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  • The spinning hallway fight scene. A oner using nothing but strings, a nifty rotating set and brilliant choreography.
  • There's also Cobb's Batman Gambit, "Mr. Charles."
  • When Arthur is firing off rounds of his assault rifle against the invading mooks, Eames pushes him aside and says "You mustn't be afraid to dream a little bigger, darling." Then pulls out a fucking grenade launcher and blows them all away.
  • Arthur managing to provide the kick at dream stage 2, despite having less time than he thought and no gravity.
  • Ariadne going up a level (no, not a dream level) and deciding to take care of Mal herself.
    • When they cut back to her, she has this awesome look on her face that said, "Sorry, love ya, Cobb, but I've had enough of your bullshit. Time to get things done."
Cquote1

 Cobb: What are you doing?!

Ariadne: Improvising!

Cquote2
  • Eames pulling a One-Man Army in the snow fortress.
  • Yusuf's driving.
    • And flipping off Fischer's security just before he drives over the edge.
  • Hell, just the fact that such an example of Doing It for the Art could be made in this day and age, with Christopher Nolan holding off on filming his script for ten years until he was absolutely sure he'd ironed all the kinks out, and then receive such universal acclaim.
  • Saito taking out some of the invading soldiers with a grenade, despite literally being seconds away from death.
  • Arthur weaponizing the Penrose Steps.
  • Ariadne's first journey into a dream, where she takes the road and flips half of it upside down!
    • Keep in mind: she has only just found out that she can manipulate the dreamworld, and her first idea is to turn half the city upside down. Girl dreams big.
  • In "The Cobol Job," Arthur holds up a jewelry store and makes a suicidal charge against a bunch of cops to buy time for Cobb.
  • My sister really liked Bobby's utterly blase reaction to being kidnapped by armed men. Just the sheer truckloads of Do Not Care.
    • I was a big fan of that scene too. It's also kind of heartwarming that he only starts getting upset during the "hostage situation" when he hears "Browning" screaming.
  • A severely understated one near the end: Saito has just died and spent fifty to sixty years in Limbo. First thing he does when he wakes up is honor his promise to Cobb.
  • Saito's line "I just bought the whole airline (cue stunned looks). It seemed... neater."
  • When all four kicks come through: Ariadne falls off the building, then is woken up to the exploding base, which sends her to the crashing elevator, then to the truck falling down into the river, and finally back to reality (or what passes as it in this film).
    • A small one that most don't know: They actually dropped Ellen Page nearly 30 feet at a green-screen stage to get the shot of her leaving Limbo, when they could've just CG'd the sensation of her falling while filming her prone.
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