Laura Hasn't Slept (2020) Poster

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8/10
Better than Smile!
panagiotis19932 December 2022
I can see this being the inspiration for Smile (2022). The visual effects used were disgusting in a good way and on point. I especially liked the CGI for the doctor's face. It's a bit different from Smile though. Smile was more about trauma affecting people and a mysterious curse. Laura Hasn't Slept reminded me a bit of Nightmare on Elm Street, because here the curse is more of a ''sleep demon'', I would call it. In Smile the characters can see the manifestation of the curse even when they are awake while in this short film it seems like the curse mostly manifests itself while the character is asleep. This short film is very intense and has a creepy atmospheric horror vibe. Both the actors involved do a great job portraying their characters. Very solid overall, my rating is 8/10.
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7/10
He needs more smile
Neptune16517 November 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Finally got around to seeing this and always have to come here after I watch a new film to see what you guys think! I LOVE this film, The short film looks even more creepy. I enjoyed this short film over all, it was done really well, but I'm tired of this kind of ending. The same as the grudge, the ring, etc. The cinematography and sounds design were great. A lot of tension and the ending was a lot (and not where I thought it was going). Great short movie. Could have been titled "before the Smile" Really enjoyed this short movie. I loved the non-stop dread felt from beginning to end. Not knowing about short movie, I keep thinking about this short film in terms of mental illness versus the supernatural evil demon entity. It's technically both, but they were very intentional with including mental illness and trauma. I want to see that explored more, and I think leaving out about the other victims in the suicide chain would make the film very successfully lean more towards mental illness than the supernatural.
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9/10
Profound Nocturnal Horror
carvajalenriquex17 November 2022
Lovely! Caitlyn is amazing amazing I swear shes gifted as hell the way she portrays desperation and fear surely has a real roll on her psyche and for that Im sorry but thank you so much for that Caitlyn, pure awesome. Therapist is great too at leaving you guessing if hes competent, or to be trusted , or is he just a frikken Satariel incarnate...who knows! Omg this short is the perfect preambule to Smile tho i didnt know about it after watching Smile sadly.

At any rate Parker Finn quickly becoming a noetic horror MASTER.

PARKER IF YOU READ THIS, dont name Smile 2 , Smile 2 if u want to make it happen even...

What about...." Smiling "

:)))
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Spiritual prequel to Smile
Kristonkiner15 March 2023
The idea of being trapped in a nightmare is a trope of the horror genre, explored in Parker Finn's short film "Laura Hasn't Slept", a short film that revolves around this question and that laid the groundwork for its passage to feature film in the successful Smile.

The short film starts in media res with the protagonist, Laura. (Caitlin Stasey) in the office of her therapist, the calm and kindly Dr. Parsons (Lew Temple). Laura is clearly not in a good state of mind, to the point that she has refused to sleep for several days, due to a recurring nightmare she has about a creepy smiling man who threatens to show her "his true face." The tension of the short is very well executed, slowly building as we learn more about Laura, her nightmares and the monster that haunts them.

This premise is by no means new, it combines the concept of avoiding sleep to avoid confronting a terrifying entity, with the theme of the stigmatization of mental illness in the horror genre. Titles like Them from 2002 come to mind, and above all, any film in the Freddie Krueger saga. With these precedents, the viewer instinctively knows what is to come and it seems inevitable, but the director shows a great ability to smoothly transition from one atmospheric level to the next. With that use of slow panoramas as an element of suspense, which the director has turned into a trademark of the house.

The idea of using the smile as the main concept in a horror film is not new, perhaps its oldest literary antecedent is the short story by H. G. Wells, "Pollock And The Porroh Man", in which terrible visions of a smiling head haunts an English expeditionary in the Sierra Leone of colonial imperialism in the 19th century. An overexploited concept, that year after year, there are constant revisions and variations, especially in the short film genre.

In short, Laura Hasn't Slept tells a brief but terrifying story, where she plays with the dichotomy of madness and demonstrates a good know-how to create tension and propose sequences with a captivating atmosphere.

*A more detailed review can be found on the youtube channel Kristonkino.
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10/10
Brilliant Short Horror Film
ladymidath28 December 2022
I have not seen smile yet but I do intend to. I watched this film instead as it's the inspiration for Smile. This was one of the best short films I have seen. The tension and atmosphere were perfect, it managed to give an real air of menace. The two actors were very good and really managed to convey the fear and sense that something if a little off. I hope that Smile is as good as this. Movies like The Broken and the original The Ring, The Grudge and Dark Water all manage to convey that things are not quite right feeling. Laura Hasn't Slept managed to do that beautifully.. I fully recommend this short film.
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Superb storytelling with sound and production design
DanTheButler19 January 2023
Watched Smile some time ago, but was curious to check out the short it was based on. Quite honestly, I kinda liked this more than the feature.

The production design was really immersive and it had a really good use of sound to build tension. The actress was quite good as well and I was glad they put her in the feature too. It felt a bit longer than it was, probably due to being drawn in so quickly.

I can totally see why Paramount scooped up this short, as it was pretty original. I wish the feature was more about the roots of this short, rather than running off to do its own thing. One of the best short films I've seen.
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