Inception
Inception (2010)

Inception

3/5
(20 votes)
8.8IMDb74Metascore

Details

Cast

Goofs

The first time the cab is hit, the front grille with the Hyundai logo is smashed in, and disappears.

The grille reappears in the next scene, and the car has less damage than before.

In the warehouse scene, the grille disappears again.

When the white van emerges from the warehouse, the passenger side mirror strikes the warehouse door.

In the next shot of van's exterior, the passenger side mirror is fully extended and instead the driver's side mirror is flipped back.

In subsequent shots, the correct mirror is flipped back.

In the falling van, Arthur is sleeping without the headphones that were placed on his head.

The headphones reappear before the van hits the water.

One car explosion is shown twice.

First, the car explodes in a fireball, filling the frame.

Minutes later, the same car explodes in the same fireball, but as part of a bigger shot from further away, in the bottom half of the frame.

At the café, when Ariadne adjusts her hair or picks up her coffee cup, her hand movements are out of sync from shot to shot.

When Eames is chasing down the Hummer with skiers trailing behind it, the number of skiers on the ropes alternates between five and six in different shots.

When Saito enters the helicopter and tells Cobb about the inception plan, hard rain hits the helicopter window.

Subsequent shots show no rain.

When Arthur and Ariadne are looking at the hotel rooms in the second layer of dreams, Ariadne's bun keeps moving from the back of her head to the top of her head.

When Fischer's cab is hijacked, numerous production markings are visible on the street.

When Cobb and Mal commit suicide in front of the train, they look young, although they have been in limbo for decades.

This is deliberate, an artifact of Cobb's happy recollections.

A later scene in which he reflects on their life together revisits this shot, and the actors are aged to show Cobb's corrected memory of the events.

When Cobb meets Saito in limbo, the full-eye contacts used to make 'Leonardo DiCaprio' (qv)'s and 'Ken Watanabe (I)' (qv)'s eyes look glossy and bloodshot are visible in close-up shots.

When the team busts into room 528 in the hotel, the door opens fractionally before Cobb's foot hits it in the POV shot.

In the warehouse scene between Cobb and Ariadne, a Nikon DSLR camera on a desk behind Cobb disappears and reappears between shots.

When Arthur is tying up the team in the hotel scene, Eames' arms are tightly bound to his sides.

When Arthur is pushing them down the corridors, Eames' arms float freely.

Then, in the shot looking down into the elevator, his arms are once again bound tightly.

On the flight from Sydney to LAX, a flight attendant gives Cobb a white I-94 immigration form, for people coming to the US on a visa.

US citizens only need to fill out a smaller blue customs declaration form.

Cobb clearly declines the white form.

The flight attendant also offers Fischer an I-94.

He takes it and sets it down.

Fischer is an Australian citizen; his passport is visible when he sits down and Cobb looks at it.

Australia is a member of the Visa Waiver Program, so Australians do not need a visa to visit the US.

However, flight attendants regularly give immigration forms to passengers who don't need them.

Plus, depending on Fischer's position in his father's company, his visit could require a B1 (visitor for business), L1 (intra-company transferee), or E1/E2 (treaty trader/investor) visa.

Dom slipped the sedative into Fischer's drink on the plane.

The flight attendant, who was in on the plot, could have slipped it in beforehand, with much less chance of detection.

When Saito uses his teeth to pull the safety pin from a fragmentation grenade (extremely difficult in real life) the safety lever remains in place even after the grenade is thrown several feet into the opening of a vent.

The characters dream during a 10-hour flight from Sydney to Los Angeles on a Boeing 747.

In real life, a 747 flight from Sydney to LAX takes at least 13.

5 hours.

The characters need 10 hours to complete the inception, regardless of how long the flight takes.

When the bus on the bridge hits the guardrail, it flies horizontally for some time, but the passengers immediately become weightless.

That is correct; weightlessness is caused by acceleration, not speed.

Falling is a vertical acceleration, and gravity will immediately cause the bus to fall as soon as it is no longer supported by the bridge.

Shots of the falling van are interspersed with several stages of the dreams.

The van backtracks in several shots.

When Cobb confronts Mal at the hotel, in front of the open window with billowing curtains, a crew member's fingertips can be seen through the sheer fabric.

When Arthur puts the cab in reverse and rams a bodyguard/projection, the gun flies out of the victim's hand and falls a few feet away.

