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"My Dreams Are Getting Better All the Time" (1945) with Manny Curtis "Oh How She Lied to Me" (1945) with Manny Curtis "With a Hey and a Hi and a Ho-Ho-Ho" (1947) with Manny Curtis "In the Middle, In the Middle, In the Middle", an early 1960s anti-jaywalking public service announcement for New York City, sung by Mizzy's daughter Patty Keeler.
The Night Walker is a 1964 American psychological horror film [1] [2] directed and produced by William Castle, written by Robert Bloch, and starring Robert Taylor, Judith Meredith, Lloyd Bochner and Barbara Stanwyck in her final theatrical film role. It follows the wife of a wealthy inventor who is plagued by increasingly disturbing nightmares ...
The Night My Number Came Up; The Night Walker (film) A Nightmare; The Nightmare (2015 American film) The Nightmare (2015 German film) Nightmare (1956 film) Nightmare (1964 film) Nightmare (1981 film) Nightmare (2011 film) Nightmare Detective; Nightmare Detective 2; A Nightmare on Elm Street; A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge
Dream telepathy – The ability to telepathically communicate with another person through dreams. Precognition (including psychic premonitions ) – The ability to perceive or gain knowledge about future events without using induction or deduction from known facts.
The series was renewed for a second season called Kulipari: Dream Walker on March 8, 2017, which was released on November 20, 2018. [3] [4] A graphic novel called Kulipari: Warflower was purported to be released on January 1, 2019, but it was canceled.
Dreams (Japanese: 夢, Hepburn: Yume), also known as Akira Kurosawa's Dreams, [4] is a 1990 magical realist anthology film of eight vignettes written and directed by Akira Kurosawa. Inspired by actual recurring dreams that Kurosawa had, [ 5 ] it stars Akira Terao , Martin Scorsese , Chishū Ryū , Mieko Harada and Mitsuko Baisho .
Why We Sleep: The New Science of Sleep and Dreams (or simply known as Why We Sleep) is a 2017 popular science book about sleep written by Matthew Walker, an English scientist and the director of the Center for Human Sleep Science at the University of California, Berkeley, who specializes in neuroscience and psychology.
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, Deathdream holds an approval rating of 83%, based on 12 reviews, and an average rating of 6.72/10. [7]In a contemporary review, Chuck Middlestat of the Albuquerque Journal deemed the film a "light-weight spooker that starts off pretty slowly but builds into a good nail-biter in the last half-hour," but noted the dialogue as weak, adding that "the actors ...