Let Me Dream Again (1900) Poster

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7/10
Mildly risqué, early one-joke short from G. A. Smith
jamesrupert20144 February 2020
A gentleman is happily cavorting with a young woman in a clown costume when, to his apparent disappointment, he awakens from a dream to find himself in bed with his frumpy and disapproving wife. The brief (~80 seconds) turn-of-the-century film, directed and produced by George Albert Smith, is a very early example of film-maker using a blurring effect (the image goes out of, then back into, focus as the gentleman awakens) to depict a transition from dreaming to reality. The very short, one joke film is only mildly entertaining (in a retro-quaint way) but is an interesting example of early cinematographic effects.
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7/10
A very rough gem that MAY be original,...I hope
planktonrules15 September 2006
The same night I watched this silent short, I also saw a French film called "Rêve et réalité" (1901). It turns out the French movie was a knockoff of this film--with the exact same plot and scenes! While it was common for many of the very early studios to plagiarize each other's work, this one is one of the more flagrant examples. I just hope that LET ME DREAM AGAIN is the actual first film of its kind and not a rip-off of another, earlier film! The story is immensely simple (as was true of nearly all films from this era). An old guy is making out with a pretty young lady and life seems grand--until he wakes up and realizes it's all a dream! The idea is cute, though the execution is a tad primitive and rough. Still, given its tremendous age, it's still pretty watchable today.
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6/10
Dream is collapsing
Horst_In_Translation20 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
I have to say that even with the spoiler in the title I did not see the final plot twist coming and had to laugh quite a bit. Also the actors' face expressions were really spot-on. Early on we see a man and a woman having a great time, drinking, smoking and joking around. Such a fun scene really. But could it all be true? Bummer. The director is George Albert Smith here, one of Britains very early and very prolific filmmakers. The lead actress played in a couple more films and so did the lead actor who was also a fairly prolific filmmaker himself. I thought this started off a bit slowly, but got better quickly and was actually really good at the end. Certainly worth a watch. A contender for best film and best comedy movie of 1900 in my opinion.
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Dreams and Early Movies
Cineanalyst7 March 2008
Dreams are closely associative with cinema. That idea isn't really explored here, as the film only consists of two scenes and lasts around a minute. However, it is an early exploration of the film language of how to tell a dream and how to tell, or separate, the inner narrative of the dream from the outer narrative of "reality". Moreover, it's a rather early film to consist of spatially separate scenes, although there had been a few already, including G.A. Smith's own "The Kiss in the Tunnel" (1899).

The first scene is the dream and the film narrated by the male character within the dream. He's fantasizing about having an affair with a younger woman. In the second scene, we see him awake in bed with his older, less attractive "real" wife. Smith's transition between shots consists of an in-camera out-of-focusing at the end of the first shot and then beginning the second scene out-of-focus before pulling it within focus. There's also a sort of disrupted match on action, with the actors being within the same position for each scene--the man continuing his embracing action into the second shot. It's a good effect, especially for its continuity and how the focusing is analogous to coming out of a dream and awakening. Ferdinand Zecca, for Pathé, used a dissolve in his remake, "Dream and Reality" (Rêve et réalité) (1901), but, then, he seems to have been using dissolves for all shot transitions at this time.

Many of the other early films about dreams don't split the scenes, but the separation of dream world and "reality" is implied by the character going to sleep, weird things happening, and then the actor waking up. These are usually trick shot films, which Georges Méliès largely invented. Edwin Porter's "Dream of a Rarebit Fiend" (1906) is an example. Another way to separate them was with a scene-within-a-scene, accomplished by blacking out part of the set, or masking part of the camera lens, and filming the awake part; then, the effect is reversed and filmed again. Zecca did this in "Story of a Crime" (Historie d'un crime) (1901), and Porter did it in "Life of an American Fireman" (1903) and other films. Smith actually introduced this scene-within-a-scene effect to motion pictures with such films as "Santa Claus" (1898). These early efforts aren't quite as interesting and exciting as, say, "Sherlock, Jr." (1924) or "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" (2004), but they are important for having gotten us started.
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7/10
Girl Of My Dreams
boblipton14 December 2019
A man in evening clothes is sitting with a pretty girl. They are drinking, smoking, and having a great time. Then the scene unfocused; when the camera comes back into focus, he wakes to argue with his wife in bed.

Is this the first instance of a dream sequence in the movies? I'm hesitant to assert anything as a first in the movies; even movies in 1895 were borrowing from other, older technologies for their subjects and what they showed. Yet this is a movie from George Albert Smith, whose films from 1898 through 1904 are the earliest known examples of many techniques..... some of which, of course, he borrowed from earlier technologies, like magic lanterns.

