Inception MPEG4 (2010) {NLsubs} [H33T] [QUL]seeders: 0
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Inception MPEG4 (2010) {NLsubs} [H33T] [QUL] (Size: 1.73 GB)
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_______________________________________________ ***BEDANKT VOOR HET DOWNLOADEN & ENJOY*** _______________________________________________ THIS ZIP CONTAINS: __________________ - Mpeg4 AVI Movie - Cover DVD - Movie-Info(read me) - Downloaded from... DETAILS: ________ Formaat : AVI Bestandsgrootte : 1,73 GiB Duur : 4h 44mn Totale bitrate : 873 Kbps Video Codec-ID : XVID Bitrate : 768 Kbps Breedte : 1 024 pixels Hoogte : 576 pixels Beeldverhouding : 16:9 Audio Formaat : MPEG Audio Formaatversie : Version 1 Formaatprofiel : Layer 3 Bitrate : 96,0 Kbps ABOUT... : __________ Inception is a 2010 American science fiction thriller film written, produced, and directed by Christopher Nolan. The film stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Ellen Page, Marion Cotillard, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Ken Watanabe, Cillian Murphy, Tom Hardy, Dileep Rao, Tom Berenger, and Michael Caine. DiCaprio plays Dominic Cobb, a specialized spy or corporate espionage thief. His work consists of secretly extracting valuable commercial information from the unconscious mind of his targets while they are asleep and dreaming. Unable to visit his children, Cobb is offered a chance to regain his old life in exchange for one last, almost impossibly difficult, task: performing inception, the planting of a commercially damaging idea into the mind of his client's competitor. Development began roughly nine years before Inception was released. In 2001, Nolan wrote an 80-page treatment about dream-stealers, presenting the idea to Warner Bros. The story was originally written as a horror film, inspired by concepts of lucid dreaming and dream incubation. The film also taps into psychological phenomena like false memories and the introspection illusion. Feeling he needed to have more experience with large-scale films,[7] Nolan opted to work on Batman Begins, The Prestige and The Dark Knight. He spent six months polishing up the script for Inception before Warner Bros. purchased it in February 2009.[8] Filming spanned six countries and four continents, beginning in Tokyo on June 19, 2009 and finishing in Canada in late November of the same year. Composer Hans Zimmer scored the film, using parts of Edith Piaf's song Non, je ne regrette rien. Inception was officially budgeted at $160 million, a cost that was split between Warner Bros. and Legendary Pictures. Nolan's reputation and success with The Dark Knight helped secure the film's $100 million in advertising expenditure. Inception premiered in London on July 8, 2010 and was released in both conventional and IMAX theaters on July 14, 2010. Released to critical acclaim, the film grossed over $21 million on its opening day, with an opening weekend gross of $62.7 million. Plot ---- Dominic Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio), along with point man Arthur (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), is on an "extraction" mission within the mind of a powerful Japanese businessman Saito (Ken Watanabe); a form of corporate espionage via dreams. Pain is felt in dreams, while death results in awakening. Cobb carries a "totem", a spinning top which spins endlessly if used in the dream, but topples in the real world. The extraction fails because of Mal (Cobb's dead wife): Cobb's memories of her haunt his dreams and sabotage his missions. Saito reveals that he is in fact auditioning the team to perform the most challenging act of all: "inception" or entering dreams in order to implant an idea. Saito promises that if the mission is successful, he will have murder charges against Cobb cleared so Cobb can return to the U.S. and be reunited with his children. The target is Robert Fischer (Cillian Murphy), son of Saito's terminally ill corporate rival, Maurice Fischer (Pete Postlethwaite). The objective is to convince Fischer to break up his father's empire. Cobb recruits Eames (Tom Hardy), a forger who can change appearance inside dreams, Yusuf (Dileep Rao), a sedative chemist, and Ariadne (Ellen Page), a student architect to design dream worlds. When the elder Fischer dies in Sydney, Saito and the team share the flight with Robert Fischer back to Los Angeles and drug him. They enter Yusuf's dream, a rainy downtown area, and kidnap Fischer. However, they come under attack from Fischer's trained subconscious projections, and Saito is badly injured. Due to the strength of the sedatives and multiple dream layers, death will result in the person going