Design for Dreaming (1956) Poster

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I call YES way!
rowsdower4526 January 2003
One of my favorite MST3K shorts of all time! The music is bouncy and the color is colory and the gizmos and gadgets are really neat and the cars look cool...still, it was really goofy and MST3K struck gold with this one!

7 stars!
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1/10
Is this GM's answer to Roger & Me? *SPOILERS*
quamp2 May 2002
Warning: Spoilers
Man, people at GM were very white back in 1956 when this was made. Janine Turner clone Tad Tadlock dances her way through this short film with a guy reminiscent of Secret Agent Super Dragon. Obscene cheerfulness and a pair of singers that can't sing shoot this one down. Cheesy special effects (such as the Highway of tomorrow is in fact a slot-car race set.) don't help either.

Avoid this one unless you're watching the MST3K version.
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1/10
A rebuttal to "Roger and Me"...
lee_eisenberg11 July 2006
...was how Crow defined "Design for Dreaming" when he, Servo and Mike had to watch it. It portrays a happy-go-lucky woman living a fantasy in which a jolly man buys her any car that she wants, and a kitchen has all the appliances that a 1950s housewife could ask for. Very much a product of the 1950s.

A previous reviewer called this short "I Dream of Jeannie" on LSD. I thought that it looked like the Broadway sequence in "Singin' in the Rain" on LSD. But either way, the movie is beyond pathetic, just the sort of schlock that Dr. Forrester would cruelly beam aboard the Satellite of Love to torture Mike, Servo and Crow.

In conclusion, the movie itself is 0/10, but the "MST3K" is 10/10.
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1/10
"Future may not be available as seen..." *SPOILERS*
icehole48 March 2002
Warning: Spoilers
Why in the world does this film have a positive rating on it? As of this writing, the rating here is 7.9. ICK! This film, presented by GM in 1956 to showcase their new line of cars, has an EXTREME lack of reality in it. The plot goes like this: A woman wakes up with an invitation to a ball. She doesn't have anything to wear, so suddenly she's in a formal ballgown. Next she flies after the invitation to a hotel. There she's shown a bunch of cars, along with her in designer dresses. There's also a guy in a mask (who gave me Secret Agent Super Dragon flashbacks) who leads her through this dream. In the end, they enter a car together and take off on the highway of tomorrow. There's also a song going on in the background that's pretty annoying and the woman singing it can't really sing to well. Rightfully skewered on Mystery Science Theater 3000 for its bad special effects and lack of reality, this short should be avoided unless you're watching the MST3K version.
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7/10
"Your Time Is Now (or before)"
Seamus282928 May 2007
I just saw this weird assed film short recently on the Arts Channel (a free station offering short snippets of Classical & Jazz,along with film shorts,and excerpts of (some) classic films. This film short was directed by the legendary bad film director, William "one shot" Beaudine (aptly named for his penchant of using any take,no matter how good or bad it was), who directed such film classics as "The Bowery Boys Meet A Brooklyn Gorilla" & "The Ape Man". This film short reminded me of an uber surreal film I saw a few years back entitled "Dreams That Money Can Buy", about a dream agent that sets up various people with the kind of dreams one would probably experience after a midnight snack of fried clams & a chocolate malted. It would probably make for a perfect short film opening for such films as "W.R.:Mysteries Of The Organism", or even "Reefer Madness". I'm just wondering if this film short is available on DVD, or even the old school VHS format (I know that companies such as Video Wizard or Weirdo Video,that gets all sorts of whacked out film fare would probably have something like this available for mail order). A strange little item that's worth seeking out.
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10/10
Simply the best film ever made
tork_1107 August 2002
Ok, maybe I'm a little bias, but I love every minute of this ten minute commercial (except maybe the minute where they show the cars.)

The reason why I love this short is the cute star, Tad Tadlock. It's fun watching her reactions to the new cars and the Kitchen of Tomorrow. She even gets the opportunity to perform the Dance of Tomorrow. This woman could sell me the goofy looking Firebird 2. It's a real shame that she didn't appear in any feature films at this poin in her career.

The singing is very good in this short. The woman singer has a cute voice and it complements Tad's character.

Some people criticize this short. This film shouldn't be taken so seriously. The story takes place in a dream. It's suppose to be a fantasy! The Highway of Tomorrow is neat, even if you can tell what it is. The film was made to sell cars, but it's a lot of fun to watch.

I recommend this film and the similar yet inferior "A Touch of Magic".
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10/10
I loved it!
superuser14005 September 2006
Warning: Spoilers
i simply love this short film. It' about a woman who loves cars, who dreams about going to a futuristic car show, with a masked man. I love most of the 50's cars, and i love the part where they are in a kitchen, and we see all sorts of cool gadgets. Then she has her relaxing time, and takes out her wonderful cake, which is very amusing, and then they have a futuristic dance. Then they show a fabulous selection of cars and fashion, I love the cars and I love the fashion. Then they travel on a futuristic road, and we see the city of the future. I love the songs in this film, and I watch it often. I think that anyone who gets the chance should watch this film, as it's lots of fun. I think it's in the public domain, but I'm not sure. I give it 8 out of 10.
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I Dream of Jeannie......ON LSD!
Mitora-san31 December 2002
I remember seeing "Design for Dreaming" on an episode of MST3K, and it instantly reminded me of American Sitcom "I Dream of Jeannie", if the staff were using LSD.

