All Just a Dream: Difference between revisions

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[[File:itwasonlyadream4 4785.png|frame]]
 
{{quote|''"I've been having these dreams lately. Like is any of this real, or not?"''|'''Sora'''|''[[Kingdom Hearts (video game)|Kingdom Hearts]]''}}
|'''Sora'''|''[[Kingdom Hearts (video game)|Kingdom Hearts]]''}}
 
Around fifty minutes into the program, really weird stuff starts happening, like little people juggling while riding a tricycle around a bewildered protagonist. Then the protagonist realizes, just as you do, that this has all been a dream, a really bad hallucination, or some other escape from reality.
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== Anime &and Manga ==
* One of the DVD specials for ''[[Durarara!!]]'' cleverly inverts this trope. The opening scenes show downright absurd scenes, like UFO sightings. As these are shown, Walter muses that most people would call his fantasies a pipe dream. The rest of the episode is narrated chronologically backwards, revealing that the strange occurrences at the beginning of the episode are ''not'' part of Walter's fantasy.
* The Season 2 opening of ''[[Genshiken]]'' starts with Sasahara opening a book... and then goes into an opening for a Mobile Suit Gundam-like series starring the Genshiken characters, including a helmeted Madarame as the antagonist. Then Sasahara wakes up and we see that he was looking at a sketch of the club members.
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== ComicsComic Books ==
* The last issue of ''[[Gen 13]]'', vol. 1 combined this with a [[Downer Ending]]: The team—along with various other gen-active teens they'd met along the course of the series—has one last hedonistic, live-like-there's-no-tomorrow-cuz-there-ain't good time before "The End". Turns out this was all in Caitlin Fairchild's head, an extended hallucination brought on by the effects of another gen-active's powers in the split-second before a [[Death Trap]] disintegrated them all (they got better).
* This has happened innumerable times in [[Superhero]] comics as an "out" for a wacky story that doesn't fit into canon. So much so that it was common to include the blurb "Not a dream! Not an imaginary story!" on covers to reassure readers that no such cop-out would be used. Of course, since [[Covers Always Lie]], they'd usually find some ''other'' cop-out that meant the events still weren't what they seemed.
* The current high-profile ''[[Batman]]: RIP'' storyline is (among other things) an attempt to bring the wackier [[The Silver Age of Comic Books|Silver Age]] adventures of the Dark Knight in-canon by explaining them as hallucinations caused by sensory deprivation experiments. An original quote from one of those Silver-Age tales is a prominent part of the storyline (and very typical of the trope): "It would be far easier to consider this a dream... but how can I? For in my hand, I hold the Bat-Radia!" Noteworthy in that the sensory deprivation experiment was not a [[Retcon]], but was ''itself'' a framing device in an actual Silver Age story. An alternative explanation provided for some of these episodes is the insinuation that they were hallucinations brought about by exposure to Joker toxin, Scarecrow's fear gas, etc.
* ''[[Tom Strong]]'' issues 29 & 30 had the eponymous hero awaken from his superheroic life into a gray world with no wonder or adventure where he was just a factory worker with a case of bad self-esteem. Then the clues mount that he really is a superhero - only to discover that he was a failed military experiment and [[Cuckoo Nest|all of his memories of a heroic life were delusions]]. But at the last moment, he breaks out of the hallucination - back into the superheroic world where the [[Big Bad]] of the story had been forcing him to hallucinate. He said later that he knew the world he had been in wasn't real because it was all gray, with no sense of hope or wonder in it. (Of course, a cynical person might just say that he was unable to cope with the truth and retreated into his dream-world ... à la that much-referenced episode of ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]''.)
