Welcome to The Queue — your daily distraction of curated video content sourced from across the web. Today, we look at the lasting subliminal influence of Christopher Nolan’s Inception. It’s true: I nception is a decade old. Christopher Nolan’s dream-within-a-dream heist premiered in 2010 and, if you’ll recall, took pop culture by storm. Ten years later, the inescapable memes may have subsided, but Inception continues to prove itself as a film well-worth discussing. One of the more relevant and persistent conversations surrounding the film is the way it acts as a case study for conscious and unconscious influence in the creative process. When Inception first premiered, many fixated on the way the film felt, looked, and indeed, was inspired by other media. From Satoshi Kon’s dream detective anime Paprika to the snowy disc-like fortress of On Her Majesty’s Secret Service , Inception is a fantastic way to explore the idea that everything (yes, everything) is a remix . In the