Time Travel movies

Time travel is a fun concept for a film, but it seems like it is the easiest one to mess up if you don't pay attention to little things...like consistency. I recently watched a movie that dealt with time travel (I won't mention it by name just yet), and I still annoyed that the filmmakers opted to bypass common sense in favor of an ending that they thought would be ... well, I don't know what they were thinking.

So how about an open thread on time-travel movies? Who did it well? Who blew it big time? Which theory do you prefer -- the alternate universe concept (like Back to the Future); or the unchanging linear concept (like 12 Monkeys)?
 
I love and own both of those movies! :D Debating the merits of one theory of time travel versus the other seems like more of an academic exercise than a basis on which to judge a movie's worth, IMHO.

I also liked Donnie Darko and that indie film that came out a couple of years ago (forget the title).

As for who blew it, the latest Star Trek springs to mind. Can't they come up with a new concept besides time travel for these things? They've got the whole damn galaxy to play in, for pete's sake! And don't get me started on the idiotic villain who - instead of warning his people about their impending destruction - waits around for 25 years (doing what, I dunno; surfing porn on the Internet, I guess) until Spock is old enough to kill. What a steamin' heap o' buffalo loaf! :rolleyes:
 
The indie timetravel film you may be talking about is 'Primer' that would have to be the top of my list for time travel films, in my opinion the greatest approach to tackle the ol' subject.
 
Primer! That was it!

Oh, yeah...I forgot The Navigator (1988 Australian film). Awesome time-travel movie!

And Time Bandits!!! :cool:

edit: And the first two Terminators!
 
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The One with Jet Li followz Dr. Kaku's string theory that time and space is linked together by parellel universes, which means a past, present, and future someone ccan exist simultanously in parrellel universes. It also takes into account alternate realities where changes can make soneone's life totally different.
 
Couple of good television shows did it recently, and did it well:

Here in the US, SyFy channel's "Warehouse 13" did H.G. Welles's "The Time Machine" in a very unique way. I won't spoil it for you, but in the show H.G. Welles was actually a female inventor who hid behind the male guise of the famous author, who was really her brother. She actually invented the things in her brother's novels, and one of the things she invented was a time machine. It worked different from anything I had ever seen before...you hook up to the machine and take a potion and you are transported back into the body of someone who lived in the past, and you have 23 hours to walk in their shoes, in the past. I'm not doing it justice, but it was cool.

Over in the U.K., two shows "Life on Mars" and "Ashes to Ashes" dealt with time travel. Essentially a police officer woke up in the '70s or '80s respectively, and you were never quite certain, especially with the sequel Ashes to Ashes, if they were in a coma or had actually traveled back in time.

Time travel is such a tricky subject matter, I love it most when it's treated in new ways, even if the ends don't tie up nicely.
 
The Navigator (1988 Australian film).

It was filmed in Auckland. Might have been aussie-financed, though. Great movie.

Does Aranovsky's The Fountain count as time-travel? I love that film. :blush:

A really terrible time-travel flick is... don't recall the name of it, but it has HG Wells (whose time machine was actually real!) arrives in modern-day Manhattan. Had a song by Cyndi Lauper as opening or ending credits. God-awful time-travel flick if there ever was one.

An awesome (well, for a kid anyway) TV series from the '60's was... The Time Tunnel. Very simple concept - some scientists invent a time-tunnel, and each week they arrive at a famous historical event and get into huge trouble, and just when they're about to die the people back at the lab manage to get a lock on them and catapult them to safety (which leads to the next week's new adventure.) An eternal out of the frying pan situation. Man, I loved that show. (That and Land of the Giants)
 
Does no one remember Somewhere in Time with Christopher Reeve. That movie was great.

As for the Terminator movies...Why can't SKYNET seem to kill any of Conner's relatives.
 
Not really time travel, per se, but in "Next" Nick Cage could see into his own future. Not great, but not bad. The next film I saw that same night (on a different cable channel) was "Deja Vu" with Denzel Washington. Very cool twist at the end.
 
I love and own both of those movies! :D Debating the merits of one theory of time travel versus the other seems like more of an academic exercise than a basis on which to judge a movie's worth, IMHO.

I also liked Donnie Darko and that indie film that came out a couple of years ago (forget the title).

As for who blew it, the latest Star Trek springs to mind. Can't they come up with a new concept besides time travel for these things? They've got the whole damn galaxy to play in, for pete's sake! And don't get me started on the idiotic villain who - instead of warning his people about their impending destruction - waits around for 25 years (doing what, I dunno; surfing porn on the Internet, I guess) until Spock is old enough to kill. What a steamin' heap o' buffalo loaf! :rolleyes:

Haha, I'd never thought of that. For the record, I LOVE JJ Abram's "Star Trek", but yeah, if he's got time-travel, why the hell didn't he just prevent his world from getting blown-up? That's stupid.

