One other explanation for that ending is that it’s a potential cliffhanger for an When I got the script of Inception, I was a bit puzzled by it and I said to him ‘I don’t understand where the dream is’. By the time Cobb deals with expelling Mal's "shadow" from his subconscious, Saito has begun to perceive himself as an old man.Mal's shadow stabs Cobb during the film's climax, which throws Cobb back out into Limbo and onto the shores of Saito's limbo house. This is a guy who is ready to blow his brains out if the top keeps spinning, in order to "wake himself up." Is Cobb stuck in a dream or did he reunite with his family?

All you need to really know are the basic concepts:The dream within a dream process puts you into a deeper state of dreaming. Once the tri-level dream sequence starts, one good way to keep track of the dreamers is by noticing which team member stays awake and doesn't follow the team down to the next level of dreaming - a dreamer can't enter a lower dream state, otherwise their level of the dream would end.Here's a rundown of who is actually dreaming each level of the Fischer con:As stated, the mark thinks he is still awake, perceives the dream world as real and reinforces that notion by "projecting" his conscious view of the world onto the dream - this is why projection people populate the dream cities, etc. There are a few pieces of "evidence" that we can certainly address:At the beginning of the film, after the first job Cobb's team tries to pull on Saito, we see Cobb sitting in his hotel room alone, spinning the top and watching it intently, gun in hand. in writing and film studies. He then earned a Masters Degree in creative writing from The New School in NYC, where he first stumbled upon Screenrant.com when it was just a hobby blog owned by Vic Holtreman. - Cobb and Saito are able to remember the meaningful conversations they had and that there is a reality they existed in before Limbo, where both of them had deep desires still waiting to be fulfilled (Cobb and his kids, Saito and his business). Confused about the ending of Inception? When Saito "dies" from the gunshot wound he received on level 1 of the dream, his mind falls into Limbo, and Saito remains there for the minutes it takes Cobb and Ariadne (Ellen Page) to follow him into Limbo - those minutes in one dream state feel like decades to Saito in his Limbo state. Chris Smith started writing about gadgets as a hobby, and before he knew it he was sharing his views on tech stuff with readers around the world. Nolan takes the classic concept of a con man a step further by making Cobb and his team dream thieves, but in the end, the basic concept is still your classic con/heist movie.Nolan throws a lot of fancy math at you but it's all really inconsequential. If you want to read about specific points you can follow the links below:So, the first thing to talk about are the rules of the dream world Nolan created for the film. Mal wanted Cobb back in limbo - his own subconscious trying to pull him back to a place where he could "be with her. Once they remember that limbo is limbo, they are able to wake themselves up (likely with a gunshot to the head).The architect can manipulate real-world architecture and physics in order to create paradoxes like an endless staircase, which makes the dream world function as a sort of maze.

The version of Browning Fischer conjures in his subconscious motivates him to run deeper into Cobb's maze (dream level 3, the snow fortress) in order to find "the cheese" - i.e., the inception of the idea Saito wanted Cobb to plant. Or is it the job completed, everyone is back in reality and everything is happily ever after? Pretty deep meta-thinking stuff.There are a ton of theories being tossed around the Internet about the ending of But people want more concrete answers than that, so here you go:From the moment that Cobb and Saito (seem to) wake up from limbo, Nolan very purposefully shifts the film into an ambiguous state that leaves it somewhat open to the viewer's perception and interpretation of that perception - two big themes of the movie, coincidentally enough.From the moment Cobb and Saito wake, there is no more dialogue between the characters and few shots or images that would concretely explain or prove one interpretation.

Breaking yourself out of this cycle is extremely difficult, which is why Cobb and his wife Mal were trapped in Limbo for what seemed like decades.Time is the other factor. In a way, the movie is its own maze designed to plant a simple little idea in the viewer's mind: "reality" is a relative concept.Kofi Outlaw (former Editor-in-Chief, 2008 - 2016) has a B.A. Was the top still spinning? We all know what that's like: the deeper you sleep, the harder it is to be woken up and the more vivid and real-feeling a dream becomes. B) So the mark runs the maze, leading the extractor toward "the cheese" - i.e., mental secrets the mark is protecting.When you start getting into the whole dream within a dream aspect of the movie, identifying the dreamer can be tricky - this is especially true when Cobb and his team start running their con on Fischer using three separate levels of dreaming. Is Cobb still dreaming and his team and family (and maybe Saito) are all projections? The biggest Amazon device sale of 2020 has begun – here are the 10 best dealsThe CDC is especially worried about one state’s coronavirus death rateGood news: Some of you will get new stimulus checks as soon as this monthYou’re most likely to get the coronavirus in the one place you can’t avoidTokyo has transparent public toilets, and they’re awesomeIf you’re feeling hopeless about coronavirus, Dr. Fauci has 3 words for youSony’s next-gen WH1000XM4 headphones launch tomorrow, but you can buy them right nowThe biggest Amazon device sale of 2020 has begun – here are the 10 best dealsClorox makes stronger hand sanitizer than Purell, and it’s back in stock at AmazonExperts say more grocery hoarding is coming – stock up on these 5 things while you canCDC says you need these 7 things to protect yourself from the coronavirus

The final shot shows Cobb’s totem, the spinning top, but Nolan doesn’t let us find out whether it’ll continue spinning, an indication we’re still in a dream, or whether it’ll stop, which means we’re in real life.Nolan never explained the ending, saying that the only thing that matters is that Cobb doesn’t care anymore if he’s dreaming or not. A one-stop shop for all things video games. Here's an explanation of what really happened in the film.We've organized things by category for you, in case you're more interested in one facet of the film than another.