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    Home » Review: Writer-Director Kristoffer Borgli’s “Dream Scenario”

    Review: Writer-Director Kristoffer Borgli’s “Dream Scenario”

    By SHOOTTuesday, November 14, 2023Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments1314 Views
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    This image released by A24 shows Nicolas Cage in a scene from "Dream Scenario" (A24 via AP)

    By Jocelyn Noveck

    --

    Quick: What's a good adjective for Nicolas Cage's screen presence? Mercurial, perhaps? Volcanic? Volatile?

    How about mundane, schlubby, average? Not the page we'd think to turn to in our Roget's Thesaurus.

    Yet here Cage is, channeling his inner drabness to chillingly comic effect in Kristoffer Borgli's "Dream Scenario." As Paul Matthews (heck, even the name is drab), a college professor at nowhere famous, he performs his job with perfect mediocrity, and seems a fairly mediocre husband and dad, too. With his graying beard, wire-rimmed specs and shiny bald spot, Cage's Paul is the guy in the room you ignore.

    Until, suddenly, you can't. Because something weird starts happening. Paul starts appearing in people's dreams. Everyone's dreams.

    The premise is delicious — and precarious. It recalled for me the setup in a very different movie, "Yesterday," where only one guy on Earth remembers the Beatles. It makes for a fantastic beginning, but you immediately worry how they'll manage to keep it going.

    But Borgli, the Norwegian writer-director making his English-language debut here (Ari Aster co-produces), is aiming for a broader statement about the nature of fame. And while the topic, which he's broached before, may not be original, it's ripe for exploration in the right hands — especially with an actor as inventive and unpredictable as Cage. Fame can be intoxicating, this film is saying, but it can and probably will turn on you in an instant, unless you're Taylor Swift (OK, we added that last part).

    We begin on an autumn day by a suburban swimming pool, where Paul is raking leaves near his teen daughter. Scary things start dropping from the heavens, and suddenly the girl is grabbed by an unknown force and lifted, screaming, into the sky. Dad? He does nothing to help.

    It's only the girl's dream. But then there are more. Paul and his patient wife, Janet (Julianne Nicholson, reliably excellent) run into someone at the theater, and she too has dreamed about Paul. At a dinner party, several guests discover to their shock that they've been dreaming about the same person. Yep, Paul.

    What's happening? On campus, Paul's students, who mostly chat among themselves during his unremarkable lectures on evolutionary biology, start listening — they're dreaming about him, too.

    In many of these dreams, Paul stands by, inexplicably, as others experience peril — slithering alligators, for example. But in real life, for once, Paul has the floor — a man who until now seethed with frustration over his unrealized ambitions as others succeeded. Now, everyone is interested in him.

    Borgli never stops to analyze the science of this bizarre development, and frankly, Paul doesn't either. He takes a meeting with a snarky group of branding experts (led by Michael Cera, perfectly cast) who want to market him up the wazoo. They can get him a Sprite commercial! Well, Paul doesn't want that — he just wants a book deal for his biology research. But his ears perk up at the idea of an endorsement from Barack Obama. ("I know Malia," one of these young professionals says.)

    One young woman even lets on to Paul that in her dreams, the two have great sex. This is too stunning for the schlubby Paul to ignore, especially when she invites him home to recreate the dream. Needless to say, it doesn't go as well in real life. In fact, the dénoument is utterly, agonizingly humiliating.

    And then, everyone's dreams change. Suddenly Paul is the one causing harm. His students, terrified, don't want to see him anymore. He gets sent home from a dinner with friends. He can't even sit in a coffee shop and read a book without a fellow diner spitting on his food.

    As for the branding consultants, well, they inform Paul that Obama is off the table — but hey, they could get him time with Joe Rogan or maybe Tucker Carlson.

    We won't spoil the ending, but let's just make the obvious point that Borgli is not making a rom-com — is there a word for "horror-com"? We walk away from this funny, sad, scary film acutely reminded that if fame has two sides, one of them is pretty darned horrible.

    And perhaps, as you walk home from the multiplex this time, you might even revel in the fact that nobody's paying attention. Obscurity can be underrated.

    "Dream Scenario," an A24 release, has been rated R by the Motion Picture Association "for language, violence and some sexual content." Running time: 102 minutes. Three stars out of four.

    "Dream Scenario" hit select theaters last week and goes wide for release on November 22.

    Jocelyn Noveck is an AP national writer

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    Category:Features
    Tags:Dream ScenarioKristoffer BorgliNicolas Cage



    Effie UK and Ipsos Report Finds That Having Values Has Value For Brands

    Saturday, March 7, 2026
    “Causes and Effectiveness: What Marketers Need to Know About Aligning with Values,” a new report from Effie UK and Ipsos

    Great Britain’s cause landscape offers brand owners plenty of opportunities for nuanced brand building and a chance to tackle real issues affecting people, according to “Causes and Effectiveness: What Marketers Need to Know About Aligning with Values,” a new report from Effie UK and Ipsos. The report, the latest in Ipsos and Effie’s Dynamic Effectiveness series, was prompted by the uneasy world in which we live. At a time when backlash by some public figures against perceived “wokery” has contributed to many organizations diluting--if not abandoning altogether--cause-related marketing activities in the past few years. The starting point was a key trend in the 2025 Ipsos Global Trends report--the Power of Trust, and the role “aligning with values” plays in it. For the new report, Ipsos analyzed the responses of 4,200 GB adults about their relationships with 60 causes across 109 brands in seven product areas to unpack this trend further. Effie then illustrated the findings of the Ipsos data with recent Effie UK award-winning cases to show how these dynamics play out in the real world--and the business impact they have. Ipsos’ analysis shows that people do (still) care about causes--78% of Britons care deeply about at least one. However, it also reveals that the value exchange from brands is less clear-cut. 37% of Britons say they don’t care if brands are “ethical or socially responsible.” And a majority feel that the government, rather than private companies, should act for a cause. Despite this, across a broad range of categories, many brands are seen by Britons as doing “good” things for the planet and for their communities, with 32% of those surveyed agreeing companies have a “positive impact on society and the world we... Read More

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