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  1. Aug 23, 2018 · Inception Ending, Final Answer : r/movies.     Go to movies. r/movies. r/movies. The goal of /r/Movies is to provide an inclusive place for discussions and news about films with major releases. Submissions should be for the purpose of informing or initiating a discussion, not just to entertain readers.

  2. Mar 16, 2021 · The point to me is that reailty is all about perception. If it feels real, it is real. If Cobb believes he’s with his kids, whether it’s in ‘reality’ or a dream, then he’s with his kids. I suppose it’s an understanding of the ending that gets to a similar point, in that the top doesn’t really matter, but with a slightly different ...

  3. Jul 17, 2010 · This could be an indication that Cobb is making things up in his mind/dream and choosing what he wants the most. 3) Conclusion: Cobb doesn't know that he's still dreaming, he chooses to believe/his brain makes him believe that he woke up and gets what he wanted. For Cobb, this is now his reality.

  4. Jul 29, 2023 · So Saito's solution is to learn Cobb's Inception technique and use it on Cobb himself. While Saito doesn’t know the physical properties of Cobb's top — how long it spins – he implants in Cobb the idea that it's more important to be a young man and see his children than to check the totem. Of course some may still say the ending is ...

  5. Jul 20, 2010 · My perfect happy ending theory: All the events, the inception, the limbo, all that happened. The ending, however, is a dream Cobb has on the plane, a brief, normal dream. Saito really did make they call, Cobb knows he can go back home, and he falls asleep for a moment because he's damn tired.

  6. Jan 10, 2021 · It's purposefully ambiguous like the end of Memento. There is no definitive answer, it's up to the viewer to decide, like a Japanese koan- which is a short story or parable which has no clear answer. The act of thinking about the possibilities is what the viewer is left with at the end of the movie.

  7. I love that the ending of Inception will always create debate - the debate will go on forever. Here is a point I haven't seen anyone make. The now familiar line from Christopher Nolan, though originally from the producer Emma Thomas, is that Cobb "doesn't care" whether the spinning top stops spinning or not, and his not caring is the point of the scene.

  8. Mar 8, 2021 · Nothing has happened to him to make him not care anymore. Certainly not confronting his guilt with Mal as that scene ends with him emphatically rejecting the notion of choosing to accept a dream as reality. So at the end he walks out to meet his kids because he's totally convinced those are his real kids.

  9. Mar 13, 2011 · zoo_estrange • 13 yr. ago. Cobb needed to forgive himself for his perceived sin of killing his wife by planting the idea that they were still dreaming. In actuality he is still dreaming, and all the events were put there to orchestrate Cobb forgiving himself, so Mal can come in and help him truly wake up. The sequel we will find that Mal is ...

  10. Dec 24, 2020 · The ending is reality because he was able to see his kid’s faces. His subconscious wasn’t able to make that up because he never called out to them for them to look back at him. In all of his dreams, he never saw their faces. So, when he was finally able to see their faces, he knew he was in reality. 1. Reply.

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