web
counter
Rian Johnson's The Psychology of Dream Analysis
 
business vision articles new vision business opportunities finance vision deposit money vision making art loan vision deposits make vision your home good income vision outcome issue medicine vision drugs market vision money trends self vision roof repairing market vision online secure vision skin tools wedding vision jewellery newspaper vision for magazine geo vision places business vision design Car vision and Jips production vision business ladies vision cosmetics sector sport vision and fat burn vat vision insurance price fitness vision program furniture vision at home which vision insurance firms new vision devoloping technology healthy vision nutrition dress vision up company vision income insurance vision and life dream vision home create vision new business individual vision loan form cooking vision ingredients which vision firms is good choosing vision most efficient business comment vision on goods technology vision business secret vision of business company vision redirects credits vision in business guide vision for business cheap vision insurance tips selling vision abroad protein vision diets improve vision your home security vision importance

Watch Rian Johnson's The Psychology of Dream Analysis

By Steven Lloyd Wilson | Posted Under Station Agents | Comments ()



rianjohnson.jpeg

Rian Johnson seems to be fairly well regarded in these parts, with two damned good films to his name and gearing up on a time travel thriller involving Bruce Willis but no monkeys. Which two films? If you don’t know, then that means you have homework to do. The nuns are waiting if you don’t, steel-edged rulers quivering.

In any case, an old short film of Johnson’s has been put up online, a ten minute affair that he says all copies of had been lost except for a DVD-R that he ripped in order to salvage it. It’s there in its completeness below.

The Psychology of Dream Analysis from rcjohnso on Vimeo.

Now that’s a fantastic little story, the sort that wouldn’t seem out of place in a Neil Gaiman anthology, with maybe a little glimpse of Morpheus in passing just to add a signature.

It’s funny, because it took me two times to watch it, because for whatever reason, the previews and trailers and such for Looper have embedded Rian Johnson’s name in my head as a science fiction director. So the first time I watched this, my brain felt like it was trying to find the angle that wasn’t there.

“Spaced” was like that for me, by all accounts an excellent show. That is, unless you become convinced before watching that it’s supposed to be science fiction and by the third episode you’re getting really irritated at just when they’re going to find the aliens in the attic.









Each Time You Like, Share, Tweet or Stumble a Pajiba Post, An Angel Does the Paul Rudd Dance



5 Shows After Dark 9/16/12 | 'RoboCop' Reboot: First Look at the Suit and the PD Cruiser