In the next shot, the gun is next to the dead body.

When Ariadne starts changing her first dream with Cobb, she steps over an invisible step (probably a part of a green screen) each time she moves a mirror.

When Cobb first meets Ariadne and begins her interview drawing puzzles, she is wearing a gray henley shirt with buttons underneath her jacket.

For the rest of the interview, she is wearing a different gray pullover blouse without buttons.

Arthur fights a projection in the rotating hallway, and they slide into a room.

When everything finally comes to a stop, and he shoots the projection, he curls up to his left.

When he gets up, he straightens up from his right.

When Yusuf drives the white van with frequent jerks, the same shot of the dreaming passengers moving inside and trying to gain balance with one hand while dreaming is shown twice.

During the city bending scene, reflections in the windows show the buildings in place, not bending.

In the first scene, Saito spins Cobb's totem clockwise.

When the same scene is shown at the end of the movie, the totem spins anticlockwise (counterclockwise).

When Dom shoots Arthur to wake him from the first dream, Arthur has no bullet-hole in his forehead until he is shown lying on the ground.

When Cobb returns home at the end of the film, his children run toward him, and he picks up Phillipa.

The scene cuts to Miles before cutting back to Cobb, who is now holding James.

Just after Cobb spins Mal's top and closes the safe door, the water in his cityscape is not moving or rippling.

When he and Mal walk outside, the water in the background is stationary.

When the avalanche starts after the first kick, smoke from the explosion that probably started it is visible above the cliff for a few seconds.

The crew busts into room 528 by kicking the door down, which should damage the lock.

In later scenes, the lock is fully functional.

During various shots of the van falling off the bridge, the train on the adjacent bridge stops, moves at a decent rate of speed, and disappears between shots.

During the chase sequence in Mombasa (filmed in Morocco), the cars' steering wheels are on the left.

In Kenya, where Mombasa is located, steering wheels are on the right.

When Saito is lying on his back after being shot in the chest, something that looks like a squib is visible under his shirt.

Someone mentioned first aid earlier in the scene, so it may be a bandage on his wound.

When Saito is taken from the second level dream to the first level, the floor is linoleum tile.

When they push him to the floor, it is carpeted.

When Eames gets on the taxi after Robert in the rain, the scene outside the taxi with a red door, is different than the building stairs before taxi stops.

When Eames and Saito are in the hotel elevator, Saito's right hand is on Eames' shoulder.

His hand is in a different place just after the camera shows the mirror.

When Cobb spins the totem in the final scene, 3 paint pens are in one glass on the table.

When the camera moves back to the table a few seconds later, more paint pens are on the table.

When Cobb dives to grab his pistol and shoot Arthur, it is not in the same position as it was when he surrendered it and slid it onto the table.

In Mombasa, the cars have yellow license plates in the front and back.

Kenyan cars have white plates in front, and yellow plates in back.

In the warehouse, while Cobb and the team are talk about the idea of inception, Cobb rolls up his sleeve, then starts rolling up the next sleeve.

The camera cuts away, then moves back to Cobb, who is rolling up his sleeves again.

There are several valid reasons why Robert Fischer didn't bring a bodyguard on the 747 flight.

He may like to keep a low profile.

He may have thought it wasn't necessary, since he was in a secured first class compartment.

Since he'd just become the heir to his father's company, he may not yet have recognized the need for a bodyguard when he traveled in public.

Since his being on the 747 flight was a last minute move, very few people would have likely known about it and had very little time to do anything about it, including potential terrorists.

Finally, since it turns out his mind was trained by another extractor, Fischer knew how to protect his subconscious if he ever was put under.

When Arthur arrives in the hotel to get Cobb for their ride on the roof, the reflection of the window reveals a moving boom pole, possibly a c-stand and the boom operator himself.

Bullet holes and damage disappear in various shots of the falling van.

When Arthur arrives in the hotel to get Cobb for their ride on the roof, it is dark outside.

When they are out on the roof, it is around noon.

After the van falls into the water, Fischer saves Peter Browning (actually Eames) from drowning in the van.

Saito's eyes are wide open.

Back inside the submerged van, when Arthur and Ariadne are breathing from the oxygen tank, Saito's eyes are closed.

When the rain-soaked cars enter the warehouse, the floor already has wet tire tracks, evidently from a previous take.

Once they stop and the people exit, the floor behind the cab and back towards the door is dry.

