Anno_Domini
Avenger
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- Oct 9, 2010
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The whole point of the totem is that if it starts to wobble to fall, it's not a dream, period.
I used to think the same, but I don't think it's so cut and dry now.
I used to think the same, but I don't think it's so cut and dry now. Without tumbling further down into an Inception analysis rabbit hole...I'll just say again that I prefer the "Cobb is in reality" interpretation, but I think Nolan was definitely going for an ambiguous kind of ending there. In fact Nolan said that he does have his own specific interpretation that he refuses to share because he wants people to have their own.
You could easily write a thesis paper on that ending (and books have indeed been written about the film), so I'll just leave my off-topicness at that, lol.
Just because it's cut and dry doesn't mean the ending should've been more than what it really is. I feel people overthink with Inception so much that they're looking beyond what we see on film sometimes just because we're dealing with a director like Chris Nolan.
“There can’t be anything in the film that tells you one way or another because then the ambiguity at the end of the film would just be a mistake,” he says. “It would represent a failure of the film to communicate something. But it’s not a mistake. I put that cut there at the end, imposing an ambiguity from outside the film. That always felt the right ending to me."
Why would Bruce Wayne would go the trouble of faking his death if he had no intentions of leaving Gotham in the long run, and why he would put Alfred through all of that that if he was only intending to purposefully mislead him about the fact that he had finally moved on with his life?
^ How does it feel to be on a one-man boat? Lol.
Not sure really. Maybe you can help think of something. Bruce Wayne has been known to play things pretty close to the chestBesides, if he really wanted to let Alfred know he was alright, he could have just told him without going to Italy. Although I can understand the dramatic way of letting him know he was alright, given Bruce Wayne's love of theatricality
On side note, I think The Dark Knight Rises feels most like a Batman movie out all three films; while retaining the elements that made the first two films successful.
It was like a cinematic version of the best batman graphic novel that doesn't exist.

i wonder how many times Bruce ate at that cafe; in hopes that Alfred would show up. Selina looked kind of annoyed. so i'm guessing it was often.
And Nolan got lucky. Can you imagine he captured the exact moment when they were both there ?