^ That was my own take on it but frankly Caine has never struck me as the sharpest tool in the box.
It's a statement about fiction in general.
I see the ending like Schrodinger's cat. The top neither remains spinning nor falls within the audience's perception, therefore the story's "quantum state" is never collapsed.
That is, it is both a dream and reality.
It's a statement about fiction in general.
^ Yeah, I suspect that the idea is for you to make of it what you will.
Other than the first reveal about a dream within a dream, this was an extremely straight forward movie, so people who spend a lot of time talking about how they were confused and lost throughout the movie despite multiple viewings lose some credibility right there.
The top starts to fall. Actually seeing it fall is irrelevant. By the rules of the story, the top falling means the scene is real. If the rules the movie spent so much time on are pointless, so is the movie.
If you wanted a definitive answer than this is not the film for you, sorry.
I see the ending like Schrodinger's cat. The top neither remains spinning nor falls within the audience's perception, therefore the story's "quantum state" is never collapsed.
That is, it is both a dream and reality.
It's a statement about fiction in general.
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