TIME TRAVEL LINKS

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start your journey here

TIME TRAVEL-RELATED WEBSITES:

  • Time Travel Movie-related websites

  • Memoirs of Elise

  • Somewhere In Time site

  • Inside the Tardis

  • Virtual Tardis Time Machine

  • Virtual Tardis Time Machine 2

  • Virtual Time Machine Warnerbros

  • Time Zones

  • Truth Seeker TV

  • Dr. Who BBC links

  • Unexplained Mysteries

  • Unexplained Mysteries

  • Unexplained Mysteries

  • Unexplained Mysteries

  • Unexplained Mysteries

  • Unsolved Mysteries

  • Unsolved Mysteries

  • Time Machine already invented?

  • Inventor claims to be near success

  • Inventor's Home Page

  • Brian's Home Page

  • Time Travel Shortcut

  • Time Travel Model ( Shockwave required )

  • Dare to enter The Time Machine ( FLASH )

  • Time Ship - great links!

  • Dr. Who and The Tardis Databanks

  • Back to the Future Page

  • The Philadelphia Experiment Movie Trailer

  • Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court

  • Disaster in Time Movie Trailer

  • The Final Countdown Movie Trailer

  • H. G. Wells The Time Machine

  • Art Bells Theme Song!

  • Dr. Who Theme Song!

  • Time Travel Bulbo Cartoon

  • Time Travel Subject listing from Yahoo!

  • The Mining Company's Time Travel Site - Including Links




    Time Travel in Physics:

  • Fun Time Travel Sites:
  • General, Unclassified Time Travel Sites:
    • Memories from the Future - The off off Broadway magic show about Time Travel - featuring Master Magician, Igor. Now playing at the 13th Street Theatre in New York City. (Yes, I know it's an ad, but it sounds kind of interesting!)
    • Einstein's Dreams - An interactive site based upon the Alan Lightman book of the same name, which I highly recommend (needs Shockwave plug-in, which is free). "A hybrid of essay, prose poem, imaginary biography, and short story collection, Einstein's Dreams elegantly defies generic classification and straddles the gap between realism and fantasy, science, philosophy, and literature. But most of all, it is about human experience." - from the website.
    • Andy's Anarchonisms - Time Travel and Alternate History website.
    • The Time Travel Page of James Deem - Exploring many facets of Time Travel, including TT as a "retrocognitive experience".
    • TIMELINKS - Aetherco's  online content guide to time travel on the web.
    • How to travel in Time - An Essay by Bill Adler, Jr., author of "Time Machines: The Greatest Time Travel Stories Ever Written.
    • Alien Time Treasure - Serial Sci-Fi, Fantasy, Magic, Mystery, Horror, and Young Adult novels.  Read online or download.  Featured novels are "A Circle of Two" and "Quarantined".
    •   TimeFlights.com - A site by two people claim to have travelled in time. Features info about their book "Sparks from the Fire of Time", as well as about channeling, past life regression and hypnosis.
    • Check out Chuck Buckley's Time Travel Site - Time Travel, a Temporal Brain Drain.
    • The mad bassist - Erich Zann- on Time Travel - An excellent essay on Time Travel, giving plausible explanations for paradoxes and taking time travel films to task for inaccuracies.
    • Steve Preston's Time Travel Site
    • Brian Bosak's Time Travel Page
    • Time Travel - It's only a matter of time  - A somewhat more whimsical look at time travel.
    • Time travel for beginners - An interesting group of articles on Time Travel.
    • StrangeMagazine's Time Travel Pages- Good articles in this online magazine about time travel in general, including interviews, a story of a documented time travel incident, and a listing of time travel books and movies.
    • Practical Time Travel - An interview Strange Magazine with Steven Gibbs, who  claimed to have traveled to the future and back..
    • An FTP listing of Sci-fi authors and their works, chronologically arranged.
    • Also visit the alt.sci.time-travel newsgroup.
      =To Top=     =To Books=       =To Films=

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      SOME TIME TRAVEL BOOKS (Fiction):

