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In the ending of Inception (2010), there is some doubt that Cobb is in the real world. But if he is not in the real world then at which level of the dream he is in?

Starting at the presumed 'real world' as the first level of the story, I think the final scene it's the fifth level (limbo) because at the fourth level they save Fischer, but I need clarification.

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  • 19
    The ending is open to interpretation, what evidence do you have to suggest otherwise?
    – Tablemaker
    May 11, 2012 at 23:55
  • 8
    Possibly answered over at SciFi: scifi.stackexchange.com/q/6903/2912
    – Flimzy
    May 13, 2012 at 4:59
  • 4
    If we assume that the whole thing is a dream and that cobb is simply dreaming up the whole movie's central inception plot, that the flight sequence is itself a dream, that would simply take away the essence of the whole movie. None of the events would matter, the time dilation wouldn't matter. Without the real world reference, there would be loss of purpose, inception wouldn't matter. The movie is more admirable because of all the rules that exist in the dreamworld which don't in the real world. The distinction makes the execution of the movie brilliant.
    – John
    Feb 5, 2015 at 8:34
  • 2
    Cobb accepts the job for only one reason- to be reunited with his children. At the end of the movie, it does not matter anymore if he was dreaming or not. Ohhh yes, finally he can embrace his children, hear their voices and call him daddy. For me, this movie was about hope. The dream level represents the difficulties and trials we're dealing with. I am not surprise, why people give so much attention to the clues and to the tiny details that might solve the hidden puzzle, because this was a very intriguing and a brilliant movie.
    – oldage
    Jul 14, 2015 at 16:10
  • FWIW thenational.ae/arts-culture/film/…
    – auburg
    Aug 22, 2018 at 20:32

10 Answers 10

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+100

None of the different means you can use to guess whether Cobb is in a dream or not at the end of the movie are completely reliable.

The spinning top has huge issues - the fact that it was Mal's totem, that it appears to act in a simplistic way that perhaps other people could dream, hence invalidating its usefulness - and of course the fact that we are never even shown what the top does at the end of the movie.

I am unconvinced by how completely watertight the wedding ring theory (referenced in @Eoin's answer), as it seems possible for Cobb to dream the wedding ring when he thinks he is in a dream and not otherwise. Yes it is an interesting theory, but whilst it is certainly a deliberate action from the writers/director - the meaning is not completely clear. Cobb clearly seems to treat the spinning top as his totem (flawed or not), as he uses it when flustered by his dream in Mombassa. So yes, it could be a clue, it could even be his true or second totem - but it is still not completely reliable in my opinion.

So is Cobb in a dream at the end? I don't think we can tell. Unlike the other answer, I like the ambiguity in the movie. If pushed to give an answer I would say that the fact that he is such an experienced shared dreamer, it seems likely that he would eventually work out if he is in a dream or not - so I guess he is likely to be in the real world, and the wedding ring therefore might be a true clue to that.

So to answer the original question, if this is not the real world, what level is this? Well if the top level of the story is not the real world, and is in fact another dream, then 'who knows' is the only real answer. The question has no real meaning as there are possibly untold levels of dreaming we have no knowledge of.

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  • 1
    I like the idea that the top level is actually another dream. It goes well with other ambiguous scifi movie/books like Existenz, and would mean Mal was right all along that dying pushes you up to the "true" reality. One problem is that they spend at least the length of the movie, which is weeks or months, at that level, but it may not be the top-level dream.
    – trysis
    Jun 3, 2014 at 0:34
  • I get what you're saying, but regarding the "wedding ring as totem" theory - if the wedding ring was his real totem then it would HAVE to reliably appear only when he's asleep, because that's what totems are for. If he could dream not having the ring while he was asleep, then it would be useless as an indicator of whether or not he's really awake. I can't believe Cobb would be so negligent as to pick such a totem if he couldn't rely on it. All of this is, of course, assuming that you accept the idea that the ring is his real totem. It's easy enough to reject the premise if you want to.
    – Steve-O
    Nov 17, 2016 at 14:19
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    @Steve-O ... but I don't think that's how totem's work, they don't indicate when you're asleep, they indicate whether or not you are in someone else's dream. In the case of Cobb we never go into his dream (except in the brief elevator scene). So, my problem with the wedding ring totem is that its easy for someone else to spot, and therefore duplicate the behavior, therefore convincing Cobb that he's not in someone else's dream.
    – iandotkelly
    Nov 17, 2016 at 14:27
  • 17
    The top level is reality itself, where Cobb is a movie actor called Leonardo Dicaprio. Feb 6, 2017 at 14:21
  • 5
    @JonathanReez how to tell if we're not all dreaming?
    – nilon
    Feb 12, 2017 at 7:14
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Although the ending of inception was meant to be debatable and ultimately was left up to the audience, there are several factors indicating that Cobb is indeed dreaming in the end of the film. In fact if you read my whole theory you shall understand that Cobb is actually on the third dream level and you will understand why.

