Release Date : 16th july 2010
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Movie Plot : Inception is a 2010 American science fiction-action film written, produced, and directed by Christopher Nolan and starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Ken Watanabe, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Marion Cotillard, Ellen Page, and Cillian Murphy. The film is inspired by the experience of lucid dreaming.[5] The film, a variant on the heist genre, centers on Dom Cobb, an “extractor”, who enters the dreams of others to obtain information that is otherwise inaccessible. His abilities have cost him his family and his nationality, but a chance at redemption and regaining his old life is promised when Cobb and his team of specialists are hired to plant an idea in a target’s subconscious. This process of planting of an idea, known as “inception”, is less familiar and far more difficult than Cobb’s usual job of “extraction”.
Development of Inception began roughly ten years before the film’s actual release when Nolan wrote an 80-page treatment about dream-stealers. After presenting the idea to Warner Bros. in 2001, he felt that he needed to have more experience with large scale films. Therefore, Nolan opted to work on Batman Begins and The Dark Knight. He spent six months polishing up the film’s script before Warner Bros. purchased it in February 2009.Filming began in Tokyo on June 19, 2009 and finished in Canada in late November of the same year.
Inception was officially budgeted at $160 million, a cost which was split between Warner Bros. and Legendary Pictures. Nolan’s reputation and success with The Dark Knight helped secure the film $100 million in advertising expenditure. Inception premiered in London on July 13, 2010 and was released in both conventional and IMAX theatres on July 16, 2010. The film grossed over $21 million on its opening day, with an opening weekend gross of $62.7 million. Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports that 85% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 224 reviews and Metacritic assigned the film an average score of 75 out of 100 based on 41 reviews from mainstream critics.

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