Lem a écrit :J'y reviens un instant…
Lensman a écrit :Lem a écrit :Inception
Par Cthulhu ! Je vais devoir aller le voir!
… pour signaler qu'outre son intérêt propre, ce film illustre assez bien ma petite prophétie sur la parachronie : il se déroule dans un monde où la technologie spéculative d'infraction onirique est réalisée, est connue et circule (puisque les businessmen apprennent à se défendre contre elle) mais ce monde n'est pas le futur : c'est simplement le nôtre avec ce truc en plus : le présent enrichi.
Tout en étant un présent... en moins.
Cf la critique de Gary Westfahl :
http://www.locusmag.com/Reviews/2010/07 ... inception/
"To be specific: we first see Miles hard at work in a lecture hall, his desk covered with papers and books – but there is no desktop computer, surely an essential tool for any contemporary architect. Well, perhaps this elderly man is just an old-fashioned individual. However, come to think of it, I cannot recall a single moment in the entire movie when anyone was observed sitting in front of a computer, which would certainly be odd in a film about contemporary western culture; even the simplest sort of computer, a digital clock, never appears, as we instead only see clocks and watches with hands clicking around to six or twelve o’clock. (Granted, on this point and others to follow, some attentive viewer might notice an exception or two, but if they occur, they must be fleeting and rare.) Further, one ubiquitous feature of today’s homes, hotel rooms, and bars is a television set, always turned on and regularly observed in the background of other films; but although there are scenes in people’s homes, hotel rooms, and bars, I cannot recall seeing a single television set. It is particularly striking that Cobb’s small children, whenever they appear in memories or dreams, never seem to watch television or play video games."