      • A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court (1889) - Mark Twain
      • The Time Machine (1895)- H.G. Wells (A link to this text online)
      • An Experiment With Time - (1927) - J.W. Dunne
      • Sidewise In Time (1931) - Murray Leinster
      • Lest Darkness Fall (1949) - L. Sprague DeCamp
      • The Wheels of If (1949) - L. Sprague DeCamp
      • The End of Eternity (1955) - Isaac Asimov
      • The Crossroads of Time (1956) - Andre Norton
      • The Door Into Summer (1956) - Robert Heinlein
      • The Lincoln Hunter (1958) - Wilson Tucker
      • Time Out of Joint (1959) - Philip K. Dick
      • Dr. Futurity (1960) - Philip K. Dick
      • A Wrinkle In Time (1962) - Madeline L'Engle
      • Man In His Time (1965) - Brian Aldiss
      • Tunnel Through Time (1966) - Lester Del Ray
      • The Time-Hoppers (1967) Robert Silverberg
      • Up The Line (1969) Robert Silverberg
      • Time and Again (1970)- Jack Finney
      • The Tardis LibraryLots of Dr. Who related books here!
      • Dinosaur Beach (1971) - Keith Laumer
      • There Will Be Time (1972)- Poul Anderson
      • Time's Last Gift - (1972) - Philip Jose Farmer
      • The Return of the Time Machine (1972) - Egon Friedell
      • Time Enough for Love (1973) - Robert Heinlein
      • Bid Time Return (1975) - Richard Matheson
      • The Time of Achamoth (1977) - M.K. Joseph
      • The Mirror (1978) - Marlys Millhiser
      • Morlock Night (1979) - K.W.Jeter
      • The Man Who Folded Himself  (1980) - David Gerrold
      • The Number of the Beast (1980) - Robert Heinlein
      • Thrice Upon A Time (1980) - James P. Hogan
      • Remember the Alamo! (1980) Kevin Randle and Robert Cornett
      • The Guardians of Time (1981) - Poul Anderson
      • Time Machine II (1981) - George Pal and Joe Morhaim
      • Anubis Gates (1983) - Tim Powers
      • The Ivanhoe Gambit (1984) - Simon Hawke (Time Wars Series)
      • The Pimpernel Plot (1984) - Simon Hawke (Time Wars Series)
      • The Threshold (1984) - Marlys Millhiser
      • The Timekeeper Conspiracy (1984) - Simon Hawke (Time Wars Series)
      • Time After Time (1985) Allen Appel
      • The Nautilus Sanction (1985) - Simon Hawke (Time Wars Series)
      • The Zenda Vendetta (1985) - Simon Hawke (Time Wars Series)
      • The Cross-Time Engineer (1986) - Leo Frankowski
      • The Khyber Connection (1986) - Simon Hawke (Time Wars Series)
      • Time Out of Mind (1986) - John R. Maxim
      • The Argonaut Affair (1987) - Simon Hawke (Time Wars Series)
      • The Highly Flavoured Ladies (1987) - Patricia Andagi
      • Three By Finney (1987) - Jack Finney
      • To Sail Beyond Sunset (1987) - Robert Heinlein
      • Project Pendulum (1987) - Robert Silverberg
      • Kindred (1988) - Octavia Butler
      • Replay (1988) - Ken Grimwood
      • The Dracula Caper (1988) - Simon Hawke (Time Wars Series)
      • Lightning (1988) - Dean Koontz
      • Remember Gettysburg! (1988) -  Kevin Randle and Robert Cornett
      • The Boat of a Million Years (1989) - Poul Anderson
      • The High-Tech Knight (1989) - Leo Frankowski
      • The Radiant Warrior (1989) - Leo Frankowski
      • The Flying Warlord (1989) - Leo Frankowski
      • Lord Conrad's Lady (1989) - Leo Frankowski
      • The Lilliput Legion (1989) - Simon Hawke (Time Wars Series)
      • The Shield of Time (1990) - Poul Anderson
      • If I Never Get Back (1990) - Darryl Brock
      • The Hellfire Rebellion (1990) - Simon Hawke (Time Wars Series)
      • The Cleopatra Crisis (1990) - Simon Hawke (Time Wars Series)
      • Remember the Little Bighorn! (1990) Kevin Randle and Robert Cornett
      • The Six-Gun Solution (1991) - Simon Hawke (Time Wars Series)
      • The Time Patrol (1991) - Poul Anderson
      • Lord Kelvin's Machine (1992) - James P. Blaylock
      • Dragonfly in Amber (1992) - Diana Gabaldon (part 2 of a series)
