Thursday, 14 June 2012

Dreams Chapter no.1

The literary critic Frank Kermode famously argued that all successful works of art have the ability to inspire multiple interpretations. We read the classics, he said, because we believe they say more than the author meant. In other words, it is the ambiguity of art  - this ability to inspire arguments and blog posts – that makes it so interesting.
Inception, of course, is all about the ambiguity. (Those who parse the wobbles of the spinning top in the final scene have missed the entire point of the scene.) This doesn’t mean the movie is a masterpiece – I personally thought it was a smart summer blockbuster but no Dark Knight. That said, I found this interpretation, by Devin Farci, to be mostly convincing:
Every single moment of Inception is a dream. I think that in a couple of years this will become the accepted reading of the film, and differing interpretations will have to be skillfully argued to be even remotely considered. The film makes this clear, and it never holds back the truth from audiences. Some find this idea to be narratively repugnant, since they think that a movie where everything is a dream is a movie without stakes, a movie where the audience is wasting their time.
Except that this is exactly what Nolan is arguing against. The film is a metaphor for the way that Nolan as a director works, and what he’s ultimately saying is that the catharsis found in a dream is as real as the catharsis found in a movie is as real as the catharsis found in life. Inception is about making movies, and cinema is the shared dream that truly interests the director.
I believe that Inception is a dream to the point where even the dream-sharing stuff is a dream. Dom Cobb isn’t an extractor. He can’t go into other people’s dreams. He isn’t on the run from the Cobol Corporation. At one point he tells himself this, through the voice of Mal, who is a projection of his own subconscious. She asks him how real he thinks his world is, where he’s being chased across the globe by faceless corporate goons.
What I like about this interpretation of Inception is that it also makes neurological sense. From the perspective of your brain, dreaming and movie-watching are strangely parallel experiences. In fact, one could argue that sitting in a darkened theater and staring at a thriller is the closest one can get to REM sleep with open eyes.


CHAPTER No.1
Now, Let me assure you that DREAMS ...... I mean If we Just calculate from Childhood , How many Hours we have slept so far?   Answer could be ..... Dont know But eternally the answer says: More than What I was awake and Judging the world to adjust myself to prove I am alive. Exactly this question answer is yet to Answer and it will be always. It doesn"t mean we have to calculate our sleeping hours but to know how we cherrished in dreams including DAYDREAMS. That is the POWER of DREAM ,,,, Its make you travel from One to Other world in very nano fractions of seconds this is where POWER OF YOUR MIND is defined...

Scietiffically said, Most genious uses maximum 5% of their brains and shock the world with their Innovations. On the other side a high dedication to work make you win tour de france. Following your dreams is not that easy task but if we realised Its where i live then definitely It will make you stand on spitch and score you tonnes and tonnes without shattering for 2 decades. Sometime they make you realise with shock and releived you when you wake up from BAD DREAMS....................................................?

Neuroscientist are still in middle to solve the mystery of Power of Dreams.....In facts its also a dream where Dream would be Unfold....

I am still looking to Unfold the dreams......But One day I got hint of dream mystery..................


to be contd..................................................

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