The thing that bugs me about the time-travel in the latest "Star Trek" isn't whether or not it makes sense, but that it completely negates all other Trek movies before it. We're in a new universe -- none of the other ones have ever happened. That's bullshit. It pisses me off. They literally pressed restart on the entire franchise. Well, that's fine, in a way, I guess. But I like the old universe. I wish they would've found a way to blend old with new, instead of just completely sweeping out the old.

As far as the original question of this thread is concerned, to be frank, I don't think it matters too much, what type of time-travel rules they use, or whatever. As long as the story pieces together, that's all I care about. The entire concept of time-travel is quite silly, in my opinion, and I've never seen a time-travel movie that actually makes sense. Every single one of them has some kind of paradox that just smacks of nonsense. Half the time, I think the filmmakers did it on purpose.

For example, it doesn't take a rocket-scientist to figure out how nonsense the first two "Terminator" movies are. Okay, so in the first movie, we learn that in the future, John Connor sends back one of his most trusted fighters to protect his mom from attack from The Governator. And then, while he's protecting her, they procreate, the offspring which would of course be John Connor, himself. What?! That makes no sense!!! Clearly, Cameron created this paradox on purpose. He did it again in "T2".

In "T2", we learn that Skynet, and all of it's brilliant computer processing abilities were reverse-engineered from a small chip found in the arm that remained from the aftermath of the events in the first "Terminator" movie. Needless to say, this also does not make one iota of sense. It's fucking ridiculous, and I feel like it was intentionally written that way.

I'm actually very strongly leaning towards making my next feature a time-travel movie. As of yet, I haven't nailed down anything close to a solid story. All I've got bouncing around in my head is the concept of a time-travel movie combined with a mistaken-identity movie. A dude is suddenly thrust into a wild world, in which he has to unravel some kind of mystery, because he's mistaken for someone else. This is the classic mistaken-identity movie, no? Except, in my movie, he's not mistaken for someone else, but mistaken for a future version of himself. That's all I've got, so far. Any ideas?
 
I love watching time travel movies but I can understand the feeling you get when you notice inconsistancies.

I just watched 12 Monkeys again after reading your thread it reminded me of that movie. I loved that movie. Sure it does not completely add up but then again I think most time travel movies have some issues such as paradox.

A few other time travel movies I watch are Timecop, of course BTF 1,2,3, Terminator films, etc...

I have heard some people complain about the new Star Trek movie because they don't like how the time line changed.

I think I would love to make a time travel movie in the future. They have always been interesting to me.
 
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An unusual time travel movie was "Kate and Leopold". What made it unusual was that it was a romantic comedy and not an action/adventure flick.
 
"Deja Vu" with Denzel Washington. Very cool twist at the end.

Funny you mention that one. It was the movie that prompted me to start this thread. I though the ending completely contadicted the rest of the movie.

Alcove Audio said:
I just watched 12 Monkeys again after reading your thread it reminded me of that movie. I loved that movie. Sure it does not completely add up but then again I think most time travel movies have some issues such as paradox.
I'd be curious to hear (er...read) what you consider to be the paradox of 12 Monkeys, or what it is doesn't add up.

The concept of time-travellers creating a "paradox" or changing the future is so common, and probably more widely used in fiction, that we tend to assume it will happen even when the story is designed to not have any. With a story like 12 Monkeys, the concept is that there is no changing of the past because each moment in the past happens only once. If you time-travel back to yesterday, your interaction with that date as a time-traveller is now already part of that history and has already impacted the course of the future. There was never a "yesterday" where your time-travelling self was NOT there. I tend to favor this concept in time travel stories. Not sure why...
 
The part that does not add up in 12 monkeys is that the time traveler that was sent into the past to stop the virus was also the guy that implants the idea to kill off all the humans in the past to the crazy guy that does start the 12 monkeys and releases the virus. If he was never sent back in time the crazy guy would not have came up with the idea to release the virus and kill of 5 billion people. That seems to be a paradox to me.
 
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Haha, I'd never thought of that. For the record, I LOVE JJ Abram's "Star Trek", but yeah, if he's got time-travel, why the hell didn't he just prevent his world from getting blown-up? That's stupid.
IIRC, he was accidentally thrown back in time and didn't have much control over it. And apparently the whole 'disappearing for 25 years' thing was actually not a true plot hole, but was explained in a deleted scene. I think the story went that he was in a Klingon prison the whole time?

The thing that bugs me about the time-travel in the latest "Star Trek" isn't whether or not it makes sense, but that it completely negates all other Trek movies before it. We're in a new universe -- none of the other ones have ever happened. That's bullshit. It pisses me off. They literally pressed restart on the entire franchise. Well, that's fine, in a way, I guess. But I like the old universe. I wish they would've found a way to blend old with new, instead of just completely sweeping out the old.

As far as the original question of this thread is concerned, to be frank, I don't think it matters too much, what type of time-travel rules they use, or whatever. As long as the story pieces together, that's all I care about. The entire concept of time-travel is quite silly, in my opinion, and I've never seen a time-travel movie that actually makes sense. Every single one of them has some kind of paradox that just smacks of nonsense. Half the time, I think the filmmakers did it on purpose.

