (done with panache and thrills), the building of the team, the outline of the heist. And then the second half of the film is the heist itself, a journey through multiple layers of the psyche that span the globe and have relativistic chronological connections. This leads to one of the most incredible, jaw-dropping and beautifully-created sustained action set pieces in cinema history. The action ranges across levels, with car chases and shoot outs and fist fights, and with the events in one level of reality impacting the next. Moments in one level are hours in the next, and crashes and explosions in one ripple down to those below. It's heady and smart and most of all completely and totally thrilling. What could be the most thrilling, though, is the way Inception shows serious promise for Nolan as an action director. His action scenes have always been confused and poorly shot; while a handful of Inception's action scenes - like a chase through the streets of Mombasa - are vintage Nolan mess, most of the heart-stopping action in the third act is next level stuff, which hopefully means Nolan has begun to conquer his fear of long shots in fight scenes.
As amazing as the bravura third act is, the most transcendent part of it is Joseph Gordon-Levitt's zero gravity fight in the dreamy corridors of a hotel. The simplistic comparison is to The Matrix, but I think it's also the best - no action scene in a mainstream movie has been so incredibly realized, so elegantly staged and remained so viscerally exciting since the Bros Wachowski shook up the world of action movies. It's a scene that made the hair on the back of my neck stand up, not because it was using some exciting new technology or because it was incorporating underground techniques but because it was just so well done, because it was so beautiful and so fun and so fresh. The biggest problem with the zero-G fight is that it ends, that Nolan doesn't keep dragging it out so that we can keep living in that perfect cinematic moment. I wanted to get to my feet and applaud.
To be honest I wanted to get to my feet and applaud all through the third act. The stakes keep raising while also becoming more and more personal. The goal isn't a knock out punch or an explosive finale (although both come into play) but rather emotional breakthroughs. And to make those breakthroughs be an organic part of the sound and the fury going on around them is the work of a master, a filmmaker who has truly come to a place where his skills are unsurpassed. In the final moments of Inception you realize this movie has worked on every single level, from Hans Zimmer's edging on monster movie score to Pfister's stunning visuals to the textured and believable CGI effects that give the dreamworlds their depth. A standing ovation is the natural impulse when faced with such perfection.
I can see how some might dislike Inception. Nolan's vision of dreams is one that is fairly staid and antiseptic and frankly not that resonant with how I dream. And if a viewer cannot engage in the beginning, during the film's opening dream heist, it's possible that they'll never be able to engage with the rest of the film. But I can't see how someone could say Inception is bad. Thematically it is Nolan's most complete and whole vision (which is a relief, as I think thematics has been where the director has dropped the ball in the past), but cinematically it's also his grandest vision. It's his complete statement as an auteur, bringing together his personal quirks and his stylistic quirks; Inception is his ultimate city movie, and it's his ultimate repression film. It's the summation of everything he has done to date. And it's delicately assembled, with each piece having meaning and a perfect fit with every other piece. There's not a wasted moment or an unnecessary diversion (again, a relief, as Nolan was all about diversions in The Dark Knight). Everything means something.
What's perhaps best about Inception is that it's not a trick film. A smart, aware viewer will find most of the movie's answers given to them in the very opening scene. Nolan's not trying to hide anything or pull any twists, and he's more interested in paying off emotional beats than pulling the rug out on viewers at the end. Memento works despite being a puzzle movie, but The Prestige is fatally crippled by being a one and done fluff experience. Nolan wisely avoids that here; a lesser director might have tried to twisterooni his film to death, but Nolan knows that we're going to be looking everywhere for clues and meanings, and he's happy to deliver them. This, again, is a psychoanalysis film, and Nolan wants us to interpret it just as a therapist might interpret our dreams. The ending isn't intended to shock or stun but to pull together the pieces, while sending the audience out discussing the larger meanings and contexts of what they've just seen. And it's a film that will reward mightily on future viewings. Inception works on the most basic levels as the ultimate in cinematic entertainment, and it also works on deeper levels of meaning and character. The film I am most reminded of, weirdly, is Lawrence of Arabia. While Inception has nothing to do with David Lean's masterpiece (except for some gorgeous location photography), it contains the same scope I find there. I can watch Lawrence as the gripping examination of the meaning of a man, or I can watch Lawrence as a lush, epic adventure. Both ways of approaching the film are equally correct and both ways are equally satisfying. Inception brings the epic scope of Old Hollywood together with the psychological realism of New Hollywood, creating a fusion that feels timeless and classic.
