...when in reality the times are approximately the same...
Where's your evidence to support that theory? I'm not attacking you, it's just apparently multiple people are convinced about it
...when in reality the times are approximately the same...
I think each dream contains 3 elements: the architecture, the host and the subconscious projections.
Hence the first 3 levels were hosted by Yusuf, Arthur and Eames respectively, Ariadne was responsible for the designs of the streets, the hotel and the mountain, while Fischer's subconscious populated the dreams with his projections.
If you look at it that way then the diagram is correct.
I just saw it tonight and it was enjoyable. The plot and score were both fantastic. However, I really didn't like how Nolan portrayed dreams. They were far too structured and realistic, and didn't reflect at all how illogical they can be. Also, the dream rules about waking up, etc wouldn't stand up to any logical scrutiny, which bothered me the entire movie.
The last half contained too much action imo, which felt inconsistent with the themes of the film, and didn't let the film develop into anything cerebral. The ending scene seemed like the obvious way to end a movie about dreams, but it didn't do anything for me because I really didn't believe the implications or consequences of whether he was dreaming were that significant.
@darkie: The falling car in the 1st level caused the zero gravity in the 2nd level, however the only person the zero gravity really affected was Arthur since he was the one bouncing off the walls while everyone else was asleep and floating in mid-air. Since Eames was the host of the 3rd level it makes sense that zero gravity doesn't carry over to the snowy mountains because Eames was floating almost stationarily.
This doesn't work, because Arthur is asleep in the van and is still affected by the shift of gravity. I think the only consistent explanation is the deterioration in effect as you go deeper.