into "limbo", a world of unconstructed dream space, for a seemingly indefinite time. Cobb reveals to Ariadne that he spent 50 years with Mal in limbo, where they shaped their own world and lives. After waking, Mal had remained convinced she was still dreaming, and committed suicide, attempting to persuade Cobb to do so by incriminating him in her death, but he instead fled the U.S. and the murder charges. Eames changes into Peter Browning (Tom Berenger), Fischer's godfather, to suggest to Robert the false idea that Robert's father had created a second will locked in a vault, concepts meant to cause Robert to reconsider his relationship with his father. The team then enters a van and are sedated into Arthur's dream, a hotel, where the team convinces Fischer that the kidnapping on the first level was orchestrated by Browning, and that he must enter his godfather's mind to determine his motives. They then enter a third level, actually dreamt by Eames, where Fischer must break into a snowy mountain fortress to reveal the planted idea. To wake and protect the team, the member dreaming each level stays behind at that level, being assigned the triggering of synchronized kicks: Yusuf driving the van off a bridge, Arthur crashing an elevator carrying the sleeping team members (which happens in a zero gravity sequence), and Eames detonating explosives in the mountain fortress' foundation. Music played into the dreamer's ears is used to help synchronize the kicks, by signaling to the dreamer on each level when a kick on the previous level is about to take place. Fischer is killed by Mal, and goes into limbo. Ariadne and Cobb follow him down and confront her. There Mal attempts to convince Cobb to stay in limbo by making him question reality, referring to events that occurred while he was awake. Cobb reveals that he had originally planted the idea in Mal's mind to wake, making him indirectly responsible for her suicide. She attacks him, but Ariadne shoots her. Cobb remains in limbo to locate a now dead Saito, while Fischer and Ariadne return to the mountain fortress. Fischer finds a paper toy-fan in the safe which reassures him that his father cared for him. Thus he comes to the conclusion that his father wanted him to be his own man. Cobb eventually locates an elderly Saito and tells him that they need to return to reality. Saito's recollection of Cobb leads him to conclude that he is dreaming, and he reaches for a gun. They suddenly wake on the plane to find the rest of the team and Fischer up and well. Cobb enters the United States and finally returns home to his children. He spins his top to test reality, but is distracted by the reunion. As Cobb reunites with his children, the camera focuses on the top, that is still spinning. Just as the top starts to wobble, the film ends. Leonardo DiCaprio as Dominic "Dom" Cobb, the Extractor, a professional thief who specializes in conning secrets from his victims by infiltrating their dreams. Cobb leads a team consisting of Arthur, Ariadne, Eames, Saito, and Yusuf, with the goal of influencing Fischer's actions via his dreams. DiCaprio was the first actor to be cast in the film.[12] Nolan had been trying to work with the actor for years and met him several times, but was unable to convince him to appear in any of his films until "Inception". [13] Ellen Page as Ariadne, the Architect, a graduate student who is recruited to construct the various dreamscapes, which are described as mazes. The name Ariadne alludes to a princess of Greek myth, daughter of King Minos, who aided the hero Theseus by giving him a sword and a ball of string to help him navigate the labyrinth which was the prison of the Minotaur.[14] Marion Cotillard as Mallorie "Mal" Cobb, the Shade, Dom Cobb's projection of his deceased wife and a frequent, malevolent presence in his dreams. The film's main antagonist, she is a manifestation of his guilt about the real Mal's suicide. Dom is unable to control these projections of her, challenging his abilities as an extractor.[13] Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Arthur, the Point Man, Cobb's partner who takes "point" during jobs and is responsible for researching the team's targets. Ken Watanabe as Mr. Saito, the Tourist, a businessman who employs Cobb for the team's mission, and insists on joining them inside.[15] Tom Hardy as Eames, the Forger, a sharp-tongued associate of Cobb's. Eames uses his ability to take the form of others in order to manipulate Fischer in Fischer's dreams. Dileep Rao as Yusuf, the Chemist, who formulates the drugs needed to sustain the dream states. Cillian Murphy as Robert Michael Fischer Jr., the Mark, the heir to a business empire and the team's target.