Let Me Dream Again Explained

Let Me Dream Again
Director:George Albert Smith
Producer:George Albert Smith
Starring:Tom Green
Laura Bayley
Cinematography:George Albert Smith
Studio:G.A. Smith
Distributor:Warwick Trading Company
Runtime:1 minute 16 secs
Country:United Kingdom
Language:Silent

Let Me Dream Again is a 1900 British short silent drama film, directed by George Albert Smith, featuring a man dreaming about an attractive young woman and then waking up next to his wife. The film stars Smith's real wife, Laura Bayley, as the woman of his fantasies. Bayley would later appear in Smith's 1906 film Mary Jane's Mishap. The film, according to Michael Brooke of BFI Screenonline, "is an excellent example of an early two-shot film, and is particularly interesting for the way it attempts a primitive dissolve by letting the first shot slip out of focus before cutting to the second shot, which starts off out of focus and gradually sharpens." This appears to be the first use of a dissolve transition to signify a movement of a dreaming state to one of reality.

Of further interest is the camera composition of the husband and wife in bed. The bed is placed upright against a wall and in front of a camera that is fixed to the floor, giving the appearance of two people lying in bed, when in reality they are standing. The film was shot in Smith's own studio, the former pump house at St Ann's Well Gardens in Hove. The film was remade by Ferdinand Zecca for Pathé as Dream and Reality (1901).[1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Let Me Dream Again . Michael . Brooke . BFI Screenonline Database . 2011-04-24 .