Inception 2 ??
Inception was a real box office dream for Christopher
Nolan. And when the movie was released, the writer-director had already
shown that he was also a master of sequels with his batty follow-up, The
Dark Knight. So it seemed entirely plausible that
Nolan would eventually go deeper into the layers of subconscious reality with Inception 2.
"You mustn't be
afraid to dream a little bigger darling."
But despite an ambiguous
ending and some serious interest in a follow-up film, it just hasn't happened
yet. Here's why.
Limbo
Inception was released
right before The Dark Knight Rises closed out Nolan's three-part trek
through Gotham City. While he wasn't traditionally a sequel man before, his Dark
Knight trilogy seemed to change his tune. In fact, he said that while he
originally conceived of Inception as a one-shot cinematic experience, he
wouldn't close the door on a possible return, simply because of the outcome of
his Batman experience. He told Deadline:
"I've always liked the
potential of the world. It's an infinite, or perhaps I should say infinitesimal
world that fascinates me I think of Inception as one film, but that's how I
approach all of my films. When I was making Batman Begins, I certainly didn't
have any thoughts of doing a second Batman film, let alone a third. You never
quite know where your creative interests are going to take you. But when I was
making Inception, I viewed it as a standalone movie."
Virtual reality to
further explore the dream-within-a-dream world he'd created, Nolan originally
eyed a video game as the preferred medium for a follow-up because it would
offer an even more expansive place for exploring all the layers of his dream
world. Plus, let's face it. Some parts of the movie just looked like video
games, with all that Minecraft-style world-building and how the heroes stormed
the frosty fortress like something straight out of GoldenEye. Hey, you
know you'd play it.
The kick
Even if Nolan did
want to consider stepping back into the world of Inception, he's
kept himself pretty busy with other projects. After he returned to Gotham for
the final Dark Knight installment after Inception's release, he
ventured into all-new territory with 2014's Interstellar. He's also
written and directed a World War II epic called Dunkirk. Nolan's shown
he has the ability to step back into one filmmaking world after pressing pause on
it, but the more movies that stack up between Inception and its
hypothetical sequel, the less likely it seems he'll ever return.
"You promised, you
promised!"
Going graphic
The cast has been pretty
swamped since then, too. After Inception, DiCaprio headlined in a series of
commercial and critical successes, starring in J. Edgar, Django Unchained,
The Great Gatsby, and The Wolf of Wall Street in rapid
succession— then, after five Oscar nominations over 22 years, he won Best Actor
for his leading role in 2015's The Revenant. More recently, DiCaprio
has turned his attention to philanthropic filmmaking with the documentary Before
the Flood and producing duties on his upcoming big-screen Captain Planet
adaptation. Tom Hardy has also starred in a few big-deal pictures you might
have heard of, like The Dark Knight Rises, Mad Max: Fury Road, and The
Revenant.
And Joseph Gordon-Levitt
went on to make his own directorial debut in Don Jon and starred in a bunch of
hits like Looper and Snowden. Surely they'd all be willing to pencil in
another project with Nolan if he asked them to. But scheduling a time
that might work for all of these people could conceivably be pretty complicated.
Elephant budget
Saito might've had deep
enough pockets to make a second movie happen, but in the real world, budgets
are a real wake-up call for studios looking into making a sequel. Inception
cost a whopping $160 million to make, and it's expected that a sequel
would have to be even bigger and also better to truly impress, meaning it'd
cost even more. In an era when sequels aren't always a box
office guarantee, that's a risky move Warner Bros. might not be
ready to make.
Drop the top
But even with all that
in mind, it's hard to shake that spinning top and not want to see more. One of
the main reasons Inception fans have been dreaming of a sequel is that the
ending seemed to raise more questions than it answered. Was Cobb really
reunited with his children at long last in the waking world?
Did the spinning top
that was his totem eventually fall, revealing that he'd finally escaped the
brain plane?
But according to Nolan,
that last scene wasn't meant to be so confusing. He told Princeton University
graduates in 2015:
"The way the end of that
film worked, Leonardo DiCaprio's character Cobb — he was off with his kids, he
was in his own subjective reality. He didn't really care anymore, and that
makes a statement: perhaps, all levels of reality are valid. The camera moves
over the spinning top just before it appears to be wobbling, it was cut to
black."
You got all that?
"Your condescension
is as always much appreciated darling, thank you."
The short version: even
if you think that there's more to tell about the final shot of Inception,
Nolan doesn't.
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