Brolin One Liner: “Alicia Adams was searching for the
fulfillment of a haunting dream.”
Brolin is leaned up against a Flotard Real
Estate sign to introduce this story. (. Brolin, and later Frakes, are always
sitting on, leaning on, or otherwise lounging around props from the show. Dale
says this is a common trope in the series but I honestly don’t remember.)
Flotard Real Estate? Faisdodo? These guys
are taking the “we’ve changed the names to protect the innocent” a bit too
drastically here. Alicia, our narrator, begins describing a too perfect house, during
a too perfect spring rolling into an Indian summer. Now, I’m no meteorologist
but Indian summer is just a warm fall. And spring’s gradual change to fall is
usually called summer. The house is a huge two-story Victorian with clapboard
shutters and large colonnade. As she is about to step foot into the house, her
alarm clock goes off.
That’s right, this story begins with a dream sequence.
See, it’s really seven a.m. and she’s getting up in the morning. Her husband
walks in and reminds them that they are going house hunting today. She
describes her dream house to her husband who seems overly interested in his
wife’s dreams about a house. If I’m dreaming about a house, that’s going to
keep me asleep. Her husband Daniel accuses her of sabotaging their search for
their first home by hoping for too much.
[It’s perfect. It’s just not perfect enough.]
It then cuts to them leaving the last home of the day with Alicia
being obtuse and vague about her dislike of the house. Daniel asks if there’s
something in particular wrong with it, but Alicia just explains that it isn’t
the house from her dream.
Daniel tries to explain that dreams and
reality are actually different and hoping for something hard enough doesn’t
make it happen. That night Alicia visits the house in her dreams again. Alicia’s
dreams are as exciting as the fly through view on Home Architect software, but less
so. While walking down the hallway towards the back patio she floats past
herself walking through the living room. Wait, what? Apparently, she is
dreaming from Daniel’s perspective because a male hand brushes aside the
curtains and wakes her up. She tells him about the house again and how
impossibly perfect it is for them and their desires to begin a family. Daniel
assures her that when they can afford it, they’ll buy a house just like it, but
gently brings her back down to reality.
While
out driving towards another possible starter home that’s just hit the market in
a familiar neighborhood Alicia demands the car stopped. Turns out the house of
her dreams is in a neighborhood she has frequently driven through. What. A.
Coincidence.
Actually it’s not, because dreams are only
our brains going through our memories and recombining them in weird ways.
That’s why you can dream of Kermit the Frog riding a Humpback Whale to
Antarctica but can’t picture the city of Marrakesh, unless you’ve been to
Marrakesh. One of the odd quirks of the human mind. No one is certain why we
dream. One of the major theories is it’s our brain’s way of defragmenting the
visual inputs we receive from temporary storage into more long term memories.
Alicia breaks into and enters a strange
home where people are obviously still living. There’s not even a real estate
sign. She walks through the house like she owns the place and bosses her
husband around like he’s never been allowed inside a house before. It turns out
that this house is going for sale today and the real estate agent isn’t
surprised to see people just waltzing about the place. Alicia and Daniel put in
a bid well below the asking price but Alicia has a good feeling about it. The
real estate comes back with the good news that they are the new owners of the
house. The previous owner had given her instructions to accept the first offer
no matter what, so technically, they overpaid. I would’ve just offered them a
matchbox car and a Tic-Tac for the house. Daniel asks first logical question
that there is something wrong with the house, but the realtor gives him her
word that there is nothing wrong. SHE GAVE HIM, HER WORD. But I’ve learned that
this is the real world. My girlfriend promised she wasn’t cheating on me.
PEOPLE LIE. But he instantly believes it. The realtor does let it slip that the
house is haunted though.
[Not in the house description]
The owner of the house decides to come and
meet Alicia and Daniel. Instantly she jumps back in fright. It turns out that
Alicia is the one haunting the house. Brolin suggests that it was an out of
body experience. Alicia was astral projecting herself into a house in order to
get the swoop on the sale. However, he also offers a much more logical answer
almost offhandedly. “The seller is obviously under a lot of stress.” Which
brings this whole episode full circle. People under stress think they see
ghosts.
Casey’s Comment: This didn’t get the house sold on the
Brady Bunch, it’s not working here. Fiction.
Dale’s Comment: Ugh…this story was just in bad taste. You
can’t close the episode on this. There was nothing believable here. This story
cheapens the stories that came before it. It’s beyond belief they would
continue the series after this story. Fiction.
Fact or Fiction: Fact
Casey’s Comment: Bullshit.
I love to read about your comments!
ReplyDeleteI just discovered this show tonight and could not believe this story was fact Soni tried to find a source online and obviously found your blog. A weird blog even for 2011, even weirder it looks like you just started the blog back up.
ReplyDeleteFact or fiction?
What becomes even more weird is my comment on the 2019 comment. This show is from the 90s.
ReplyDeleteFais Do Do is a real club in LA and they filmed at the actually club, but changed the look of the sign.
ReplyDeleteI feel like in her past life she lived in this house and passed away. Then years later she came back as Alicia and remembered this house because she lived their. Like Reincarnation. Her older self was haunting the house.
ReplyDeleteNo it's appointed unto man to die one time and then go to judgment. No reincarnation.
ReplyDeleteFlotard is a real estate agency in New Jersey.
ReplyDeleteI want the floor plan to this dream house.
ReplyDeleteMe too lol… that kitchen had me ❤️
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