Cobb and Ariadne are walking along the bridge and Cobb is explaining the importance of not building entire areas from memories.

In the single shot of Cobb it's clear he's swinging both arms while walking.

In the 2-shot he has his left hand in his pocket.

Cobb stops the car in a crosswalk at an intersection to pickup Ariadne.

As soon as she enters, the car is broadsided by a train, in the middle of the intersection.

When the train engine hits the cars, it is clearly affected by the mass of the cars it pushes, and its bouncing movements suggest some form of suspension (or rubber wheels).

A real freight engine weighs more than 100 metric tons, far more than the cars it hits.

It would not give way or bounce when hitting cars.

However, the train appears in a dream, so the laws of physics may not apply.

Further indication of this is that the train's wheels are shown running on non-existing rails in/under the asphalt.

In real life it would not continue in a straight line.

During the zero-gravity fight, as Arthur chokes a projection, padding is clearly visible on the ceiling, to facilitate stunt work.

When Ariadne and Cobb are at the café, a man in a yellow jacket passes behind Cobb.

The camera switches back and forth between Cobb and Ariadne several times.

When it switches back to Cobb, the man in the yellow jacket passes once again.

The person in the jacket is a projection and based on what the movie explains, projections behave a lot like extras.

This means the same projection may reappear like that.

In the first dream sharing of Ariadne and Cobb, when Cobb wants her to think about how they ended up there, in the close shot Cobb hasn't crossed his arms.

Then suddenly in the long shot he has crossed his arms, and in the next close shot they are un-crossed again.

On the flight, having verified that Fischer is asleep, Cobb signals the flight attendant.

She immediately draws the curtain, retrieves the case from a locker, and upon turning around the curtain is open again.

When the white van starts to cross the bridge there are several bullet holes in the back door and side panels.

After the van crosses the safety bollards the bullet holes have gone.

When the helicopter sets down at the airport, there is lots of water on the ground, and the rotor makes large ripples on it.

When Saito calls to Cobb asking him if he would like to go home, the water is gone.

It reappears when the helicopter takes off again.

In the beginning when you see the old man sitting at the table, one of his guards brings him a top that they found with Cobb.

He sets it down so it leans to the side with the bottom point touching the table.

In the next frame, the longer top point is touching the table.

When Ariadne goes into Cobb's dreams, she is in the elevator and passes the train in limbo.

Behind the train is a body of water and the a hilly landscape with houses, not the abandoned cityscape of Cobb's perception of limbo.

S Immigration no longer stamps passports as shown when Dom reenters the U.

S at LAX.

Since the movie takes place sometime in the future, though, it is possible that the policy has changed.

One newspaper article about the strained relationship between Maurice and Robert Fischer misspells "success" (with only one "c") and uses the phrase "eminent death" instead of "imminent death".

In the cut-away shot of Fischer's Maybach driving up to the foot of the stairs of a private jet during the initial description of the Sydney-LA flight, the car's rear number plate is shown is show as "63-AG-GW" in black on yellow, with the text "NEW SOUTH WALES".

While the format and subtext are correct for that Australian state, the actual pattern of the number is not and should instead be "AG-63-GW".

The registration code for Fischer's private jet is shown as "VH-7JL", with the "VH" prefix indicating registry in Australia.

However, in reality Australian aircraft registration codes cannot include numbers.

After the initial dream sequence, on board the Bullet Train, Cobb states that he's ".

Getting off at Kyoto.

" In the next establishing shot, we can clearly see that the city Cobb is in is Tokyo (judging by the presence of Tokyo Tower).

Kyoto is over 200 miles away from Tokyo.

Saito's helicopter takes off from a rooftop in Tokyo, with the distinctive red and white Tokyo Tower in the background of several shots.

But it lands moments later at the ultra-modern Farnborough Airport in England, more than 5,900 miles away.

Dileep Rao drops his African accent in the first dream, after the team leaves the warehouse.

He only has about 2 or 3 more lines in the movie, but he says them in his normal American accent.

When Ariadne is showing Cobb her dream level layouts a Nikon camera is visible besides Cobb at the desk he sits down at.

The camera angle looks at Ariadne, then returns back to looking at Cobb and the camera on the desk is gone.

In the opening scene, when Saito is presented with Cobb's totem, it is shown upside down, immediately after being placed on the table properly.

Cobb tells Ariadne to draw a maze in two minutes that takes more than one minute to solve.