      • Outlander (1992) - Diana Gabaldon (part 1 of a series)
      • The Dreamstone (1992) - Liane Jones
      • The Doomsday Book (1993) - Connie Willis
      • Voyager (1993) - Diana Gabaldon (part 3 of a series)
      • Thebes of the Hundred Gates (1993) - Robert Silverberg
      • Dead Morn (1994) - Piers Anthony
      • Remembrance (1994) - Jude Deveraux
      • Dinosaur Nexus (1994) - Lee Grimes
      • Mariana (1994) -  Susanna Kearsley
      • Arc Riders (1995) - David Drake and Janet Morris
      • Time After Time (1995)- Jack Finney
      • The Time Ships (1995) - Stephen Baxter
      • Time Trekkers Visit the Dinosaurs (1995) - Kate Needham
      • Time Trekkers Visit the Romans (1995) - Antony Mason
      • Time Trekkers Visit the Stone Age (1995) - Antony Mason
      • Pirates (1995) - Linda Lael Miller
      • Arc Riders: The Fourth Rome (1996) - David Drake and Janet Morris
      • House on the Strand (1996) - Daphne Du Maurier
      • The Law of Love (1996) - Laura Esquivel
      • Time Station London (1996) - David Evans
      • Time Station Paris (1996) - David Evans
      • The Christmas Mystery (1996) -  Jostein Gaarder
      • The Bones of Time (1996) - Katheen Ann Goonan
      • Knights (1996) - Linda Lael Miller
      • Pastwatch: The Redemption of Christopher Columbus (1997) - Orson Scott Card
      • The Mistress of Spices (1997) - Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni
      • Days of Cain (1997) - J.R.Dunn
      • Drums of Autumn (1997) - Diana Gabaldon (part 4 in a series)
      • Ceasar's Bicycle (1997) - John Barnes (Timeline Wars Series)
      • Patton's Spaceship (1997) -John Barnes (Timeline Wars Series)
      • Remembrance (1997) - Jude Deveraux
      • Timequake (1997) - Kurt Vonnegut
      • Time Machines: The Greatest Time Travel Stories Ever Written (1997) - Bill Adler (editor)
      • Timeshare (1997) - Joshua Dann
      • Time Station Berlin (1997) - David Evans
      • Time Weaver (1997) - Kate Donovan
      • Corrupting Dr. Nice (1997) - Kessel, John
      • To Say Nothing of the Dog (1997) - Connie Willis
      • Washington's Dirigible (1997) - John Barnes (Timeline Wars Series)
      • Einstein's Bridge (1997) - John Cramer
      • The Dechronization of Sam Magruder (1997) - George G. Simpson
      • Timeshare: Second Time Around (1998) - Joshua Dann
      • In the Garden of Iden, a Novel of the Company (1998) - Kage Baker
      • The Fall (1998) - Simon Clark
      • On the Edge of Darkness (1998) - Barbara Erskine
      • About Time (1998) - Jack Finney
      • Conrad's Quest for Rubber (1998) - Leo Frankowski
      • Seize the Night (1998) - Dean Koontz
      • Timeline (1999) - Michael Crichton
      • Timeshare: A Time for War (1999) - Joshua Dann
      • Larry Niven (1999) - Larry Niven
      • Timeless Wish (1999) Barbara Sheridan
      • 1632 (2000) - Eric Flint
      • Father Ernetti's Chronovisor: The Creation and Disappearance of the World's First Time Machine (2000) - Peter Krassa
      • Mendoza of Hollywood, a Novel of the Company (2000) - Kage Baker
      • Sky Coyote, a Novel of the Company (2000) - Kage Baker
      • Enchantment (2000) - Orson Scott Card
      • The Boozygods (2000) - Mark Von Zierenberg
      • Out of Time (2000) - Lynn Abbey
      • A Portrait in Time (2001) - Barbara Donlon Bradley
      • A Separate Season (2001) - Paul D. Ellner
      • What Lies Behind You (2001) - Robert Furlani
      • Timeshift (2001) - Phillip Ellis Jackson
      • The Time Traveller (2001) - Joseph W. Miles (short story)
      • (More Time Travel book titles requested. E-mail timetravel @ sacomm.com NOTE: Date of first publication MUST be included in your e-mail.)
      A good list of Children's time travel fiction can be found here, at this link.
      An excellent essay on time travel literature through history can be found at this link.