Reason 1. Cobb told Saito and Ariadne how his totem works therefore he can never truly tell if he is inside one of their dreams. In the end of the movie the totem DID fall down, but it was a dream. (This is because the totem was corrupted; the whole purpose of a totem is that it's functions are known only to you and no one else. When you are in someone else's dream and they know how your totem works they can use it against you, therefore making it impossible to tell if you are dreaming.)

Reason 2. When Cobb met his children at the end of the film after he spun the top he asked his son what he was building and his son replied "A house on a cliff." This is A HUGE factor because we all know that throughout the movie elements of the subconscious work their way through to the dream; ie, Mal who was a projection. The relevance of the "house on a cliff" is that Saito lived in a house on a cliff in Limbo. If you remember when Cobb washed up on shore to the beach in Limbo he looked up and saw a house on a cliff. The son saying this is not a coincidence because there is no way he would have known that Saito lived in a house on a cliff. Therefore Cobb is inside Saito's dream hence the elements of the subconscious working its way to the surface.

Reason 3. The reason the screen to suddenly cut to black and possibly the reason for the top to take so long to fall was due to the end of the third dream. The dream was collapsing and it in fact ended. This is because of the song Je ne regrette rien. It was played in the dreams to indicate when the dream was ending. When the song ended so did the dream. The song was 2 minutes and 28 seconds long. The movie Inception was EXACTLY 2 hours and 28 minutes to the exact second (check if you want). This means that the ending was a dream but it was the end of the dream.

Reason 4. Why did Saito and Cobb end up in the third dream level? Well everytime someone dies in a dream within a dream they awake up one dream level. When Cobb and Saito shot themselves they died in Limbo and awoke in the third dream level which is one level higher than Limbo. However why did they wake up on the plane? Simple. It is not the plane and they did not "WAKE UP". Going back, you must keep in mind that Cobb and Saito missed the series of kicks that would allow them to leave the dream. So with everyone gone and Cobb and Saito still in Limbo, only EMPTY DREAM SPACE REMAINS, waiting for the first mind to make contact with it. Then Saito killed himself followed by Cobb. Saito was first and so his subconscious populated and inhabited the third dream level. The reason he "wakes up on a plane" is because he believed himself to be on a plane and so his subconscious built the plane from his memory along with the projections of his team. When Cobb entered right after he was entering a dream that belonged to Saito and therefore because it looked like reality he couldn't tell if it was a dream or not. Also his totem is "broken" so there is no telling whether he is dreaming or not.

Reason 5. After Saito and Cobb leave the plane and enter the airport they never once talk to the other "members of their team". This 1 dimensional characteristic was commonly used before from the projections in the various dream levels.

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  • 2
    2) important point for plot. 3) important point to wink at audience and open the question: are you dreaming?
    – nilon
    Feb 12, 2017 at 7:21
  • Ad 3. So as far as I understand when screen cut black then Cobb and Saito woke up from third level, skipped 2nd and 1st level (as those ends too) and woke up to reality, right?
    – Qback
    Apr 18, 2018 at 16:38
  • @Qback No they're stuck as they've missed the kicks and are forever stuck in limbo.
    – Anthony
    Oct 28, 2020 at 1:50
  • @Anthony but they are currently in the third dream level, not limbo. So they are actually in state of "waking up", not "stuck".
    – Qback
    Dec 4, 2020 at 22:35
  • @Qback Are they or are they (Saito and Cobb) currently in Saito's own limbo and he's "dreaming" that they're in the 3rd dream level and so it appears that way. Remember the house on the cliff that's Saito's Limbo? The same house Cobb's kids are making in the sand? The film is way too ambiguous to determine that I'm afraid since it's filled with evidence to plausibly argue that they're in a dream and not in a dream but more evidence suggest he's in a dream for instance like the backwards "MAL" when dicaprio arrives at the airport so.
    – Anthony
    Dec 5, 2020 at 23:48
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There is a wedding ring theory which leads to the conclusion that he is indeed back in the real world. A quick Google will turn up a number of explanations of that theory.

