Hahaha! Dude I love your take on this! I actually thoroughly enjoyed the movie and several of the palindrome theories I’ve seen about it. (It is unnecessarily confusing though) But your take is great and you’ve got a super polished and fun approach to this! Well done!!
@@cinemainsidr Thank you for putting this out there. I can't even fathom the work it must take to make these videos, so I can only stand aside in respectful awe when someone puts out a quality video like this.
This movie made perfect sense to me once I'd watched it a second time in a row. I didn't have any more trouble following the basic plot or hearing dialog. There are definitely some sequences so complex, they defy comfortable viewing. The inversion point at the end of the midpoint action sequence is enormously hard to follow. But that doesn't mean it makes no sense, anymore than a swiss watch is a cluster of junk because we can't follow all the cogs and mechanics. The answers are there if you want them. As for whether it's entertaining, that's purely a subjective issue, completely independent of the complexity. Personally, I find it incredibly engrossing, with brilliant character work. It has a lot of exposition, of course. It's a Chris Nolan film after all. That comes with the territory of films tackling the fantastic rules of dream sharing, the complexities of relative time in space travel, or whatever else the films are exploring. If you're not into complex ideas that require exposition to understand the deeper themes of the film, maybe Nolan isn't for you. If you're having trouble trying to piece together the order of events of this particular film, and their logical meaning, I think you might have missed the point of it. Inception was, ultimately, about the complex, indirect way in which we learn to accept new beliefs when we need to. We can't just be told things, we have to experience them. That's what the movie shows. Tenet, on the other hand, is about how we can never truly be in control of our lives, and we have to take some things on faith. It's a movie that rewards letting go of perfect understanding, not because understanding is impossible, but because the mechanics of how it all works isn't the real story. The real story is the Protagonist, the antagonist, and the woman caught in the middle. If you're busy trying to understand the cause and effect games, you miss that.
Hahaha! Dude I love your take on this! I actually thoroughly enjoyed the movie and several of the palindrome theories I’ve seen about it. (It is unnecessarily confusing though) But your take is great and you’ve got a super polished and fun approach to this! Well done!!
Thanks man I really appreciate it!!!
@@cinemainsidr Thank you for putting this out there. I can't even fathom the work it must take to make these videos, so I can only stand aside in respectful awe when someone puts out a quality video like this.
This movie made perfect sense to me once I'd watched it a second time in a row. I didn't have any more trouble following the basic plot or hearing dialog. There are definitely some sequences so complex, they defy comfortable viewing. The inversion point at the end of the midpoint action sequence is enormously hard to follow. But that doesn't mean it makes no sense, anymore than a swiss watch is a cluster of junk because we can't follow all the cogs and mechanics. The answers are there if you want them.
As for whether it's entertaining, that's purely a subjective issue, completely independent of the complexity. Personally, I find it incredibly engrossing, with brilliant character work. It has a lot of exposition, of course. It's a Chris Nolan film after all. That comes with the territory of films tackling the fantastic rules of dream sharing, the complexities of relative time in space travel, or whatever else the films are exploring. If you're not into complex ideas that require exposition to understand the deeper themes of the film, maybe Nolan isn't for you. If you're having trouble trying to piece together the order of events of this particular film, and their logical meaning, I think you might have missed the point of it.
Inception was, ultimately, about the complex, indirect way in which we learn to accept new beliefs when we need to. We can't just be told things, we have to experience them. That's what the movie shows. Tenet, on the other hand, is about how we can never truly be in control of our lives, and we have to take some things on faith. It's a movie that rewards letting go of perfect understanding, not because understanding is impossible, but because the mechanics of how it all works isn't the real story. The real story is the Protagonist, the antagonist, and the woman caught in the middle. If you're busy trying to understand the cause and effect games, you miss that.
What did you edit.. Curious
bro to like a movie you gotta undersand it, to understand u need brain