      =To Top=    =To Websites=      =To Films=

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      SOME TIME TRAVEL FILMS

      • Berkeley Square (1933)
      • Turn Back the Clock (1933)
      • Time Flies (1944) - A minor music hall star uses a professor's time machine to go back to the days of Queen Elizabeth I.
        That Lady in Ermine (1948) - Circa 1861, the ruling countess of an Italian principality is at a loss when invaded by a Hungarian army. Her lookalike ancestress, who saved a similar situation 300 years before, comes to life from a portrait to help her descendant.
      • Portrait of Jennie (1948) - (Link) A struggling artist  meets an enchanting young girl in the park who seems to be from a previous life. On each subsequent meeting, she is older and more beautiful. He falls in love with her and decides he must paint her portrait. He attempts to piece together the facts which led to her untimely death, and tries to keep it from happening again.
      • I'll Never Forget You (1951)  - A nuclear scientist is hit by lightning and is sent back in time 150 years. Remake of 1933's "Berkeley Square"
      • Beyond the Time Barrier (1959)  A 1950s jet pilot breaks the time barrier and flies into World War III America, which is populated with mutants and plagued with a deadly virus.
      • The Mystery of the Crystal Orb *** - (Link)The great science fiction writer H.G. Wells mastered the time travel narrative in his illustrious career. THE MYSTERY OF THE CRYSTAL ORB is one of his best stories of the ever-fascinating concept of travelling through time. A mystical mystery, this film version stars Tom Ward, Katy Carmichael, Eve Best, and Nicholas Rowe.
      • The Yesterday Machine (1963)
      • The Time Travellers (1964) - A time travel experiment that was supposed to produce a window into time turns out to be a portal instead. One of the experimenters steps through into a not-too-distant-future world that has been destroyed by nuclear war. Some of the others follow, but then the portal phases out and they can't get back. Things just get worse after that.
      • Daleks': Invasion Earth 2150 A.D. (1966) - Doctor Who spinoff movie, featuring a "Doctor" not in the original series.
      • Dimension 5 (1966) - An American intelligence agent, aided by a Chinese-American female agent, uses a time-travel belt to thwart Chinese operatives who are attempting to import to Los Angeles the materials to make an atomic bomb.
      • It's About Time (1966) - Two astronauts, after breaking the speed of light, accidently travel back in time to prehistoric Earth. Unable to return, they make friends with the "natives".
      • Journey to the Center of Time (1967) - (Link)
      • Planet of the Apes (1968) ***  - Thought by many to be a "classic", this 60's era film does have much going for it. It has a great actor in Charlton Heston, some good lines, and a nice plot twist or two (no give-aways here!) It is rather dated, however, and the it appears to be a rather typical 60's morality play. If you hate preachy 60's morality plays, see it anyway, because it's probably the highest form of that genre.
      • Beneath the Planet of the Apes (1970)
      • Time Slip (1970) - Simon and Liz were teenage siblings who fell into a time hole and found themselves trapped in  various periods of the 20th century, where they encounter all sorts of adventures. Many of them involve the nefarious Commander Traynor, who is also traveling in time.
      • Escape from the Planet of the Apes (1971)
      • The Amazing Mr. Blunden (1972) After their mother is hired as the caretaker of a Victorian mansion, a pair of youngsters see a ghost. They are transported back in time to the turn of the 20th century, where they come to the aid of two children who are about to be murdered.
      • Between Time and Timbuktu (1972) - (Link) A made-for-tv film based on several short stories of Kurt Vonnegut, and pieced together in a screenplay for a public television broadcast on March 13, 1972.
      • Slaughterhouse Five (1972)  ***  -  This well-acted film features the character Billie Pilgrim, who survives the bombing of Dresden in a POW camp, then returns home, where he becomes "unstuck in time", living in the present, in the future, and in the past, simultaneously. A very disjointed but interesting film, though the "future" scenes, in which he becomes an exhibit in a zoo in a distant galaxy, is a bit much. However, it's based on Kurt Vonnegut's nightmarish novel, after all, so one must expect the Bizarre.