On the otherhand, Christopher Nolan refuses to answer the question, indeed here he seems to go so far as to insist there is no answer. Personally I think that's nonsense: either the wedding ring theory is true, or the person in charge of consistency screwed up in a way that happened to perfectly support the theory.

The other thing I believe, is that not having a clear answer to the question is not some wonderful way of getting people to question the nature of reality, rather it's just a cheap trick to avoid a clichéd ending, which is done in such an obvious way that it only leaves people annoyed.

I know that sounds harsh, I did truly enjoy the film, but I think the ambiguity at the end didn't improve the message of the film.

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    "there is a good theory on why my answer is correct, but I won't include it, so Google it". I find that to be a bit of a copout. You don't even provide a link to an explanation.. I'm sure it exists, but I doubt that it has as much bearing on your answer as suggested. -1
    – Gnemlock
    Dec 16, 2017 at 23:01
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I know that we can all agree that the ending is up in the air, but were he dreaming in the end, what dream level he is in, can be one of at least two possibilities.

1st level: Although we are introduced to the spinning totem early on in the film and further enlightened to its significance throughout, we only see it spin out once, in the hotel room before Cobb and Arthur catch the helicopter. The next time Cobb spins the top, in the restroom in Mombasa, it doesn't fall, Cobb accidentally knocks it off of the sink. So some think from his sleep in Yusef's basement on is all dream and the entire scheme never takes place.

Limbo: Four levels down, in limbo, Cobb confronts his projection of Mal. This limbo is the limbo of the shared dreamers' subconscious. It is filled with what Cobb and Mal had left behind. Cobb describes this to Ariadne that he and Mal washed up on the shores of their own subconscious. When he washes upon the shores at the end, he is washing up on the shores of his and Saido's subconscious. If he and Saido kill themselves and it doesn't wake them up, but keeps them in Limbo, it is Cobb returning to his own Limbo, the otherwise unconstructed dream space that he's filled with his and Mal's house and projections of his children as he remembers them. He also brings in this image of the plane and Saido is there as well, and he follows his own path still within this vast detailed mixed-reality of Cobb's subconscious.

There is no real conclusion, but those are two possible levels that the conclusion may leave him.

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  • Not agreed with the 1st level. Their is two possibilities limbo or real world which i can see.
    – Ankit Sharma
    Feb 6, 2013 at 22:12
  • I didn't agree with it either, initially. It was a possibility proposed at the release of the film. I thought it was a stupid thought. But upon viewing the film with the theory in mind, however unlikely, it is ironclad possible. Check it out for yourself, I'm not saying it is npmy favorite theory, but it is actually possible.
    – Matt
    Feb 6, 2013 at 22:18
  • spinning top is itself a big issue because its mel's totem but still +1 for sharing your logic.
    – Ankit Sharma
    Feb 6, 2013 at 22:27
  • Ya, also, though, notice the way projections die in dreams and how Coball Eng. henchmen die during the chase acne. This could also be Nolan's non-violence, but it's a fun possibility. Thanks for your comment.
    – Matt
    Feb 6, 2013 at 22:53
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Mal was right!

I know I am coming at this late:

According to Cob, he and Mal spent roughly 50 years building that city by the ocean. Assuming they were using a strong sedative that give you a 1:20 time dilation factor, that would mean the next level up would be roughly 2.5 years, and then 45 days, then 2.28 days, then about 3 hours. This would imply that they were five levels down. Given the variables and unknowns perhaps we could assume they were somewhere between 3 and 5 levels down. If they were 1 level down they would have been asleep on the floor of their house for years. Therefore, they were more than 1 level down.

When Cob & Mal laid their heads down on the train tracks to leave their huge city, they went up one level and awoke in their "house." At this point they are either two or three levels down. For sure they are were not in reality.

Therefore, when Mal committed suicide, THEY WERE NOT IN REALITY. They were at least one level down. As a result, Mal is one or more levels up waiting for Cob. It is possible she is waiting in reality, but more likely she is still asleep at level one. In any case, soon....very soon she will disconnect the machine and the flow of (real or imagined) sedative and he will wake up.

