by JackRiddler » Sun Sep 05, 2010 4:09 pm
Some really good contributions on this thread, esp. 82_28's meditation on the processor and how it's just as aware of you when you're gone as when you're using it. Also, I look forward to trying these McKenna videos, thanks elfismiles.
Now, strictly on Inception: Was disappointed. Basically very very good -- for a video game. In the Nolan style it was very faithful to its own complex rules of engagement, but I felt little incentive to buy into them. What kind of dreams actually work that way, where an architecture maintains such stability, and corresponds so well to its waking world analogues, and where each dreamer remains the same person as when awake all through the dream? In this whole movie no one ever turned spontaneously into someone else, and no one suddenly found themselves having sex with a stranger. These are two things you will all have to admit happen in pretty much every dream!
Why the hell should being shot in a dream "kill" the dream construct, or cause one of the co-dreamers to fall out? Can anyone think of a reason for this? The structure of dream levels was fun to figure out, but ultimately ridiculous. Why should the fictional technology of drugging and co-dreaming work by the same rules on a dream level, as though real physics and biochemistry were still involved? Why should the next level created operate at an analogously accelerated speed relative to the level above it? All this device really accomplished was to set up a four-level battle with time running at different speeds on each level. A screenplay certain to please watchmakers who are also first-person shooter fans. I'm also willing to allow it as a meditation on film-making as collaborative willed dreaming (so Leo's the director, Saito's the fucking executive producer moneybags, Ellen Page the production designer or what, the writer?, that British guy was an actor, etc.). But while that might make a good essay, the story didn't come together emotionally, despite the dream casting all around and great performances. The effort expended to meditate on loss, grief and the hope of family left me flat.
It occurred to me at the end that one of the allegories at work was that the DiCaprio character wanted to regain his pre-9/11 innocence about his country -- make it through the iris surveillance and police state barriers and discover that it has turned back into a home, not "The Homeland."
The best part was Paris, by the way. Whereas the boulevard battle scene on "Level 1" in the long dream (the one where the locomotive appeared) felt like outtakes from the Dark Knight (the sequence with the Joker in a truck vs. the Batmobile).
In my dreams I have smashed so many alarm clocks, rammed them under ruined buildings, and it never worked to shut them up! I unplug them and turn off the city power plant, still they beep beep beep. Also, how come no one ever finds themselves flying, and thinking how they've always been able to do that, etc.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.
To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.
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