Both work.
Feel free to check it out.Your blog is really interesting to me and your topics are very relevant. SHE can “spin and spin and spin” in a manner of speaking. Dreaming/Awake. His task to confuse Cobb into believing his dream is reality, aka, using inceptionEven though they're slightly different, the clothes, the setting, and their positioning is basically the exact same as his dream. A dream can have different levels, but can it be separated into different scenes at the /same time/? He would see that as an inconsistency to have her following him around. Both are fun to debate and argue. Another thing is Mombasa.
The dreamer just wants to know that they are dreaming – it doesn’t really need to be covert in any way.I just wanted to share something.
Obviously Cobb took Mal’s totem – so what was his original totem?
Through dream sharing, dreams can be manufactured within other individuals' minds. I literally had to sit down at a whiteboard and map the possibilities out to fully understand what you were getting at. 1 hint to his/her totem.I guess an argument can be made but there are a few tells. They are instantly recognizable. Find someone else doing DIY tips, and figure out where they are lacking, and then do that thing. My point had to do with what I said earlier about scenes without Cobb in them. Why does Cobb’s not being the architect resolve anything?”Because if he’s still dreaming, it means he was trapped in that original dream with Mal – the dream in which /he/ was in the architect. So Cobb’s using his wife’s totem isn’t extraordinary in anyway save that it complicates the message the totem may or may not be telling us.If Cobb’s totem isnt his wife’s top – then what would you say his totem is? Yes? But he didn’t.
And as for the rooms being identical, there are two very easy explanations: One, there are looooads of hotel companies who build two right next to each other. If there are other people – not just projections, but people – in the dream, obviously they can be off doing their own thing. I considered the kid’s faces as a totem. Eames quietly tells Cobb to piss off so the cashier won’t scrutinize the validity of the chips.As far as the spinning top goes, I also noticed that the logic behind it didn’t work. It always fall “smiling” to you because of the weight difference.Cobb is wearing the wedding ring on the dreams, but in the real world/1st dream he isn’tand I don’t remember ever seeing the top falling. That they generally are hefty and near on addictive to handle is even more interesting. Can’t be him remembering her waking up if he didn’t see her wake up, which means it’s a movie scene showing us that she woke up.“I’ve heard others make this same argument. You would think that Christopher Nolan would give the audience a totem as well since he makes such a big deal of it with his characters. It was Cobb’s dream – and it was also his subconscious filling the space. Now, let’s remember, near the end of the movie when Cobb enters the room with Saito (who has grown old) in it. We just haven’t been shown what they are if they do. We earlier had stated there were no bad guys at the end of the story, but what if Saito was a bad guy? Interesting. I think the answer has serious implications. Having fulfilled the objective, As mentioned previously, this tantalizing finale has been endlessly dissected and debated over the years, and these days Nolan is lucky to escape an interview without being interrogated over Cobb's ultimate fate.
What other beguiling questions would you like answered or that you have answers for already? It won’t tell you when you are messing with yourself;Seriously though. But this one scene was a BIG piece of evidence that it was in fact a dream. I’m done now I swear haha.So I’ve spent the better part of my day in a car then a plane then another car and am only now getting a chance to post this. Even if it does fall over, can I trust that its telling me the truth?Maybe a stretch, but I don’t think I’m too far off. Its a foolproof guide that remains consistent throughout the movie. Loving this response. Most of the conflict can attributed to Cobb fighting himself.BIG THINGS EVERYONE MISSES.