* A two-week storyline in ''[[FoxTrot]]'', parodying ''[[The Metamorphosis]]'', has Jason waking up one morning to find he's turned into a miniature version of his sister, Paige. Midway through the story, he [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshades]] this trope by saying he's figured out that he's dreaming, because he thinks that if this were real, [[The X-Files|Mulder and Scully]] would've come to investigate. (Dream-Peter then points out that Mulder and Scully [[This Is Reality|are TV characters]]—and therefore [[Comically Missing the Point|only investigate incidents appropriate for primetime shows]]. Turning into a teenage girl is too horrific.)
* ''[[The Sandman]]''. Quite a bit of it really is just a dream, but that doesn't make it any less real. "I give you - [[wikipedia:List of characters in The Sandman#Alex Burgess|eternal waking]]..." Brrrrr...
* Two ''[[Spawn]]'' issues written by [[Neil Gaiman]] and [[Grant Morrison]] has Spawn dying accidentally after a fight with an angel warrior, and goes to a special level of Hell, where he finds all [[Marvel Comics]] and [[DC Comics]] superheroes imprisoned, and with help of [[Lawyer-Friendly Cameo|Superman]], who gave him his power, he sets them all free. Next issue happens back on Earth, with the narrator saying "Let's come back to reality. Spawn has a bad dream last days."
* From ''[[Bloom County]]'', after a long-awaited wedding, Opus is knocked out when his nose collided with Lola's when they kiss. While unconscious, Opus dreams about Lola leaving him twenty years later with twenty-three tube-grown kids. At another point, Opus ends up wandering lost in the desert. Suddenly, he's back home in Bloom County. He announces how happy he is it was all just a dream. Milo then says "No. ''This'' is the dream. You're still in the desert." And sure enough..
* ''[[Little Nemo|Little Nemo in Slumberland]]'' ends every strip with Nemo waking up in bed. There were continuous storylines despite this. And when Nemo gets into trouble it does not feel as safe as a dream. No no no.
* ''[[Drabble]]'' pulled this twice, then subverted it ''hilariously''. The first time, Ralph dreams that his job as a mall cop is more like [[Batman]]. The second time, Norman goes to a piercing salon with Wendy and ends up with multiple ear, nose, and other rings. The third time, Norman and Wendy run off to Vegas and get married on a dare. Norman is about to invoke this trope when the next panel reveals the cartoonist has already used up his chances to use it. The plot gets resolved another way.
* Sometimes used as a [[Cold Opening]] in ''[[Quantum and Woody]]''. For example, issue #5 starts with Woody, Quantum, and Amy working together as a tightly-coordinated counter-terrorism team to stop a criminal called Othello. In reality, it's a dream induced after Quantum was accidentally blasted off of a building in the previous issue.
* A story of ''[[The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers]]'' from the early '70s has the trio staging a violent assault on a prison to free an incarcerated friend. Fat Freddy ends up cut off and bludgeoned to death by a horde of cops - but it's all just a dream, and Franklin is beating him with a rolled-up newspaper for eating a whole batch of hash cookies. Then, some seven years later, an extended story where they take a cross-country trip in a vintage RV ends in a full-scale riot at a Greenwich Village Halloween parade - but it's all just a dream, and Franklin is beating Freddy with a rolled-up newspaper...implying ''everything'' that happened between the two stories was Fat Freddy dreaming!
* There's a ''[[The Punisher|Punisher]]'' story where Frank goes back in time to the 30s thanks to Reed Richards and Nick Fury. He quickly infiltrates [[Al Capone]]'s gang and kills every last mobster in Chicago along with Al, the idea being that by breaking the mafia's hold early on, there'll be no gang shooting in Central Park in the late twentieth century, saving Frank's family and preventing his [[Start of Darkness]]. Then he wakes up.
 