For example, it doesn't take a rocket-scientist to figure out how nonsense the first two "Terminator" movies are. Okay, so in the first movie, we learn that in the future, John Connor sends back one of his most trusted fighters to protect his mom from attack from The Governator. And then, while he's protecting her, they procreate, the offspring which would of course be John Connor, himself. What?! That makes no sense!!! Clearly, Cameron created this paradox on purpose. He did it again in "T2".

In "T2", we learn that Skynet, and all of it's brilliant computer processing abilities were reverse-engineered from a small chip found in the arm that remained from the aftermath of the events in the first "Terminator" movie. Needless to say, this also does not make one iota of sense. It's fucking ridiculous, and I feel like it was intentionally written that way.
While I totally enjoy movies that don't operate this way, I have to say that I subscribe to the non-linear time theory. Everything is a paradox so nothing is a paradox. If you go back in time, you can't change time, because you already went back in time. Honestly I think the best executed time travel stories aren't in movies but in books. Read (I know you hate to, but food for thought, maybe) Time Enough for Love, as well as The Number of the Beast (not his best book as only the first or second draft ended up being published), which has a lot to do with time travel and parallel universes. (both by Robert Heinlein)

I'm actually very strongly leaning towards making my next feature a time-travel movie. As of yet, I haven't nailed down anything close to a solid story. All I've got bouncing around in my head is the concept of a time-travel movie combined with a mistaken-identity movie. A dude is suddenly thrust into a wild world, in which he has to unravel some kind of mystery, because he's mistaken for someone else. This is the classic mistaken-identity movie, no? Except, in my movie, he's not mistaken for someone else, but mistaken for a future version of himself. That's all I've got, so far. Any ideas?

This is a great place to start, but I think you need a hook. I like the fact that it's going into the future, rather than the past where he's mistaken for his great grandfather or something (which has been done before, for sure).

Maybe the hook can be found in why he is time traveling? Why would someone go to the future? And if you craft your future world interestingly, the story/hook could stem from that?
 
This is a great place to start, but I think you need a hook. I like the fact that it's going into the future, rather than the past where he's mistaken for his great grandfather or something (which has been done before, for sure).

Maybe the hook can be found in why he is time traveling? Why would someone go to the future? And if you craft your future world interestingly, the story/hook could stem from that?

Oh, thanks for those ideas, but I guess I should've given more detail. This is something that I'd be shooting myself, on a tiny budget, so the future is out of the question. It has to be set in modern day.

The future-self that he'd be mistaken for would be one that traveled back in time to modern day. And there's a bunch of people travelling through time. And then one of the people travelling through time sees the modern-day version of dude, thinks it's the near-future version of the dude, and grabs him, taking him through time somewhere, and boom, just like that, our modern-day version of our dude is right in the thick of things.
 
This is something that I'd be shooting myself, on a tiny budget, so the future is out of the question.

Why is the future out of the question? Who knows what the future will look like? Maybe there could be a solar flare that kills all our electronic technology and we could be living in the ruins or are an agrarian society - after the riots and wars and plague eliminate 90% of the worlds population... Maybe everything looks exactly the same, but it's the second time around... Since the future hasn't happened you can write it to suit yourself.
 
Oh, thanks for those ideas, but I guess I should've given more detail. This is something that I'd be shooting myself, on a tiny budget, so the future is out of the question. It has to be set in modern day.

The future-self that he'd be mistaken for would be one that traveled back in time to modern day. And there's a bunch of people travelling through time. And then one of the people travelling through time sees the modern-day version of dude, thinks it's the near-future version of the dude, and grabs him, taking him through time somewhere, and boom, just like that, our modern-day version of our dude is right in the thick of things.

So kind of like 'The Man Who Knew Too Little'? I like it, it could be a lot of fun (fingers crossed for a comedy).

I will say though that it actually wouldn't be too hard to set something in the near future. Say 10-20 years. It's most likely that 70% of everything would look the same, and the 30% that's different can easily be a couple matte paintings and some nice after effects work to up the interactivity of technology. Someone on here (I think it was Uranium) was talking a while back about pulling off some cool holographic computer interfaces he picked up in a video copilot tutorial.

But yeah, it doesn't sound like the time period is gonna be super important to the plot. So that last paragraph is probably moot. :D

I do some thinking while I work on some folks today (I usually find I can focus and hash out my ideas when I massage, for some reason). I know I can come up with something to move this story.
 
So kind of like 'The Man Who Knew Too Little'? I like it, it could be a lot of fun (fingers crossed for a comedy).

Yes, and yes. That is the idea, exactly.

And, you and Alcove are correct to point out that the future can be done on a nothing budget. The idea I've got in my head, though, definitely takes place in the now.
 
Excellent!!!!!

Remember these guy. Papertwin and I were just reliving this on another thread.:)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OT4B-NJUcZE&feature=related
 
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