She eventually draws a circular maze.

The circular maze seems to be unsolvable by Cobb.

However, it is solvable, and it would probably take most children less than a minute to solve.

When Ariadne is asked by Cobb to draw a maze she draws 2 that are easy to get out of, but she draws a 3rd that's impossible - the only two ways out of the maze from the center are dead ends.

Awards

African-American Film Critics Association (AAFCA) 2010


AAFCA Award
Best Director
Top 10 Films

Alliance of Women Film Journalists 2011


EDA Award
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best Film Editing
Best Film Music or Score
Best Picture
Most Beautiful Film
Unforgettable Moment

Art Directors Guild 2011


Excellence in Production Design Award
Fantasy Film

ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards 2011


ASCAP Award
Top Box Office Films

Austin Film Critics Association 2010


AFCA Award
Best Film

Awards Circuit Community Awards 2010


ACCA
Best Achievement in Cinematography
Best Achievement in Directing
Best Achievement in Film Editing
Best Achievement in Visual Effects
Best Art Direction
Best Cinematography
Best Film Editing
Best Motion Picture
Best Original Score
Best Original Screenplay
Best Performance by a Cast Ensemble
Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role
Best Sound

Awards of the Japanese Academy 2011


Award of the Japanese Academy
Best Foreign Film

BAFTA Awards 2011


BAFTA Film Award
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best Editing
Best Film
Best Production Design
Best Screenplay (Original)
Best Sound
Best Special Visual Effects

Bodil Awards 2011


Bodil
Best American Film (Bedste amerikanske film)

Boston Society of Film Critics Awards 2010


BSFC Award
Best Film Editing

British Society of Cinematographers 2010


Best Cinematography Award

Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards 2011


Critics Choice Award
Best Action Movie
Best Art Direction
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best Editing
Best Picture
Best Score
Best Sound
Best Visual Effects

California on Location Awards 2010


COLA
Teamsters Local 399 Assistant Location Manager of the Year - Features

Camerimage 2010


Golden Frog
Main Competition

Central Ohio Film Critics Association 2011


COFCA Award
Actor of the Year
Best Actor
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best Ensemble
Best Original Screenplay
Best Picture
Best Score

Chicago Film Critics Association Awards 2010


CFCA Award
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best Original Score
Best Picture

Cinema Brazil Grand Prize 2011


Cinema Brazil Grand Prize
Best Foreign-Language Film (Melhor Filme Estrangeiro)

CinEuphoria Awards 2011


CinEuphoria
Best Editing - International Competition
Best Film - Audience Award
Best Screenplay - International Competition
Top Ten of the Year - Audience Award

Costume Designers Guild Awards 2011


CDG Award
Excellence in Contemporary Film

Czech Lions 2011


Czech Lion
Best Foreign Language Film (Nejlepsí zahranicní film)

Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Awards 2010


DFWFCA Award
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best Picture
Best Screenplay

Danish Film Awards (Robert) 2011


Robert
Best American Film (Årets amerikanske film)

David di Donatello Awards 2011


David
Best Foreign Film (Miglior Film Straniero)

Denver Film Critics Society 2011


DFCS Award
Best Director
Best Original Screenplay

Detroit Film Critics Society Awards 2010


DFCS Award
Best Director
Best Film

Dublin Film Critics Circle Awards 2010


DFCC
Best Director
Best Film

Film Critics Circle of Australia Awards 2011


FCCA Award
Best Foreign Film - English Language

Florida Film Critics Circle Awards 2010


FFCC Award
Best Art Direction/Production Design
Best Cinematography
Best Original Screenplay
Best Visual Effects

Gaudí Awards 2011


Gaudí Award
Best European Film (Millor Pel·lícula Europea)

Gold Derby Awards 2011


Gold Derby Award
Art Direction
Cinematography
Director
Ensemble Cast
Film Editing
Motion Picture
Original Score
Original Screenplay
Sound Editing/Mixing
Visual Effects

Golden Schmoes Awards 2010


Golden Schmoes
Best Action Sequence of the Year
Best Director of the Year
Best DVD/Blu-Ray of the Year
Best Line of the Year
Best Music in a Movie
Best Sci-Fi Movie of the Year
Best Screenplay of the Year
Best Special Effects of the Year
Best Supporting Actor of the Year
Best Supporting Actress of the Year
Best Trailer of the Year
Breakthrough Performance of the Year
Coolest Character of the Year
Favorite Movie of the Year
Favorite Movie Poster of the Year
Most Memorable Scene in a Movie
Most Overrated Movie of the Year
Trippiest Movie of the Year

