Movie · 2010 · Action, Science Fiction, Adventure · 2h 28m · PG-13 · English
Curator score: 9.1/10 (6.7M ratings)
Your mind is the scene of the crime.
Overview
Cobb, a skilled thief who commits corporate espionage by infiltrating the subconscious of his targets is offered a chance to regain his old life as payment for a task considered to be impossible: "inception", the implantation of another person's idea into a target's subconscious.
Ratings
Curator score: 9.1/10
IMDb: 8.8/10
Letterboxd: 4.23/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 87%
Metacritic: 74
TMDB: 8.4/10
Director
Christopher Nolan
Production
Legendary Pictures, Syncopy, Warner Bros. Pictures
Cast
Leonardo DiCaprio, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Ken Watanabe, Tom Hardy, Elliot Page, Dileep Rao, Cillian Murphy, Tom Berenger, Marion Cotillard, Pete Postlethwaite, Michael Caine, Lukas Haas, Talulah Riley, Tohoru Masamune, Taylor Geare, Claire Geare, Johnathan Geare, Yuji Okumoto, Earl Cameron, Ryan Hayward
Curator Review
Verdict
A high-concept blockbuster that pairs puzzle-box plotting with emotional stakes, inventive action, and a rare sense of scale. It rewards attention, but it’s also built to thrill on first watch.
Best for
fans of cerebral sci-fi and big-screen spectacle
viewers who like layered, twisty narratives
people who enjoy heist movies with a genre-bending hook
audiences drawn to dream logic, ambiguity, and strong visual design
Skip if
you want a simple, low-effort plot
you dislike exposition-heavy storytelling
you prefer character drama over concept-driven filmmaking
you’re not in the mood for a long, intense, highly stylized blockbuster
Overview
Inception is one of the defining studio spectacles of the 2010s: a heist movie re-engineered as a labyrinth of memory, guilt, and control. It takes a wildly elaborate premise and drives it with real momentum, so the film rarely feels like an exercise even when it’s being deliberately opaque. The action is cleanly staged, the visual effects are integrated into the storytelling, and the score gives the whole thing an almost mythic pulse.
Worth noting
What keeps it from being just a clever machine is the emotional throughline. Beneath the architecture of dreams and rules, the movie is about grief, obsession, and the way people build private realities to survive loss. That gives the ending its staying power: the question isn’t only what is real, but what Cobb is finally willing to let go of.
Bottom line
It’s also a movie that became bigger than itself in culture, inspiring endless debate, memes, and rewatch analysis. Even if some of its characters are sketched more efficiently than deeply, the craft is so assured that the film remains an easy recommendation for anyone who wants blockbuster filmmaking with brains, ambition, and a little existential dread.
Top Letterboxd reviews
ksenija (4.5★) · 25650 likes
christopher nolan spent years writing this movie's complex plot and really named the main character dom cobb
kirst (4★) · 17512 likes
fellas, is it gay to go inside ur bros dreams?
David Chen (5★) · 16173 likes
"The most important emotional thing about the top spinning at the end is that Cobb is not looking at it. He doesn't care." -Christopher Nolan, Wired interview, December 8, 2010.
Patrick Willems (4.5★) · 10598 likes
Dom Cobb seems like he's never told a joke in his life and has zero friends
cathy (5★) · 9378 likes
cillian murphy: no dad i'm giving up on YOUR dream!
2000 · Mystery, Thriller · 1h 53m · R · Curator 9.1/10 (3.2M ratings) · Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video, Hulu, Peacock, Amazon Prime Video with Ads, Peacock Premium Plus
A tightly wound puzzle thriller that shares the same fascination with memory, identity, and fractured perception.