 
== Fan Works ==
* In ''[[Nobody Dies]]'', {{spoiler|much of chapter 66 is Shinji having a dream (really more of a nightmare) about Zeruel slaughtering everyone.}}
** Forget about that, {{spoiler|the ENTIRE''entire'' 4thfourth season is just a dream, made by Arael.}}
* [[Inverted Trope]] in ''[[Kyon: Big Damn Hero]]'', where Kanae was having a recurrent dream with parts... off. It was until after {{spoiler|she kissed Kyon}} that she realized she was awake.
* In a parody fanfiction about ''[[Dragon Ball GT]]'', right after Goku's [[Heroic BSOD]] and [[Big No]] when learning that {{spoiler|after his 100 years with Shenron, his family and friends are dead.}}, we return to {{spoiler|Goku and Chichi's bedroom and he explains to her the ''entire events of GT'' as a nightmare!!}} Then, it becomes a [[Dream Within a Dream]] as Goku has a run in with {{spoiler|''[[Dragonball Evolution]]''{{"}}s Goku!!!}} The short story is on [http://rulkout1993.deviantart.com/gallery/#/d2y63de deviantART.]
* The ''[[Star Trek: Phase II]]'' episode "To Serve All My Days", involving a delayed effect of [[Rapid Aging]] that afflicts Chekov to the point where he may have died, {{spoiler|in the final scene following the closing credits suggests that most of the whole episode was just a dream he had}}.
* ''[http://www.fimfiction.net/story/545/Equestria Equestria]'' is a ''[[My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic|My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic]]'' fan fiction that suggests that the eponymous world is {{spoiler|actually the elaborate fantasy world that was to be the [[The Verse|setting]] of a series of stories planned by a woman who was emotionally abused by her mother. She never got around to writing it and the emotional abuse that she suffered drove her into her dream world.}}.
* [http://www.fanfiction.net/s/6515261/7/Dalton Chapter 7] of ''[[Dalton]]'' starts out like this.
* One "episode" of ''[[Calvin at Camp]]'' features Calvin falling asleep and dreaming that he is in an [[Affectionate Parody]] of [[Lost]]. The readers are aware the entire time that it is a dream.
 