[16] Tom Berenger as Peter Browning, Fischer's godfather and fellow executive at the Fischers' company.[1] Michael Caine as Prof. Stephen Miles, Cobb's mentor and father-in-law,[17] and Ariadne's college professor who recommends her to the team. Pete Postlethwaite as Maurice Fischer, Robert's dying father.[17] Lukas Haas as Nash, an architect in Cobb's employment who is replaced by Ariadne.[19] Miranda Nolan plays a minor role as an air hostess. Miranda is a first cousin to the film's director Christopher Nolan.[20] Production ---------- Inception was first developed by Christopher Nolan, based on the notion of "exploring the idea of people sharing a dream space — entering a dream space and sharing a dream. That gives you the ability to access somebody’s unconscious mind. What would that be used and abused for?"[12] Furthermore, he thought "being able to extract information from somebody’s brain would be the obvious use of that because obviously any other system where it’s computers or physical media, whatever — things that exist outside the mind — they can all be stolen ... up until this point, or up until this movie I should say, the idea that you could actually steal something from somebody’s head was impossible. So that, to me, seemed a fascinating abuse or misuse of that kind of technology."[12] Nolan drew inspiration from the works of Jorge Luis Borges when writing Inception.[21][22] Nolan had thought about these ideas on and off since he was sixteen years old, intrigued by how he would wake up and then, while falling back into a lighter sleep, hold on to the awareness that he was dreaming, a lucid dream. He also became aware of the feeling that he could study the place and alter the events of the dream. He said, "I tried to work that idea of manipulation and management of a conscious dream being a skill that these people have. Really the script is based on those common, very basic experiences and concepts, and where can those take you? And the only outlandish idea that the film presents, really, is the existence of a technology that allows you to enter and share the same dream as someone else."[23] Harvard University dream researcher Deirdre Barrett points out that Nolan did not get every detail accurate regarding dreams, but that films which really do that tend to have illogical, rambling, disjointed plots which wouldn’t make for a great thriller. "But he did get many aspects right," she said, citing the scene in which a sleeping DiCaprio is shoved into a full bath and water starts gushing into the windows of the building he is dreaming, waking him up. "That's very much how real stimuli get incorporated, and you very often wake up right after that intrusion."[24] MUSIC ----- Hans Zimmer scored the film, marking his third collaboration with Nolan following Batman Begins and The Dark Knight. According to Zimmer, it's "a very electronic score".[46] Nolan asked Zimmer to compose and finish the score as he was shooting the film. The composer said, "He wanted to unleash my imagination in the best possible way".[47] At one point, while composing the score, Zimmer incorporated a guitar sound reminiscent of Ennio Morricone and was interested in having Johnny Marr, former guitarist in the influential 80s rock band The Smiths, play these parts. He asked Nolan, who agreed and then Zimmer approached Marr who accepted his offer. Marr spent four 12-hour days working on the score, playing notes written by Zimmer with a 12-string guitar.[48] For inspiration, Zimmer read Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid by Douglas Hofstadter because it combined "the idea of playfulness in mathematics and playfulness in music".[47] Zimmer did not assemble a temp score but "every now and then they would call and say 'we need a little something here.' But that was OK because much of the music pieces aren't that scene specific. They fall into little categories".[47] While writing the screenplay, Nolan wrote in Édith Piaf's "Non, je ne regrette rien" but almost took it out when he cast Marion Cotillard, who had just completed an Oscar-winning turn as Piaf in the 2007 film La Vie en rose. Zimmer convinced Nolan to keep it in the film and also integrated elements of the song into his score; [48] in particular, the film's iconic trumpet fanfare resembles a slowed-down version of the song's instrumentation. The trailers for the film feature specially composed music by Zack Hemsey, which does not appear on the official soundtrack. _______________________________________________ ***BEDANKT VOOR HET DOWNLOADEN & ENJOY*** _______________________________________________
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