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Two minutes of 1933 fever dream that'll make you question your own eyelids.
TMDB
70
IMDb
58

Dream (1933)

silent screamBauhaus brainrotsurrealist quicksand

Overview

DramaThriller

In the 1920s Horacio Coppola studied modern languages, photography and film, set up the first cinema club in Buenos Aires, and travelled to Italy, France, Spain and Germany, where he trained with the Bauhaus photographer Walter Peterhans. After visiting Vienna, Budapest and Prague, still hotbeds of secessionist art, Coppola returned to Berlin and made the experimental film Traum (Dream, 1933) with the theatre director Walter Auerbach, a nice short influenced by the French & German surrealists.

Flag of ARARFlag of DEDExx
Content warning
short filmargentinasurrealismblack and whitegermanysilent cinemacine argentinoargentinean cinemagerman-argentine
the unconscious made visiblemodernist anxietyvisual language transcending borders

Standout Aspects

Cinematography

Peterhans' Bauhaus precision collides with surrealist chaos.

Direction

Coppola & Auerbach pack a feature's worth of dread into 120 seconds.

Best for:Solo: Late night when your brain feels slightly broken.·Rewatch: Frame-by-frame to catch every unsettling image.
Heads up:Disturbing: Brief but genuinely uncanny imagery—surrealism hits different silent.
H

Director

Horacio Coppola

ReleasedApr 8, 1933
Runtime2m
StatusReleased

Vibe

Pacefast
Intensityhigh
Tonedark
Feelmedium

Ask about Dream

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Deep Dive

Trivia, insights & behind the scenes

Cultural

Coppola made this months before fleeing Nazi Germany, carrying Bauhaus methods back to Argentina where he'd become the father of modern Argentine photography.

Trivia

The film was lost for decades until a single print surfaced in a Buenos Aires archive in the 1990s—most Coppola scholars had assumed it was apocryphal.

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