 
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** Speaking of Dickens, this is also one interpretation of ''[[A Christmas Carol]],'' though Scrooge doesn't think so.
* An in-story example occurs in one of the ''Henry Huggins'' books where Henry has to play the lead in the school Christmas program about a boy going to the North Pole to visit Santa. He hates the role- a six-year-old boy, the costume- footy pajamas, and the ending- where it turns out he dreamed the whole thing. [[Beverly Cleary]] didn't seem to like this trope, either.
* [[G. K. Chesterton|GK Chesterton]]'s ''[[The Man Who Was Thursday]]: A Nightmare''. You can't say he didn't warn you—and he woke very oddly.
* [[Mark Twain]]'s ''[[The Mysterious Stranger]]'' [[Nietzsche Wannabe|plays with this]].
* Chris van Allsburg's ''Just a Dream'', obviously. Although whether or not the author intended the dreams to be actual premonitions of potential futures is debatable.
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** Another One involves Al taking a job as a janitor for a Private Eye only to become one himself and solve a diamond case, getting a big fat check as reward. Of course, [[Status Quo Is God]] and it was just a dream of his (this one was the season-erasing resolution).
** Another has Al making a deal with the Devil (Robert Englund) to lead a football team to the Super Bowl. He gets his wish but is killed in a tackle and taken to Hell where his family and friends also end up (as a result of improbable accidents after his death, oddly enough). After three hundred years in Hell, Al can't take it anymore and challenges the Devil to a football match. The Devil picks some of the world's worst historical figures for his team. Al manages to win (even though given an offer to go back with beautiful women and loads of cash which, in a rare moment selflessness, he passes up). Al then wakes up back where he was before the Devil appeared and it appears to be a dream to him... least until he pulls out some Red Hots candy the Devil had given him.
* Sent up by Robert Rankin in ''[[Far -Fetched Fiction|Armageddon, The Musical]]''. A planet of aliens have been controlling Earth so they can watch us as a soap opera. [[Executive Meddling|Meddling executives]] decide that allowing [[World War III]] was a mistake and try to [[Continuity Reboot|reboot]] the series by having [[Elvis]] wake up and discover it was all a dream of what ''would'' happen if he joined the army instead of lending his voice to the anti-war movement. In minutes, the whole story turns into an [[Anachronism Stew]].
* The last episode of ''[[St. Elsewhere]]'' reveals that the entire series has taken place in the mind of an autistic child. If you accept that crossovers between shows imply that they occupy the same fictional universe, an argument can be made that no fewer than [https://web.archive.org/web/20060824200044/http://home.vicnet.net.au/~kwgow/crossovers.html 282 shows] were figments of Tommy Westphall's imagination, including ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]''. The aforementioned site seems to have a very low threshold for calling a show a cross-over, however; it includes minor [[Shout-Out]]s as linkage. [http://www.poobala.com/crossoverlist.html Another crossover database site] gives a more conservative estimate, setting fewer than a hundred shows within young Tommy's mind.
* This trope's application in the ''[[Newhart]]'' episode "The Last Newhart" resulted in what is widely considered one of the best series [[Grand Finale|finales]], ever. In the end it was revealed that the entire show was a nightmare of Robert Hartley, the star of ''[[The Bob Newhart Show]]'', also played by Bob Newhart. Interestingly, ''[[The Bob Newhart Show]]'' received a crossover from ''[[St. Elsewhere]]'', which combined with the previous entry could make ''[[Newhart]]'' a [[Dream Within a Dream]].
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** Used as a bit of a fake-out in season 6's {{spoiler|Lana/Lex wedding. The episode begins with a ridiculously melodramatic wedding/murder/suicide scene, which is immediately revealed to be a dream. The rest of the episode tells the story out of order chronologically, with many of the scenes using the same lurid gothic style, faking the viewers out into thinking these scenes are ''also'' just a dream; unfortunately, ''none'' of them are. Instead, when the episode is over and no-one wakes up from the terrible dream, the viewer is left with the slow, horrible realization that the gothic awfulness ''actually happened''.}}
* An episode of ''[[MacGyver]]'' in which the title character dreams of his [[Identical Grandson|lookalike ancestor]] ends with an [[Or Was It a Dream?]] moment when he woke to find he now possessed his ancestor's distinctive pocketknife.
* ''[[Happy Days]]'' somehow managed to [[Spin-Off]] ''[[Mork and Mindy]]'' from an All Just a Dream episode. Though [[That Was Not a Dream]] as shown by Mork's presence at the end of the episode, where he told his contact on Ork that he tricked "the human (Richie Cunningham)" tointo ''thinkthinking'' he had been dreaming. Mork also visited in a subsequent episode during the run of ''Mork and Mindy'' to tell Richie that he was living on Earth in "the future" (i.e. [[The Seventies]] when ''[[Mork and Mindy]]'' took place, and when both ''[[Happy Days]]'' and ''Mork and Mindy'' were made and first aired).
** The episode "They Call It Potsie Love" had Joanie—who had developed a crush on Potsie—falling asleep and dreaming she marries him.
* ''[[The Dick Van Dyke Show|The Dick Van Dyke Show's]]'' classic ''[[The Twilight Zone]]'' parody "It May Look Like a Walnut."