      • The Time Travelers (1976) - Two researchers travel back in time, trying to rescue a cure for a modern-day epidemic, but their plans go astray when their time travel brings them to Chicago not a week but a single day before the Great Chicago Fire.  Based on "Time Tunnel" by Charles W. Byrd (1958). Thanks to Mr. Byrd for telling me about this film.
      • The Fantastic Journey (1977) A plane makes the mistake of flying through the Bermuda Triangle. It crash-lands on a mysterious island, and the survivors discover that different parts of the island exist in different realities.
      • Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (1978)
      • Two Worlds of Jennie Logan (1978) ***  - A bored housewife open to the idea of time travel finds herself wearing an antique dress, and travelling 78 years into the past. There she meets a man who is everything her husband is not, and falls in love. But can she find true love there? Can she save her new lover from a terrible fate as the new century chimes in? Starring Lindsay Wagner and co-starring future Dallas star Linda Gray, this film is well-acted and is worth seeing.
      • Time After Time (1979) ** A young H. G. Wells, played by Malcolm McDowell, follows Jack the Ripper through time into San Francisco in 1979. He falls in love with a bank teller, played by Mary Steenbergen, and he tries to avoid her death at the hands of the Ripper. The story is good, and the clothes are sooo 70s!
      • The Final Countdown (1980) ***  An aircraft carrier is sent back to the Pacific Ocean just before Pearl Harbor is attacked in 1941. Once they realize what's happened, they have a dilemma: Do they have a duty to try to change history and win the war right then and there? Or should they allow history to remain as it is? An interesting moral discussion and the special effects are good. (Starring Kirk Douglas and Martin Sheen).
      • The Girl, The Gold Watch, and Everything (1980) - Made-for-TV movie in which a man inherits a watch that stops time which he uses to fights bad guys before the time limit of one minute is up.
      • Metal Mickey (1980) - Metal Mickey was a robot built by young Ken to do chores around the house. Ken was the youngest child of an (almost) typical British family. Metal Mickey was had a number of magic powers, which enabled it to battle aliens, travel through time, survive extreme temperatures, and other outlandish situations.
      • Somewhere In Time (1980) ****  In a turn of the century hotel, an aspiring actor (Christopher Reeve) wills himself back in time to 1910 in the very same hotel after falling in love with the picture of an actress, played by Jane Seymour, who once stayed there as a guest and performed in the hotel's theatre. Richard Matheson's novel, Bid Time Return, inspired this movie. (This is one of my favorite films!) Very well filmed movie is lush and beautifully acted.
      • Time Bandits (1980) Six dwarves and a British schoolboy use time portals to travel through Earth's history.
      • Warp Speed (1981) - An astronaut takes a flight and comes back to Earth at a slight time shift, where everybody seems to be moving very slowly except him.
      • Timerider (1982) A motorcycle and its rider is thrust back in time to the old west.
      • Prisoners of the Lost Universe (1983) - (Link) Low-budget made-for-TV film about Modern people cross a gateway to anotherprimative world where humans and non-humans live in a primitive time where
        they fight with swords.
      • The Cold Room (1984) A young woman visiting East Berlin is transported back in time to World War II when she enters a strange room behind her hotel room's wall.
      • The Philadelphia Experiment (1984) *** - (Link) In 1943, a battleship in Philadelphia is part of an experiment trying to make it invisible to radar. Instead, it's sent into a time vortex, where many men are hurt or killed. Two men jump overboard, and find themselves flung ahead in time to Nevada in 1984, where further experiments are taking place. The shock of them adapting to modern life is enjoyable to watch. Just a note: this film is supposedly based upon a real event.
      • The Terminator (1984) ***