Golden Trailer Awards 2010


Golden Trailer
Best Sound Editing
Best Summer 2010 Blockbuster Poster
Most Original Poster
Summer 2010 Blockbuster

Gran Premio Internazionale del Doppiaggio 2011


Film Award
Best dubbing mixing

Hollywood Film Awards 2010


Hollywood Movie of the Year

Hollywood Music In Media Awards (HMMA) 2010


HMMA Award
Best Original Score - Feature Film

Houston Film Critics Society Awards 2010


HFCS Award
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best Original Score
Best Picture
Best Screenplay

Huabiao Film Awards 2011


Huabiao Film Award
Outstanding Translated Foreign Film

Hugo Awards 2011


Hugo
Best Dramatic Presentation - Long Form

IGN Summer Movie Awards 2010


IGN Award
Best Actress
Best Director
Best Movie
Best Poster
Best Sci-Fi Movie
Best Trailer

Il Festival Nazionale del Doppiaggio Voci nell'Ombra 2011


Film Award
Best Male Voice

International Cinephile Society Awards 2011


ICS Award
Best Editing
Best Original Score
Best Picture
Best Production Design

International Film Music Critics Award (IFMCA) 2011


IFMCA Award
Best Original Score for an Action/Adventure/Thriller Film
Film Score of the Year

International Online Cinema Awards (INOCA) 2011


INOCA
Best Art Direction
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best Ensemble Cast
Best Film Editing
Best Original Score
Best Original Screenplay
Best Picture
Best Sound Editing
Best Sound Mixing
Best Visual Effects

Internet Film Critic Society 2010


IFCS Award
Best Horror or Science Fiction

Iowa Film Critics Awards 2011


IFC Award
Best Director

Irish Film and Television Awards 2011


IFTA Award
Best Actor in a Supporting Role in a Feature Film
Best International Actor
Best International Film

Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists 2011


Silver Ribbon
Best Non-European Director (Regista del Miglior Film Non-Europeo)

Italian Online Movie Awards (IOMA) 2011


IOMA
Best Cinematography (Miglior fotografia)
Best Director (Miglior regia)
Best Editing (Miglior montaggio)
Best Original Score (Miglior colonna sonora)
Best Original Screenplay (Miglior sceneggiatura originale)
Best Picture (Miglior film)
Best Special Effects (Migliori effetti speciali)
Best Supporting Actress (Miglior attrice non protagonista)

Kansas City Film Critics Circle Awards 2010


KCFCC Award
Best Director

Kinema Junpo Awards 2011


Kinema Junpo Award
Best Foreign Language Film

Las Vegas Film Critics Society Awards 2010


Sierra Award
Best Actor
Best Art Direction
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best DVD
Best Film Editing
Best Picture
Best Score
Best Screenplay
Best Visual Effects

London Critics Circle Film Awards 2011


ALFS Award
British Director of the Year
British Supporting Actor of the Year
Director of the Year

Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards 2010


LAFCA Award
Best Production Design

MTV Movie + TV Awards 2011


MTV Movie Award
Best Fight
Best Jaw Dropping Moment
Best Kiss
Best Line from a Movie
Best Movie
Best Scared-As-Shit Performance

Oklahoma Film Critics Circle Awards 2010


OFCC Award
Best Film
Best Original Screenplay

Online Film & Television Association 2011


OFTA Film Award
Best Breakthrough Performance: Male
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best Ensemble
Best Film Editing
Best Picture
Best Production Design
Best Sound Effects Editing
Best Sound Mixing
Best Visual Effects
Most Cinematic Moment

Online Film Critics Society Awards 2011


OFCS Award
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best Editing
Best Original Screenplay
Best Picture

PGA Awards 2011


PGA Award
Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures

Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards 2010


PFCS Award
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best Ensemble Acting
Best Film Editing
Best Original Score
Best Picture
Best Production Design
Best Screenplay - Original
Best Stunts
Best Visual Effects

Prêmio Guarani 2011


Premio Guarani
Best Foreign Film

Rembrandt Awards 2011


Rembrandt Award
Best International Film (Beste Buitenlandse Film)

