MovieChat Forums > Living in Oblivion (1995) Discussion > Dream sequences and dwarves

Dream sequences and dwarves


I've never seen Twin Peaks the TV show, never watched it while it was actually on in 1990 but just started watching the DVDs from the beginning. I thought it was very interesting in the third episode, there is an extensive dream sequence .. with a dwarf! (played by Michael J. Anderson who worked with David Lynch again in Mulholland Dr. and also went on to the great Showtime series Carnivale).

Anyway, since that was 1990 and Living in Oblivion came out in 1995, I was just curious whether the scene (and speech from Peter Dinklage) was an acknowledgement of that dream sequence.. are there others you can think of?

reply

i also saw living in oblivion before i watched twin peaks. I had to explain why i was laughing at the dream scenes.
I cannot think of any others but am sure there are probably hundreds.

reply

It's dwarfs, not dwarves, but just remember, Tito's character doesn't have to be a dwarf.

10 seconds; the pain begins. 15 seconds; you can't breath. 20 seconds; turn off 'quote/unquote.'

reply

Quote: "It's dwarfs, not dwarves ..."
Thanks Mr. Knowledge, but actually both "dwarfs" and "dwarves" are legitimate spellings according to our friend Merriam-Webster:
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/dwarf

reply

I think 'dwarves' is only usable in a Tolkienesque setting, since he was the one who popularised that spelling of it, and what does Webster know? We are talking about English here, not American.

Knock knock.
Who's there?
Doctor.
Doctor Who?
How did you tell, is it my terrible gurning?

reply

And while we're at it, it's "breathe" not "breath".

reply

It's dwarfs, not dwarves
Just because the IMDb message board spell checker underscores a word with a red wavy line does not mean the word has been misspelled.

It could mean that it is misspelled. But it could also mean that there might be a much more [puke]politically correct[/puke] way of writing something potentially inflammatory.

For example, just try spelling the Spanish word for the English word "black", as politically combustive a word as there ever have been.

IMDb would underscore the word 'black' itself, if it weren't so ingrained in cinematic terminology as well as a potential insult.

The word 'dwarves' has similarly come under attack by [gag]PC[/gag] perfectionists, who cite the fact that ever since the very earliest of spell checkers, the word 'dwarfs' has never been marked as being potentially misspelled.... which is due to the fact that the word 'dwarf' is not just a noun which can be pluralized, but also a verb, which can be conjugated.

"That basketball player is so tall that he dwarfs all his teams cheerleaders," is a perfectly correct sentence, which is why the word 'dwarfs' never got dinged by spell checkers.

When [retch]political correctness[/retch] Nazis started marking perfectly valid words as being potentially inflammatory, somebody decided to add the word 'dwarves' to those lists of words to become less and less used, which saw little if no resistance because of the existence of the word 'dwarfs' still being used.

It makes little or no sense.

One calf, two calves. One wharf, two wharves. One knife, two knives. One wife, two wives.

Why in the world shouldn't it be one dwarf, two dwarves?

In astrophysics, dwarf stars and dwarf planets aren't lumped together into a classification called dwarfs, but dwarves, but then that isn't still referring to anything in this politically messed up world, is it?

reply

First thing I thought of seeing this was Twin Peaks. Especially with the red room. It seemed very David Lynch and yes, made me laugh.

For more on dwarves, check out In Bruges. Hilarious.

http://idrinkyourmilkshake08.blogspot.com/

reply

I think this was the same actor who played in Station Agent. An interesting film.

reply

I definitely saw it as a Twin Peaks (among others) reference. In Bruges keeps the tradition going.

reply

In Bruges

Even the most primitive society has an innate respect for the insane.

reply

He's now of course in HBO's Game of Thrones series.. and a damn fine actor

The real trick to life is not to be in the know, but to be in the mystery. -Fred Alan Wolf

reply

I don't know about dwarves in dreams in other movies and TV, but Tito was definitely wrong about nobody dreaming about dwarves. I've had several dreams that featured dwarves, including one about Peter Dinklage.

Sandy

It's good to be King.

reply