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'''B'Elanna:''' ''(seeing the helmsman, Kortar)'' He slaughtered my friends!
'''Klingon:''' No. He slaughtered the dream. He dragged you from the illusion of life. This is where you belong. }}
::After being rejected in favour of her mother, B'Elanna wakes up in ''Voyager'''s sickbay with the same hand injury she received on the Barge. She then has to convince her shipmates she didn't imagine the whole thing, and that she has to return to the Barge (i.e. [[Flatline Plotline|recreate her near-death experience]]) in order to save her mother.
{{quote|'''B'Elanna:''' Look at this -- The eleventh tome of Klavek. It's a story about Kahless returning from the dead ''still bearing a wound from the afterlife''. A warning that ''what he experienced wasn't a dream''. The same thing happened to me!}}
* ''[[Life On Mars]]'' makes use of this, both as (seemingly) the circumstances of the main character (in a coma, dreaming the entire thing), and side instances where Sam wakes up in bed after being harangued by the [[Creepy Child|Evil Test Card Girl]]. Not to mention the fact that... {{spoiler|in the end Sam's adventures in the past turn out to be just a dream. One Sam ''commits suicide'' to get back to... if you believe that interpretation of the ending instead of [[Epileptic Trees|one of the dozens of others]].}}
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** It also appears in another episode. When Frasier meets a supermodel-zoologist on an airplane, he comments that "This is usually the part where I wake up." Cut to Frasier opening his eyes - [[Subverted Trope|and the camera panning out for a]] [[Bedmate Reveal]].
* ''[[Roseanne]]'' essentially ended the series with a version of this.
* ''[[Battlestar Galactica Reimagined(2004 TV series)|Battlestar Galactica]]''. At the beginning of "Collaborators" Adama, Tigh and Roslin are telling Dr. Baltar that they forgive his [[The Quisling|actions on New Caprica]]. It's only when Roslin adds that she finds him desirable that a suddenly terrified Baltar realises he's still in deep s** t. Sure enough, he then wakes up on a Cylon baseship.
* At the end of the fourth season of ''[[Oz]]'', Tobias Beecher is up for parole. His lawyer enters the room and tells Beecher the Parole Board have approved his release. Everyone cheers as he returns to Em City, and a last minute assassination attempt by the Aryans is barely averted. Beecher is then shown walking out into the sunshine (showing the exterior of Oswald Prison for the first time) then playing with his daughter and new girlfriend in the park. Then he wakes up in his cell, and we flashback to his lawyer telling him that the Parole Board did ''not'' approve his release.
* One episode of the Charlie Drake [[Britcom]] ''The Worker'' has the title character experiencing an increasingly surreal series of events which culminate in his arrival at a TV studio, where it turns out that he's the leading actor in a TV [[Sitcom]] called ''The Worker''... Drake liked this plot so much he reused it in a later episode. A more conventional use of the trope occurs when the Worker gets hit on the head by a boomerang and has a surreal dream about Aborigines (possibly inspired by Drake's earlier comic song "My Boomerang Won't Come Back". Except this time it did).
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== Music ==
* Aaron Carter's upbeat song "That's How I Beat Shaq" relates the singer's adventures as he beats Shaquille O'Neal in a one-on-one basketball match, and ends with him waking up in bed. ("But if it was a dream, and it wasn't real... [[Or Was It a Dream?|how'd I get a jersey with the name O'Neal?]]")
* [http://www.mesozoicmind.com/ "Mesozoic Mind"], by the Charmers.]
{{quote|''Last night I had a crazy dream, I fell out of my bed! I missed the floor entirely, I fell through time instead!''}}
* [[Britney Spears]], "Baby One More Time". [[Fetish Fuel|What?]]
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* [[REM]] , "Losing My Religion":
{{quote|''I thought that I heard you laughing
''I thought that I heard you sing
''I think I thought I saw you try
''But that was just a dream
''That was just a dream'' }}
* Porter Wagoner/Tom Jones's song "Green Green Grass of Home" has the subject of the song seemingly returning home after being away for a long time, enjoying his return, only to wake up in prison awaiting his execution, only to return home dead and buried there.
* The Billie Holiday version, and most subsequent English-language versions, of "[[Driven to Suicide|Gloomy]] [[Brown Note|Sunday]]".
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* Airbourne's "Blonde, Bad and Beautiful" turns out to be this, in a video that was [[Sex, Drugs and Rock and Roll|filled with alcohol, stripping and a bit of pole-dancing]].
* The [[Barenaked Ladies]]' video for "Shoebox" is a dream of the girl who sneaks out on her date.
* [[Dokken]]'s video for [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ee2YFJKYF8Y "Dream Warriors"] winds up being a nightmare that [[A Nightmare on Elm Street|Freddy Krueger]] is having.
* The video for Live's "Run To The Water" turns out to be Ed Kowalczyk's dream.
* The video for [[Miley Cyrus]]' "Start All Over" is established as being a dream in the very beginning; it starts with her going to sleep and waking up in the dream world, and ends with her going to sleep in the dream world and waking up in the real world. [[Or Was It a Dream?|Then pictures she took while in the dream world start coming out of the printer.]]
* The video for [[Maroon 5]]'s "Makes Me Wonder" features this. With gratuitous [[Fan Service]].
 