I loved Inception. I loved seeing the world Nolan created. I loved visiting the locales and spending time with the characters. I loved every moment of the waking dream, every frame of the celluloid reality. Cinema is dreaming, and Nolan understands this implicitly and completely. While Inception didn't remind me of many dreams I've had, it reminded me of many incredible, transporting moments spent in movie theaters. I'm glad that Nolan opted not to post-convert his film to 3D, as that process would only distance the audience from the movie. By shooting on 65mm film, Nolan has created a massive, immersive and complete visual experience. I actually can't wait to see this movie again but in IMAX, to be completely enveloped in the universe that Nolan, the year's leading cinematic dream architect, has created.
10 out of 10
* not everything is subtle. Ariadne is a Greek figure connected to labyrinths, and the basic structure of any dream world, we learn, must be a maze.
Dernière édition par Tayelore le Lun 5 Juil - 22:53, édité 2 fois | |
| | | lepinpin Modérateur
Messages : 1557 Date d'inscription : 07/12/2009 Localisation : Spartaaaa!!!!
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Lun 5 Juil - 22:47 | |
| Ah ouè quand même!jusque là je m'attendais à des retours élogieux,mais pas de cette envergure.comment c'est loin le 21!!!!!!!!! | |
| | | Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Lun 5 Juil - 22:56 | |
| - Citation :
RT @rejectnation: Last week we gave our first F grade of the summer. Later today we give out our first A+... It's been one of those years. http://twitter.com/rejects/status/17814692707 - Citation :
- Cette année nous avons donné notre premirer F de l'été. Plus tard ce soir, nous donnerons notre premier A+.. c'est une année étrange..
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| | | darknol Utilisateur
Messages : 3123 Date d'inscription : 17/12/2009
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Lun 5 Juil - 22:58 | |
| Héhé
En tout cas, merci encore une fois pour tes traductions Tay'! | |
| | | Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Lun 5 Juil - 23:00 | |
| | |
| | | Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Lun 5 Juil - 23:01 | |
| Ps: Levée de l'embargo à minuit | |
| | | darknol Utilisateur
Messages : 3123 Date d'inscription : 17/12/2009
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Lun 5 Juil - 23:07 | |
| Je t'aiderai bien pour la trad', mais mon niveau d'anglais étant ce qu'il ait, ça me serait difficile de faire un truc qui reflète vraiment la critique. Mais vu la longueur du truc, ta pas fini, peut-être qu'en traduisant son avis global à la fin ça serait suffisant non? | |
| | | Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| | | | darknol Utilisateur
Messages : 3123 Date d'inscription : 17/12/2009
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Lun 5 Juil - 23:19 | |
| (j'essaie quand même de prendre un peu ta suite, mais mon rendement est méchamment lent, donc... ) | |
| | | Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Lun 5 Juil - 23:58 | |
| Plus que trois minutes, avant que les valves soient ouverte! | |
| | | darknol Utilisateur
Messages : 3123 Date d'inscription : 17/12/2009
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Lun 5 Juil - 23:58 | |
| Suite donc, par contre, ça ne veut pas tout le temps dire grand chose, désolé - Citation :
- Joseph Gordon-Levitt est Arthur, l'organisateur habituel de Cobb. Son travail est de faire la recherche dans la cible, d'arriver à comprendre intimement la cible pour que l'équipe puisse créer un rêve qui semblera convaincant et réel. Tom Hardy est Eames le faussaire, le membre de l'équipe qui imite les gens à l'intérieur du rêve, en faisant croire au rêveur que certaines pensées et idées viennent de son propre subconscient. Dileep Rao est Yusuf le chimiste, le type qui concocte des sédatifs permettant à l'équipe de connaître une liberté et une flexibilité à se déplacer à travers l'esprit. Et Ellen Page est Ariadne, l'architecte, peut-être le membre le plus important de l'équipe. Elle construit le monde du rêve, créant un espace de travail pour l'équipe et où la cible se sentira bien. Dans le monde d'Inception la pire chose qui peut arriver durant une mission est que la cible commence à réaliser qu'elle est en train de rêver.
