Every character in the movie got enough time for the viewer to understand basically who they are. This was not an origin story about the concept. When the movie begins, the ability to enter dreams is not a secret, it is a profitable business known about worldwide. There is a school that helps teach people to do it. Ellen Page's character does not need extra time devoted to why she is doing what she is doing because clearly it was her goal in life to do it or she wouldnt be in school learning how to do it. Yes, the character part was a bit rushed...but it didnt need to be slow.
Every character in the movie got enough time for the viewer to understand basically who they are.
The movie was 2 hrs and 28 minutes long. Character development for Adrianne AND Arthur would have added at least an hour to that.
The film was already on thin ice with the average movier goer and their inability to hang on for a mental ride going 160 MPH.
You really think the lack of character development for the rest of the team hurt the movie? Or do you think it was a missed opportunity?
The part when
she whipped around and saw Ellen Page in the elevator, our whole audience jumped.
While Blade Runner didn't do anything groundbreaking action-wise with it's SFX, the near future world created for the film was groundbreakingly stunning and has stood the test of time IMO.
Regarding people saying it is impossible for a viewer to truly "get" the movie.
Here's the deal...
The film is straightforward in it's approach. There is NEVER a moment during the climax section where you should be wondering where you are or who is dreaming or anything like that.
Then the very last scene comes. That scene is ambiguous and open to interpretation. So, you can "get" the film completely and have a totally different view of the ending (and all that would include) than someone else.
We can have a never-ending discussion about the impact of the last scene and how it plays on the hour before it...but there is NO need to debate "were they asleep" or "who was dreaming when they were in the snowy part" or anything like that. If we take the movie for what it says (disregarding the last scene) then there is absolutely no debate that needs to be done, and any confusion a person has about who is where and what is happening is entirely their own fault.
But of course...that last scene does throw everything for a loop...if you interpret it that way (which I don't). There is no right or wrong answer regarding that final scene and it's implications, until and if Nolan clarifies. It is a reasonable and potentially fun debate topic.
But seriously...the rest of this "it was too confusing" garbage needs to stop.
NOTE: I am referring mainly to the public at large who I am speaking with in real life, not one particular person on this board.
Oh yea Blade Runner still stands up against anyone. I do agree with that. I think though that since Nolan did not use a lot of CGI and what he did use was convincing it too could stand the test of time. But I guess time will tell lol
But there is more to some of the scenes than that. Which quite a few now have been saying what I found on my later viewings.
The whole film is about Cobb's inception. Not just Fischer, though he may have been needed to convince Cobb that he was in reality after Yasif's basement. After the basement he spins to top, it gets knocked over and interrupted and he never does it again through out the film. That scene was there for a reason. Not just show. It gives indication or at least a theory that the whole premise of the film is about Cobb's inception. And what we thought the first watching was Level 1 2 and 3, were actually Level 2, 3, 4 then limbo. That it was possible that Cobb was in level 1 unknowingly and was still maybe in Yasif's basement.
But aI agree with a lot of this movie and ambiguity in it, there is no right and wrong answer.
I'm wondering if Nolan will release a Director's cut with the totem falling?
I'm wondering if Nolan will release a Director's cut with the totem falling?
Well it didn't defeat the purpose of Blade Runner.then that will defeat the purpose of the movie imo
Ellen Page's character wasn't going to school to become a dream architect. She was in college to be just a regular architect. Michael Cain chose her for Cobb because she was an exceptionally good normal architect, and those skills translated well to being a dream architect.
I wish my dreams I could control as well as these guys. Mine end up being odd or me going to school or work naked. Those are the worst lol.

Don't feel so bad, they went to dream school.![]()

The film was definitely straightforward and not difficult to comprehend. Not sure why anyone would have trouble following.
I can't wait to see this a second time on Sunday, especially after your theories and ideas Solidus. It's a film that could definitely use a second watch for all the tiny details know that you know the overall plot.
It's not that people are having trouble following, there is just many layers, and many deep ideas and theories behind it. Blade Runner was straight forward as well. But there was more to it, and I believe that is where the complexity lies. Including the one that I and it seems many others have thought of this maybe the same time I did, this theory that :
That it very well could have been that Cobb was actually the mark. Along with Fischer, to get him to let go of Mal. And that that is a reason he could never look at the faces. As well after Yasif's basement when he did the totem test, it never was completed he was interrupted, and never did it again till the end. I don't think Nolan put that scene in for the heck of it, after my third viewing it was clear he was pointing at it.
I think and its a theory so no yes/no answer. But it very well could have been that Miles hired Satio to help not only incept Fischer but Cobb as well, but they had to do a job with in a job to fool Cobb's strong subconscious (he is a pro after all) that he is really just doing the job. But more so it is about inception for him as well.
I believe he could very well still be in Yasif's basement. And Level 1 was not the car chase with the van, that was actually level 2. They may have gone 4 deep +the limbo.
I have found more for my theory but man I think a few more viewings will be needed to go further with it.
Here's where things get tricky, but also awesome. Saito dies in level 1 and he is not connected to any of the others in level 4 because he is still awake. Therefore, he enters his own separate limbo state which can be considered level 4B.