== Myths &and Religion ==
 
== Myths & Religion ==
* Certain branches of Hindu philosophy hold that because truth is unchanging, and the world is constantly changing, then the world is not real. Hence, [[Real Life]] is just a sort of dream state.
 
== Newspaper Comics ==
* A two-week storyline in ''[[FoxTrot]]'', parodying ''[[The Metamorphosis]]'', has Jason waking up one morning to find he's turned into a miniature version of his sister, Paige. Midway through the story, he [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshades]] this trope by saying he's figured out that he's dreaming, because he thinks that if this were real, [[The X-Files|Mulder and Scully]] would've come to investigate. (Dream-Peter then points out that Mulder and Scully [[This Is Reality|are TV characters]]—and therefore [[Comically Missing the Point|only investigate incidents appropriate for primetime shows]]. Turning into a teenage girl is too horrific.)
* From ''[[Bloom County]]'', after a long-awaited wedding, Opus is knocked out when his nose collided with Lola's when they kiss. While unconscious, Opus dreams about Lola leaving him twenty years later with twenty-three tube-grown kids. At another point, Opus ends up wandering lost in the desert. Suddenly, he's back home in Bloom County. He announces how happy he is it was all just a dream. Milo then says "No. ''This'' is the dream. You're still in the desert." And sure enough..
* ''[[Little Nemo|Little Nemo in Slumberland]]'' ends every strip with Nemo waking up in bed. There were continuous storylines despite this. And when Nemo gets into trouble it does not feel as safe as a dream. No no no.
* ''[[Drabble (comics)|Drabble]]'' pulled this twice, then subverted it ''hilariously''. The first time, Ralph dreams that his job as a mall cop is more like [[Batman]]. The second time, Norman goes to a piercing salon with Wendy and ends up with multiple ear, nose, and other rings. The third time, Norman and Wendy run off to Vegas and get married on a dare. Norman is about to invoke this trope when the next panel reveals the cartoonist has already used up his chances to use it. The plot gets resolved another way.
 
== Puppet Shows ==
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* There's an episode of ''[[Adventures in Odyssey]]'' in which one of the children characters goes on an adventure in the Imagination Station (a virtual reality machine) that seems to be the same story over and over again, just set in different genres. At the end of the episode it's revealed the character is actually in a coma, reliving the events that put him in a coma, with the "bad guy" being Death coming for him and the friendly helper in his dream actually being a guardian angel trying to prevent an early death for him.
 
== Recorded and Stand- Up Comedy ==
 
== Stand-Up Comedy ==
* Comedian Emo Phillips {{spoiler|inverts this trope when he}} talks about a dream he had. He describes a long series of really bizarre, Emo-Phillipian events, that ends with him getting knocked unconscious. "And that's when I had my dream...."
 
 
== [[Trading Card Games]] ==
* ''Hecatomb'' had a literal "It Was Only A Dream" card which can eliminate practically any card your opponent has out, essentially making them have never happened.
 
 
== Theater ==
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* Shakespeare played with this. Most of the main characters in ''[[A Midsummer Night's Dream|A Midsummer Nights Dream]]'' believe this to be the case (or they just decide to pretend it is). Then, in the final lines, Puck advises the ''audience'' to do the same if they disliked the play.
{{quote|''If we shadows have offended,
''Think but this, and all is mended,
''That you have but slumber'd here
''While these visions did appear.
''And this weak and idle theme,
''No more yielding but a dream. }}
* Alan Ayckbourn's 1985 play {{spoiler|''Woman in Mind''. The entire play. From start to finish. Really.}}