Let Me Dream Again
Harsh reality interrupts an older man's reverie of flirting with a pretty young woman
An early example of a dream sequence on film. Stage comic Tom Green shares a flirtatious drink and a giggle with a beautiful woman in a Pierrot costume. But a 'dissolve' to a new scene shows him waking up to reality - next to his altogether less glamorous wife, who pushes him away and begins scolding him. Although the first scene may seem chaste by modern standards, the younger woman's cigarettes and alcohol imply a further permissiveness. No wonder he would rather return to his nocturnal fantasies.
The young woman is played by Laura Bayley, who was married to the film's director George Albert Smith. The dissolve effect isn't a real dissolve, but is achieved by allowing the first shot to go out of focus, then cutting to the next, which itself comes slowly into focus. The images never actually overlap.
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Inventing Film Language
The first filmmakers had a lot to learn, but they learnt quickly, driven by their own creative ambitions and by audiences' hunger for novelty. Most of the techniques we know today were in place by the end of the Victorian period.
It was the Victorian pioneers who developed the essential building blocks of film; close-ups, pans and travelling shots; editing and principles of continuity. And their ambition spurred them to innovate numerous tricks and effects, from jump-cuts, to double-exposure and even split screen. Generations of later filmmakers would refine these methods, but the groundwork had already been done.
19 videos in this collection
The Countryman and the Cinematograph
Fire!
Undressing Extraordinary; Or, The Troubles of a Tired Traveller
Grandma's Reading Glass
The Big Swallow
Let Me Dream Again
The Kiss in the Tunnel
The Kiss in the Tunnel
The Magic Sword A Mediaeval Mystery
The House That Jack Built
Comic Faces - Old Man Drinking a Glass of Beer
Spiders on a Web
Are You There?
The Cheese Mites; Or, Lilliputians in a London Restaurant
The Puzzled Bather and His Animated Clothes
The Haunted Curiosity Shop
The Waif and the Wizard; or, The Home Made Happy