Moser, T. (2026). Whose Labyrinth? Gender, Architecture and Filmmaking in Christopher Nolan’s “Inception.” In T. Moser, S. Plakolm-Forsthuber, & H. Stühlinger (Eds.), OFF! De-Centering Feminist Architectural History (pp. 147–160). TU Wien Academic Press. https://doi.org/10.34727/2026/isbn.978-3-85448-083-9_10
In his Hollywood blockbuster Inception (2010), Christopher Nolan introduces the character Ariadne as a seemingly convincing portrayal of a female architect to Western mainstream media. This chapter critically examines the ways in which Ariadne is depicted as a creative and talented architect with notable agency, while also interrogating the extent to which traditional gender roles are challenged through her. However, the analysis reveals that Nolan ultimately reproduces heteropatriarchal concepts of genius, thereby denying Ariadne’s womanhood and autonomy as an architect. A media-theoretical and production-aesthetic approach further demonstrates how the film’s postmodern self-referentiality continually positions Nolan himself as the actual “architect” of the narrative and its cinematic visualisation. In doing so, the film not only undermines Ariadne’s creative abilities but also questions the credibility of a female architect as an independent and authoritative figure altogether.