A Dream within a Dream
To die,—to sleep;—
To sleep: perchance to dream:—ay, there's the rub;
For in that sleep of death what dreams may come,
When we have shuffled off this mortal coil,
I recently watched the movie What Dreams May Come (USA, 1998) which I discovered because I was looking up the filmography of Max Von Sydow. I really have no memory of this film coming to the theatres. I'm guessing that it flopped because the director hasn't really done anything since.
It's a story about what happens to a family after death, with a lot of discussion about loss and grieving.
The plot is a bit saccharine, but it was a visually wonderful film. The scenes of Robin Williams' heaven (everyone gets their own, it seems) are fabulous. And the boats in the Venice-like halls of a giant library. And hell. Beautiful imagery.
It's also a film that makes me wonder about the official religion of Hollywood. It just seems like every Hollywood film has a very similar picture of the afterlife: kinda Christian with a heaven and a hell. But also with relatively lax entrance requriements for heaven. And there's usually a reincarnation option. Reincarnation, I guess, has much more story potential than other forms of afterlife. (And Defending Your Life remains one of my favourites among movies of this ilk.
what dreams may come
now that we have a DVD player, i should order it. :)
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it was very beautiful
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The production budget seems to have been $80 million USD, with the total US gross being $55 million USD. (EEP!) In comparison, Good Will Hunting, which came out late the year prior, had a production budget of $10 million USD and a total US gross of $138 million USD.