The plot has to do with a dancer in a fantasy world whom is invited to a ball by a masked man, and sees every dream car she wants. Plus, watch for the instant light stoves, magical costume changing and cakes that comes out of the oven, with candles and everything!

Design for Dreaming? More like "Design for an Acid Trip".
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8/10
Likable and funny commercial Short
Jordan_Haelend7 August 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I really like this one! When you consider when it was made, particularly the general attitudes concerning cars and what many people thought *T*H*E* *F*U*T*U*R*E* would bring thanks largely to technology, it makes sense- but you have to consider these things. Elevated highways, self-steering cars, and the automated kitchen were all predicted for the future, usually centering around the year 2000.

The music and dance numbers seem corny today, but I'm sure they were for the most part considered Avant-Garde for the time. I'll say this, the choreography is excellent.

The short is colorful and well-photographed, and the cars certainly are (or were) fascinating. There's also no lag time, the whole production moves along quickly but without the feeling of having been rushed.

Okay, it's a sales Ad. But it's an entertaining one, with or without MST3K.
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MST3K, the Arts channel and
tforbes-29 March 2003
This is actually one film that airs both on Mystery Science Theater 3000 and on the Arts channel.

It is MST3K material, because this film is indeed goofy. It offers the characters plenty of material to poke fun at. Yet, the Arts channel also shows this film, as (presumably) an example of this genre of film, one that promotes GM products.

Do not take this film seriously. It was produced by GM in 1956 to promote its cars, and it reflects the era in which it was produced. Tad Tadlock is definitely attractive in the fantasy role in which she plays, and it is a shame she did not do more acting assignments.

I also think the production is the star of this show, and I can see where it might have influenced two shows, "The Twilight Zone" and "Batman":

--Tadlock's "Dance of Tomorrow" is very similar to the dance Suzanne Lloyd performed in the 1959 episode of "The Twilight Zone" she appeared in, "Perchance to Dream." Lloyd's character seems to have influenced the character of Catwoman in "Batman," which aired a full decade after "Design for Dreaming."

--Also, the production value and visuals (the rich color and fantasy sequences) remind one of the "Batman" series--as does the masked male figure. Holy tie-in!

Yes, this is a plug for GM cars, but it is fascinating to see what was offered for the future (especially the Impala and Firebird). Even if all of this is a fantasy, so what? This is real eye candy, and a fascinating piece of history that is available both on MST3K and the Arts channel, depending on what you prefer.
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8/10
Design For Comedy!
marcus_stokes20003 March 2007
Warning: Spoilers
*Design For SPOILERS*

Woman dreams about a Masked Man bringing her a subpoena... no, worse, an invite to the General Motors Motorama, but she has practically nothing to wear for such an occasion (besides a pair of pink pajamas), so he gets her a gown.

She goes to the Motorama, clutching the invitation to her booosoms, wants to buy every car she sees (and almost rolls one) and ends up in the Kitchen of Tomorrow, where all is automatized... and able to cook a cake *with candles and decoration*.

Then she dances the ridiculous-yet-prophetic 'Dance of Tomorrow', presents some cars that apparently come with an assort of women (remember, though that the pregnant woman and the Schnauzer are optional), meets again with Man and they take off in his 'Extention Of My Manhood Car' on the Highway of Tomorrow, and apparently the short ends on a sour note, as the Bridge to the Future is out...

Weird, wacky and goofy, this short is like a true acid trip in sparkling Technicolor, and the only one to have been aired both on the Art Channel and on MST3K, where it has been hilariously (and deservedly) sporked, even though it's already hilarious on his own.

A movie to watch for fans of David Lynch especially, and probably the only MST3K that is watchable by itself.

Design For Dreaming: 8/10.
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male singer/voice is NOT Ravenscroft
yestismabel24 February 2011
The male voice/singer in this little film is Howard Keel, a famous movie bass-baritone in such films as "Kiss Me Kate", "Seven Brides for Seven Brothers", "Kismet", "Annie Get Your Gun", "Showboat", "Calamity Jane", "Jupiter's Darling" with swimmer/actress Esther Williams (!), and many others. He also had a career on Broadway, and was an 80's TV star, becoming known to new audiences as 'Clayton Farlow' on DALLAS. Ravenscroft is a basso profundo, the deepest, darkest, fullest of the bass voices, and his sound is distinctly different from Keel's, at least to this trained singer! I recognized Keel instantly, and kept expecting to see him on screen; why waste that talent off-screen? I don't recognize the female singer.
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