Le casting que Nolan a assemblé est aussi excellent que l'équipe de Cobb. Ils font parti des meilleurs jeunes acteurs, de beaux visages pour être sur (et je ne sait pas si quelqu'un a déjà photographié Ellen Page d'une façon aussi angélique que Wally Pfister le fait ici), mais aussi parmi les acteurs les plus sérieux de leur génération. Au niveau de la structure, Inception est un film de casse, et en tant que film de braquage, la plupart des personnages sont définis par leurs fonctions, comme opposé à quelque chose de plus profond. Mais avec un casting aussi génial que celui-ci, Nolan est capable de faire sortir une caractérisation des personnages des plus petits moments. Il sait qu'il peut faire confiance à ce casting pour donner vie (?) à ces gens, pour qu'ils puissent devenir plus que ce que propose la description de leur travail C'est exactement ce qui se produit; tandis que les plus grands plaisirs procurés par Inception proviennent des scènes d'actions épiques et de catharsis psychologiques satisfaisantes, les plus petites joies viennent dans les moments ou Arthur et Eames se renvoient la balle, où quand le troublé et las Cobb ? (là je sèche désolé) Nolan démontre une facilité à maintenir la dynamique d'équipe tout en gardant l'histoire centrale concentrée sur Cobb, ce qui contraste avec son incapacité à garder le contrôle de ses problèmes profondément enracinés, qui commence à mettre en danger l'équipe. (par contre pour le reste, le mec commence à parler de la structure du film et des différentes parties, donc je n'ai pas continué à lire, même si j'imagine que ça spoil' pas des masses, j'en ai déjà bien trop vu)
Dernière édition par darknol le Mar 6 Juil - 0:06, édité 2 fois | |
| | | Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| | | | Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Mar 6 Juil - 0:02 | |
| http://www.filmschoolrejects.com/reviews/review-inception.php | |
| | | Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Mar 6 Juil - 0:03 | |
| http://www.hitfix.com/blogs/2008-12-6-motion-captured/posts/the-m-c-review-inception-bends-brains-breaks-hearts-with-equal-ease | |
| | | darknol Utilisateur
Messages : 3123 Date d'inscription : 17/12/2009
| | | | Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Mar 6 Juil - 0:07 | |
| http://www.awardsdaily.com/?p=23795 | |
| | | Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Mar 6 Juil - 0:07 | |
| http://www.cinematical.com/2010/07/05/inception-review/ | |
| | | Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Mar 6 Juil - 0:09 | |
| | |
| | | Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Mar 6 Juil - 0:10 | |
| http://incontention.com/?p=26044 | |
| | | darknol Utilisateur
Messages : 3123 Date d'inscription : 17/12/2009
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Mar 6 Juil - 0:11 | |
| http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117943114.html?categoryid=31&cs=1 - Citation :
- If "Inception" is a metaphysical puzzle, it's also a metaphorical one:
It's hard not to draw connections between Cobb's dream-weaving and Nolan's filmmaking -- an activity devoted to constructing a simulacrum of reality, intended to seduce us, mess with our heads and leave a lasting impression. Mission accomplished. (marrant ça me rappelle un peu le parallèle qu'on pouvait déjà établir entre la quête d'Angier dans le prestige et celle de Nolan en tant que cinéaste) | |
| | | Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Mar 6 Juil - 0:16 | |
| - Citation :
- Pure cinema at its best feels like dreaming with your eyes wide open. Cinema doesn't get much purer than INCEPTION.
- Citation :
- Du pur cinéma à son meilleur, comme un réver les yeux grands ouvert. Le cinéma est à son état pur avec INCEPTION
http://www.aintitcool.com/node/45679 | |
| | | darknol Utilisateur
Messages : 3123 Date d'inscription : 17/12/2009
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Mar 6 Juil - 0:18 | |
| Eeeeet bin... Qu'est-ce qu'on va se prendre dans la tronche... | |
| | | Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Mar 6 Juil - 0:18 | |
| - Citation :
- Inception InstaReview: Your Mind is the Scene of an Awesome Movie
http://www.ugo.com/movies/inception-review-instareview | |
| | | Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Mar 6 Juil - 0:19 | |
| - darknol a écrit:
- http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117943114.html?categoryid=31&cs=1
- Citation :
- If "Inception" is a metaphysical puzzle, it's also a metaphorical one:
It's hard not to draw connections between Cobb's dream-weaving and Nolan's filmmaking -- an activity devoted to constructing a simulacrum of reality, intended to seduce us, mess with our heads and leave a lasting impression. Mission accomplished. (marrant ça me rappelle un peu le parallèle qu'on pouvait déjà établir entre la quête d'Angier dans le prestige et celle de Nolan en tant que cinéaste) Completement | |
| | | Tayelore Admin
Messages : 61203 Date d'inscription : 23/06/2008
| Sujet: Re: I N C E P T I O N de Christopher Nolan Mar 6 Juil - 0:19 | |
| http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/film-reviews/inception-film-review-1004102197.story - Citation :
- Bottom Line: A devilishly complicated, fiendishly enjoyable sci-fi voyage across a dreamscape that is thoroughly compelling.
- Citation :
- Sometimes originality comes at a cost though: At the end, you may find yourself utterly exhausted.
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