The good news here is that even though Cob gave up caring about dream vs reality in order to be with his kids, he will eventually wake up to find Mal & his kids on the next level up.

The bad news here is that since he is so lost (and using Mal's totem), after he wakes up and discovers Mal is not dead, will he be able to stop from killing himself and Mal again and again...

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Could there be a possibility that Cobb's mentor, Mal's father, purposely trapped him within the maze as revenge for his part in Mal's suicide?

I can only offer my own personal observations on this theory, and if it's true then maybe the story isn't about one man incepting another, but about his own personal inception. In thematics, it might make sense: just as Mal was made to believe that her reality was an illusion, Cobb was made to believe that the illusion was his reality.

It could also be argued that he is still dreaming because of the thematic space, in which Christopher Nolan occupies Cobb in. His character is usually associated with large castles or buildings that overlook a lonely sea, but in the 'real world' he is mostly associated with vast, winding, decaying metropolises. So if the end of the film is reality, then how is his setting that of a rural, seaside home.

Answering directly, I believe that Cobb isn't in any specific level of dream, he's simply lost in the vast maze of his own consciousness. He's simply trapped within his own world, lost to reality after what he reaches what he thinks is his goal.

But it could also be argued that he was in the real world because of the children's ages. If you stick around for the credits, you can see that two sets of children were used to act out James and Phillipa. But it's simply a technicality, the film achieves a lot more depth if Cobb is stuck in the dream. If he had been 'incepted'.

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There is an important clue in the final scene that is easy to miss, and David Kyle Johnson, author of Inception and Philosophy: Because It’s Never Just a Dream, believes that Christopher Nolan intentionally misdirects the audience’s attention in the final scene.

In short, Johnson’s view is the whole movie is a dream, Saito’s in particular.

Johnson gave a Google tech talk on the subject, and his slides (DOI:10.13140/RG.2.1.4290.5683) are available elsewhere. Johnson and his collaborators sank considerable time and thought into their analysis of Inception and its implications. My summary of Johnson’s justification for his position is below.

To start, subconscious elements work their way through dreams, e.g., the train barreling down the street in the rain dream, the random string of numbers in the hostage scene appears repeatedly in later scenes: the safe combination, the fake phone number, hotel room numbers. At the beginning of the film, Saito dreams of a mansion on a cliff.

Picking up on a big clue in the final scene may require turning on the closed-caption subtitles. Cobb asks his children what they’ve been doing, and they reply that they were building a house on a cliff.

Nolan leaves many clues that the film is a dream.

  • Mombasa was a maze, and the walls closed in around Cobb.
  • Bad guys appear out of nowhere to give chase.
  • Saito appears out of nowhere to rescue Cobb with a cheesy line about protecting his investment.
  • Cobb’s father-in-law pleads with him to come back to reality.
  • Eames is a dream forger who is able to pickpocket people without touching them.
  • Eames bet his last chips in the real world but magically produced two stacks of chips to buy beers.
  • Mal somehow got to the other hotel across the street in the suicide scene, but Cobb begged her to come back inside to his room, reasoning that would have “made sense” only in a dream.
  • The top totem gives us no information about whether Cobb is dreaming because everyone else knows how it works.
  • The Édith Piaf song that signals the end of the dream is 2 minutes 28 seconds long. The film is exactly 2 hours 28 minutes long.

When someone commits suicide in limbo, the subject goes one layer up. For Saito, the next layer up was the snow fortress. But everyone was gone, so he filled the empty dream space with his own expectations, namely the airplane scene. Eames pickpockets the passport in the airplane without touching Robert, the way he did in other dreams.

But then consider what happened to Cobb and Mal who were experimenting with multi-level dreams after being struck by the train in Limbo. They also would have gone merely one level up, but still within a dream.

This interpretation makes a much better film. Consider:

  • All characters except Cobb are flat and one-dimensional; many didn’t even have last names.
  • Editing in the “real world” jumps around without transitions.
  • Saito poofs into Mombasa to rescue Cobb from a jam.

If the entire film is a dream, these are not gaffes but strengths. The characters are flat because they’re projections, not because the writing is bad. The jumping around is not bad editing but because that’s how dreams run. Saito’s well-timed appearance and corny line become subtle clues that Cobb is dreaming.

For completeness, at least two clues suggest the move is not a dream.