His method of fading out is to unfocus the camera, and then refocusing it for the second shot; at this time, even two camera set-ups in a movie was cutting edge. However, I think this precursor of the modern 'fade' to indicate waking might have been a technique borrowed from magic lantern shows.

Never mind. The fact that Smith, even if he knew of this trick elsewhere, thought to apply it to movies. That's innovation enough for me. I will, however, keep my eyes open for earlier uses of the technique.
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8/10
Poignant comedy about cinema, dreams and the unsatisfactoriness of our daily lives.
the red duchess22 December 2000
Another familiar trope that will seem poignant to many people. A man is wining and dining a young lady only to wake up beside an old shrew who gives him what for. The master of this dream/reality narrative is Buster Keaton, who developed it with heartbreaking inventiveness.

This film is not without interest though. Firstly, the dream sequence is excellently imagined, with the couple dining in the foreground and a blank background creating a suitably unreal effect. The symmetry between couples is effective, suggesting that the wife may once have been like this one, asking us to ponder the processes that led to her 'decline', even the possibility of the husband's malign influence. Of course, this symmetry is actually a representation of rupture, division, disharmony - between dream and reality, the ideal and the mundane, the young and the old, the unattainable and the attainable.

The strange thing about the dream is that, firstly, the woman is unattainable in it, she flirts, but she doesn't give herself; secondly, she is dressed in a costume reminiscent of the circus or carnival. Here the dream is something subversive, something that can critique the failures, the repressions, the dissatisfactions of real life. It also points to the use most people make of the cinema, to dream about better lives than our own, lives we can see but cannot have. It is this melancholy vein that helps the film transcend misogyny.
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Creative For Its Time; Still Worth Seeing Despite Lack of Polish
Snow Leopard24 May 2004
With an idea that was creative for its time, and a theme that still retains some interest, "Let Me Dream Again" is still worth seeing despite its unpolished look. It was one of the very earliest attempts to film a story that compared dream and reality, and while there are later imitations of the story with a more refined technique, this is the one that should probably get the credit for the basic idea.

The comparison between the man's dream and the reality of his life certainly makes a comic point, but at the same time, it suggests some more general ideas about what people want their lives to be. The man in the story does not come across as an interesting person in himself, and the story itself is quite rudimentary - yet in watching the main character, you're not quite sure whether to respond with pity, scorn, laughter, or some of all three.

While very simple, these very old, very short features often handle these kinds of themes in an economical fashion that contrasts well with the excessive approach that has become all too common in the 21st century.
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Basic gag but noticeable for inventing the "dream sequence" wipe technique that we still use today
bob the moo21 April 2007
An old man flirts with a pretty young woman and gets very amorous, only for the reality of his situation to become horribly apparent to him! This is a very simple film with one gag to deliver and a short time to do it in. The joke is funnier than it sounds mainly because the manner of delivery of the punch line is good. It has enough time at the end to milk the gag so it does tend to work. Contrast this with the French short that repeated it less successfully the following year where the delivery was the problem and the punch line felt like it was delivered in a rush without allowing the actors to react.

Of more note is the way that the film moves from dream sequence to reality. The film goes out of focus and when it returns we are in the second scene. It is now a common effect and we all clearly know what it means but this film was the first known example of it being used.
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More original than the average one-joke short from 1900
Tornado_Sam2 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
"Let Me Dream Again" is what can be considered another one of the many one-gag shorts from this time period. While many comedies of the time were pretty cheap (a gardener getting sprayed by a hose, for example) this gag is actually a lot different. Well, for the time anyway. A year later, it would be outright copied in Ferdinand Zecca's "Dream and Reality", which uses a dissolve to go from dream to reality as opposed to the de-focus effect here.

The gag centers around a man who dreams that he's dating an attractive bucktoothed woman, when reality finally becomes clear to him. It's not hilarious but definitely holds up better than watching two bill-posters fighting over a defaced wall. The wife in the 1901 remake was uglier, I have to say. But I like the de-focus better here. Both early films are about equal.
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Dream and Reality
Michael_Elliott5 August 2015
Let Me Dream Again (1900)

*** 1/2 (out of 4)

Clocking in at less than two minutes, this is a pretty funny movie that shows a middle aged man drinking, smoking and flirting with a beautiful young woman. The man is having a terrific time until he wakes up and realizes that in bed with him is his rather unattractive wife. LET ME DREAM AGAIN is a pretty simple film but for 1900 it was rather clever and used the dream sequence for a great cause. George Melies was using dream sequences to show off horrors and magic tricks but this here was clever use of it because we get a very big laugh. I thought it was rather hilarious when the man woke up and the facial expression when he sees his wife was extremely good.
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