Rondo Hatton Classic Horror Awards 2010


Rondo Statuette
Best Film

Russian National Movie Awards 2011


Georges Award
Best Foreign Action Movie
Best Foreign Drama Movie
Filmz.ru Special Prize

San Diego Film Critics Society Awards 2010


SDFCS Award
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best Editing
Best Picture
Best Production Design

Satellite Awards 2010


Satellite Award
Best Actress in a Supporting Role
Best Art Direction & Production Design
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best Film Editing
Best Original Score
Best Sound (Mixing & Editing)
Best Visual Effects

Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America 2011


Bradbury Award

Scream Awards 2010


Scream Award
Best Cameo
Best Director
Best Ensemble
Best F/X
Best Science Fiction Actor
Best Science Fiction Actress
Best Science Fiction Movie
Best Scream-Play
Best Supporting Actor
Best Supporting Actress
Breakout Performance - Male
Fight Scene of the Year
Holy Sh*t Scene of the Year
The Ultimate Scream

Screen Actors Guild Awards 2011


Actor
Outstanding Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a Motion Picture

Southeastern Film Critics Association Awards 2010


SEFCA Award
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best Original Screenplay
Best Picture

Teen Choice Awards 2010


Teen Choice Award
Choice Summer Movie

Toronto Film Critics Association Awards 2010


TFCA Award
Best Director

Utah Film Critics Association Awards 2010


UFCA Award
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best Picture
Best Screenplay

Vancouver Film Critics Circle 2011


VFCC Award
Best Screenplay

Village Voice Film Poll 2010


VVFP Award
Worst Film

Visual Effects Society Awards 2011


VES Award
Outstanding Compositing in a Feature Motion Picture
Outstanding Created Environment in a Live Action Feature Motion Picture
Outstanding Models and Miniatures in a Feature Motion Picture
Outstanding Visual Effects in a Visual Effects-Driven Feature Motion Picture

Washington DC Area Film Critics Association Awards 2010


WAFCA Award
Best Acting Ensemble
Best Art Direction
Best Cinematography
Best Director
Best Film
Best Original Screenplay
Best Score

Women Film Critics Circle Awards 2010


WFCC Award
Hall of Shame

World Soundtrack Awards 2011


World Soundtrack Award
Best Original Soundtrack of the Year
Soundtrack Composer of the Year

World Stunt Awards 2011


Taurus Award
Best Fight
Best Specialty Stunt
Best Stunt Coordinator and/or 2nd Unit Director