  1. Cobb’s children at the end are older and wearing different clothes.
  2. The only times Cobb is depicted with a wedding ring in the real world is in flashback scenes. He has no band when passing through Customs and Immigration at the airport.

The answer above repurposes content from an answer of mine on scifi.SE.

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We might have finally gotten a direct answer that solves the ending of this movie:

After more than eight years of debate over the ending of Inception, Michael Caine has offered some clarity on the movie’s mysterious final moments.

While speaking at a Film 4 Summer Screen showing of Christopher Nolan’s acclaimed thriller, Caine — who played the father of Leonardo DiCaprio’s Dom Cobb — shared some insider knowledge on whether Cobb was awake or dreaming in Inception‘s closing sequence.

“When I got the script of Inception, I was a bit puzzled by it,” Caine said. “And I said to [Nolan], ‘I don’t understand where the dream is.’ I said, ‘When is it the dream and when is it reality?’ He said, ‘Well, when you’re in the scene, it’s reality.’ So get that — if I’m in it, it’s reality. If I’m not in it, it’s a dream.”

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  • Well, provided we take that statement as purely literal.
    – Napoleon Wilson
    Aug 22, 2018 at 11:44
  • 1
    Isn't Caine's conclusion a fallacy? Nolan said "when you're in the scene, it's reality" - he did not say "when you're not in a scene, it's not reality"
    – Arsak
    Aug 22, 2018 at 15:59
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    @Marzipanherz Which is part of what makes me think that was more Nolan playing with the term "reality" and encouraging Caine to act good and engage in the scene than anything else. The bigger problem being that we don't really know the whole context of when and why he said that to him. We have to take Caine's literal quote at face-value.
    – Napoleon Wilson
    Aug 22, 2018 at 16:04
  • 1
    Though, it is an interesting find on the matter. Even if in another way than the uncommented quote in the answer might suggest.
    – Napoleon Wilson
    Aug 22, 2018 at 16:07
  • We have to question if Nolan is even a reliable narrator when saying that to Caine. To preserve ambiguity, even if Caine was in a dream, Nolan would have benefited from telling him else wise; especially if it was just so Caine could understand the script in context. As I mentioned on another question where this came up, I would think this is good advice for every actor in the film. They aren't supposed to think they are dreaming. I don't see why Nolan would want the actors to know, even if they were supposed to be in the dream sequence; unless their character knew they were in a dream.
    – JMac
    Aug 22, 2018 at 17:05
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A totem is an item, in the real world, with a secret, unique property. Its purpose is that, when somebody targets you for extraction and tries to counterfeit that object in the process of counterfeiting the rest of the world, you will notice they have missed that detail and you are able to know that the world is not real. This idea was invented by Mol.

The first time this concept is introduced in the movie is when Saito rubs his cheek on the rug and instantly knows that, despite appearances, he is not really lying on his carpet in his apartment.

As far as the audience knows, the first time Cobb ever actually touches Mol's totem it is really just a projection in the dream realm.

Mol's totem is in the shape of a top which the audience is led to believe, through Cobb, is perfectly average in reality but will spin forever in a dream. This totem both:

  • has a uselessly obvious special property that anybody could guess; and,
  • is the logical opposite of how a totum actually works

One logical conclusion of all this is: If somebody else believes, incorrectly, that they know the special property of your totem and they try to use it, they are in danger of fooling themselves into a trap. The same way building familiar places can make you forget that you are in a dream.

This tells me that Cobb is actually incorrect about the special property of the totem he took from Mol, and it topples, not because Cobb is in the real world, but because he believes he is in the real world and has misunderstood how the totem works.

Considering all of this, Mol's totem was still reliable to her and it allowed her to accurately know that they were both still trapped in Cobb's dream.

4

Inception either ended at Limbo, in Reality, or Level 1, but I think the important thing to factor in is that, in the end, Cobb sees their faces and decides to hug his children which he never could while bringing them in from his subconscious as projections in other dreams. So I think it may be a reality.

Another thing is that he does not wait for the top to stop or keep on spinning, meaning he doesn't care which shows that he has given up all intentions of going back in(dreaming) with someone else which indicates to me that he is in limbo or he is in reality.

Two points for reality so I'm assuming reality.

Also, if Nolan had decided to extend the movie further and someone says he himself uses "the device" then we would have found out for sure whether he was in limbo or in reality because in limbo you can't go deeper. So if he can use the device dreams then he in reality, else...

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