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    • What Dreams May Come. After Chris (Robin Williams) dies in a car accident, he meets his afterlife spirit, who is guiding him. His new world is beautiful and can do and be whatever Chris wants.
    • The Matrix. A stranger leads Neo (Keanu Reeves), a computer hacker, to a forbidding underworld, where he uncovers the unexpected truth about his reality.
    • Vanilla Sky. David (Tom Kruz), a spoiled child receive his father’s company after his parents encounter a road accident. David meets a girl and instantly falls in love with her.
    • The Science of Sleep. Stéphane, a shy insecure young man, goes to Paris to move to his widowed mother Christine, after the death of his father. He falls in love with his charming neighbor Stéphanie.
    • The Matrix (The Wachowskis, 1999) The cyberpunk imaginary that the Wachowskis brought to the silver screen suggested that humanity lived an illusion, deep into its consciousness to realise the nuances that differed it from the true, wrecked reality.
    • The City of Lost Children (Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Marc Caro, 1995) Jeunet and Caro went on to create a curious little steampunk city to put in front of the camera and entertain the spectator with slapstick characters and uncanny close-ups that add to the grotesque visual elements of the film’s fantasy.
    • Dreams (Akira Kurosawa, 1990) Kurosawa is one of the most renowned filmmakers in cinema history. Dreams is one of his last contributions to the art form that he so much loved and helped build.
    • Total Recall (Paul Verhoeven, 1990) Far into the future, humanity has come to the point of profiting from the sale of dreams. Douglas Quaid has had many layers of his memory erased over time, and lives a life of lies.
  1. 8.2 (993K) Rate. 72Metascore. A mathematical genius, John Nash made an astonishing discovery early in his career and stood on the brink of international acclaim. But the handsome and arrogant Nash soon found himself on a harrowing journey of self-discovery.

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  3. Jul 4, 2022 · Movies that deal with dreams. Why do we dream? What are these endless stories that engulf our subconscious while we are asleep? Many have tried to theorize the reasons behind dreaming but none have been successful decoding it.

    • The Wizard of Oz (1939) Director: Victor Fleming. When she is hit on the head by a piece of debris after a tornado strikes her small Kansas town, Dorothy (Judy Garland) finds herself lost in the wonderful world of Oz, where – along with three unlikely allies – she heads off to locate the titular wizard, hoping he’ll show her how to get home.
    • Dead of Night (1945) Directors: Alberto Cavalcanti, Charles Crichton, Basil Dearden and Robert Hamer. Beating Inception to its ‘dream within a dream’ premise by 65 years, Dead of Night follows Walter (Mervyn Johns), an architect who is called to a house in the country to discuss renovations.
    • Nightmare (1956) Director: Maxwell Shane. The first thing we see is Stan (Kevin McCarthy) stabbing a man to death in a mysterious mirrored room. Then Stan wakes up in his bed, sweaty, scared and convinced that what he experienced was real.
    • 8½ (1963) Director: Federico Fellini. Guido (Marcello Mastroianni, playing Federico Fellini’s cipher) is a film director struggling to come up with ideas for his latest production.
  4. Jan 13, 1990 · The Dreaming: Directed by Mario Andreacchio. With Arthur Dignam, Penny Cook, Gary Sweet, Laurence Clifford. A doctor treats a sick aboriginal person, who had defied a tribal taboo and visited a sacred cave.

  5. Dreams. A collection of tales based upon eight of director Akira Kurosawa's recurring dreams. 'Dreams' is an appropriate enough title to start off this list, and it really is all in the title. Kurosawa's film consists of eight separate vignettes, each based off of a dream that he had at some point in his life.