Inception of Theseus

Never the first for new cultural memes, but often among the last, I finally took my family to see Inception over the holiday weekend. The Internet has been buzzing with comments about the movie for the last couple months, so it was difficult not to have preconceived notions of what to expect. Nevertheless, I found the film utterly engrossing. At one point I realized that I hadn’t blinked in so long that my eyes had begun to dry out. Having just finished Mark Danielewski’s House of Leaves at the end of June, and having begun my Mythology class on Friday, the Theseus myth has been on my mind anyway. Inception takes the hero’s journey through the labyrinth of the subconscious.

The first hint that Inception was the Theseus story, for me, was the introduction of Ariadne. The daughter of King Minos, Ariadne informs Theseus how to escape the labyrinth, and her first task in Inception is to draw a maze that takes a minute or longer to solve. Dom Cobb, like Theseus, is a deeply flawed hero. Part Theseus, part Daedalus, Cobb has trapped an unlikely Minotaur in the form of Mal, his wife, deep in his subconscious mind. She stalks him in his unsavory work, and when she threatens his very concept of reality, she is slain by Ariadne.

Coupled with classical mythology, the film also raises the unresolved question of the nature of reality. Is conscious existence any more real than the subconscious? This theme was explored in David Cronenberg’s eXistenZ back in 1999 with a similar ending that refuses to answer the question. Both films raise the troubling interference of technology with the most secret of human psychological repositories, the uninhibited subconscious. The closer the Internet comes to a global intelligence, the more the individual mind recoils into its own obscure and unexplored territory. Despite Freud and his disciples, we have not yet even begun to understand our own subconscious minds. Movies like Inception draw on classical sources to help us deal with the Minotaur that surely lurks there.

Ariadne explains her dream to Bacchus

4 thoughts on “Inception of Theseus

  1. Thank you for your post. You blog is always such a thought-provoking way to start the morning.

    I don’t think conscious existence is any more real than subconscious existence. However, I believe the difference between “sanity” and “insanity” is the ability to distinguish between the two and set mental boundaries that allow us to focus on this physical dimension while our awareness inhabits it.

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  2. Henk van der Gaast

    You know you could be perfectly happy with the evolution thing. But no, you have to keep going back to some mystical element.

    If there was anymore to it, spookies and magic would permeate our civilisations.

    They do of course and we enjoy these highly imaginative people who can relate the weird and inexplicable. Mt tax agent is one of those. He can communicate with the spooks in the tax department.

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  3. Pingback: The Reality of Movies | Sects and Violence in the Ancient World

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