Box Office

DateAreaGross
6 January 2011 USA USD 292,576,195
2 January 2011 USA USD 292,568,851
19 December 2010 USA USD 292,511,473
12 December 2010 USA USD 292,462,233
5 December 2010 USA USD 292,383,900
28 November 2010 USA USD 292,277,755
21 November 2010 USA USD 292,068,095
14 November 2010 USA USD 291,832,593
7 November 2010 USA USD 291,448,103
31 October 2010 USA USD 290,948,208
24 October 2010 USA USD 290,381,264
17 October 2010 USA USD 289,751,947
10 October 2010 USA USD 289,183,607
4 October 2010 USA USD 288,405,376
26 September 2010 USA USD 287,053,292
19 September 2010 USA USD 285,129,855
12 September 2010 USA USD 282,211,978
5 September 2010 USA USD 278,457,609
29 August 2010 USA USD 270,519,920
22 August 2010 USA USD 262,031,594
15 August 2010 USA USD 248,469,482
8 August 2010 USA USD 227,637,569
1 August 2010 USA USD 193,313,741
25 July 2010 USA USD 142,883,424
18 July 2010 USA USD 62,785,337
26 September 2010 UK GBP 35,264,403
19 September 2010 UK GBP 34,976,999
12 September 2010 UK GBP 34,609,887
5 September 2010 UK GBP 34,055,353
29 August 2010 UK GBP 33,085,858
22 August 2010 UK GBP 31,563,941
15 August 2010 UK GBP 29,204,120
8 August 2010 UK GBP 25,719,644
1 August 2010 UK GBP 20,800,468
25 July 2010 UK GBP 14,204,521
18 July 2010 UK GBP 5,912,814
6 January 2011 Worldwide USD 825,532,764
14 November 2010 Worldwide USD 820,186,685
Italy EUR 10,734,786
29 August 2010 Philippines PHP 99,060,137
22 August 2010 Philippines PHP 98,110,189
15 August 2010 Philippines PHP 95,519,789
8 August 2010 Philippines PHP 87,353,133
1 August 2010 Philippines PHP 72,244,921
25 July 2010 Philippines PHP 52,462,138
18 July 2010 Philippines PHP 21,589,780
12 September 2010 Russia RUR 650,144,219
5 September 2010 Russia RUR 645,361,641
29 August 2010 Russia RUR 636,043,623
22 August 2010 Russia RUR 619,590,200
15 August 2010 Russia RUR 592,499,337
8 August 2010 Russia RUR 531,317,524
1 August 2010 Russia RUR 425,811,806
25 July 2010 Russia RUR 215,963,613
24 October 2010 Spain EUR 16,735,127
10 October 2010 Spain EUR 16,444,331
3 October 2010 Spain EUR 16,210,367
DateAreaGrossScreens
18 July 2010 USA USD 62,785,337 3,792
18 July 2010 UK GBP 5,912,814 452
18 July 2010 Philippines PHP 21,589,780 70
25 July 2010 Russia RUR 215,963,613 895
DateAreaGrossScreens
2 January 2011 USA USD 15,332 28
19 December 2010 USA USD 25,929 62
12 December 2010 USA USD 49,996 108
5 December 2010 USA USD 67,426 117
28 November 2010 USA USD 119,466 144
21 November 2010 USA USD 153,650 198
14 November 2010 USA USD 234,514 262
7 November 2010 USA USD 317,189 291
31 October 2010 USA USD 362,531 401
24 October 2010 USA USD 500,140 452
17 October 2010 USA USD 348,326 297
10 October 2010 USA USD 492,311 403
4 October 2010 USA USD 904,208 625
26 September 2010 USA USD 1,247,006 907
19 September 2010 USA USD 1,967,137 1,305
12 September 2010 USA USD 2,802,390 1,583
5 September 2010 USA USD 5,884,355 1,704
29 August 2010 USA USD 4,876,356 2,070
22 August 2010 USA USD 7,838,179 2,401
15 August 2010 USA USD 11,285,051 3,120
8 August 2010 USA USD 18,505,470 3,418
1 August 2010 USA USD 27,485,245 3,545
25 July 2010 USA USD 42,725,012 3,792
18 July 2010 USA USD 62,785,337 3,792
26 September 2010 UK GBP 174,186 124
19 September 2010 UK GBP 201,162 132
12 September 2010 UK GBP 271,033 154
5 September 2010 UK GBP 417,302 258
29 August 2010 UK GBP 699,041 339
22 August 2010 UK GBP 1,063,679 419
15 August 2010 UK GBP 1,681,130 472
8 August 2010 UK GBP 2,259,595 468
1 August 2010 UK GBP 3,229,651 459
25 July 2010 UK GBP 4,172,568 456
18 July 2010 UK GBP 5,912,814 452
19 September 2010 non-USA USD 468,200,000
29 August 2010 Philippines PHP 833,960 5
22 August 2010 Philippines PHP 2,128,264 14
15 August 2010 Philippines PHP 5,024,259 42
8 August 2010 Philippines PHP 11,415,788 55
1 August 2010 Philippines PHP 14,464,503 58
25 July 2010 Philippines PHP 22,915,619 70
18 July 2010 Philippines PHP 21,589,780 70

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"Inception" will probably feature in my top 10 favourites of all time. A few people would say it is overrated, but I feel this is one of the most original and the most brilliant plots ever!

Christopher Nolan might be my favorite movie maker, and this might be his best work. Make sure you go and see this movie!

This movie has been praised by many people and it's very motivated to ask why? Good science fiction puts you in a state of mind that makes you think "there's a chance that this actually can happen.

I have never seen any other movie as many times as i have seen this movie. I really appreciate Christopher Nolan and his brother who always come up with very good scripts and inception was a masterpiece.

Start with a simple idea, and let it grow naturally in a persons mind until they are consumed by the concept. This is the basic premise of Christopher Nolan's 2010 film, Inception.

I liked Christopher Nolan's touch that the movie ended and you Do not know if it was a dream or real world!!!!

To put it in one word, mindblowing. The best movie someone can ever make.

I can't even recall how many times I've watched this movie.

Awesome movie! i really liked it i thought that the way they acted was really good they should make another movie this was a great thing to watch your really need to see this masterpiece.

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