      • Back to the Future Parts I through III (1985, 1989, 1990) **** (all)  In this timetravel classic, Michael J. Fox plays Marty McFly, whose friend Doc Brown (Christopher Lloyd) builds a time machine from a modified DeLorean.  The films explore time travel paradoxes in great detail, and are the best of the genre. In part one, McFly accidentally goes back in time and meets his parents in 1955. By changing the past, he endangers his own future, so he must arrange for his parents to meet and fall in love. Part two occurs in 2015, and McFly has to save his kids and his girlfriend - who tagged along for the ride - gets a look at what's in store for her. Part three finds McFly and Doc in the Old West. They must prevent Doc Brown's death at the hands of "Mad Dog" Bufford Tannen. All three commend themselves to the time travel enthusiast for different reasons. Those looking for nostalgia can't help but love part one's sunny '50s view of Americana. Part two is for the physicist, who will enjoy the many twists and turns of time traveling from 2015 to 1985 and back again. Part three is good fun in the wild, wild west.  (Just a note, I've seen Part One at least 25 times!)
      • Trancers (1985)
      • Biggles (1986) *** - (Link) Jim Ferguson- who lives in New York in the 1980s- is suddenly transported back to World War I to help his "time twin", "Biggles", who is in danger. Whenever either of them is in danger, they are transported to help one another. There are some problems with the film: with paradox, with character reactions to being shifted in time (i.e. they aren't very surprised by it), with the "secret weapon" and its unexplained origin, and even with the age of one character (A WWI officer would have been well over 90 in 1985, yet he still appears to be in his 60s!), but these don't detract from this interesting, well-filmed and at times very funny film. (What Ferguson and Biggles bring back to 1917 will amaze you!)
      • Peggy Sue Got Married (1986) ***  I wrote a review of this film here a few years ago that was very harsh. But having seen this film again recently (2/2002) I feel I should give it a second chance- and two more "stars" than my original "one star" rating. Kathleen Turner plays the teen-aged "Peggy Sue", who goes back to 1960 and inhabits her own body. What follows are her strong, emotional reactions to seeing her parents, sister, friends and long-dead grandparents again. Yes, the plot is silly. Yes, the means to restore her to the present day is contrived, but it's often clever and funny (like when she dates the school's "beatnik" or confides in the school physics nerd.) What's interesting is that while she's in the past, every attempt to change history by not marrying her philandering husband (Nicholas Cage) ends up with her back where she was in the present. She discovers that her love for him was stronger than she thought it was, and it transcended time itself. It's no "Back to the Future," but it takes another wistful look at a long-gone era, and makes us all want to go back to high school again, even if it's to the 1980s to see this in the theater for the first time.
      • Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986) *** The crew of the Enterprise use a captured Klingon spaceship to go back in time to 1986 San Francisco to save the earth's whales, since this is crucial to saving 24th century Earth. The funniest, and most say the best, of the Star Trek movies.
      • Timestalkers (1987) *** -(Link) A time-travelling woman from the 26th century convinces a modern-day college professor to help her track down her scientist father's evil associate- who's fled back to the 1800s. This has one of the neatest time travel gimmicks I've ever seen used in a TT film: The evil associate wants to get into a military facility. But it's too heavily guarded. So, he goes up on a hill, overlooking the facility. Then, he goes back in time to the 1920s- BEFORE the facility is built. Then, he walks down the hill to where the facility WILL BE built in the future. Then, he goes ahead again to the present day. Brilliant!
      • The Navigator: A Mediaeval Odyssey (1988) *** In this magical film, 14th century European villagers dig a hole to the other side of the earth to escape the coming plague - and to explain a young boy's visions of the 20th century. The villagers reach the modern world - a 20th century city- but are unable to find anything but violence and confusion. The interaction between the characters and modern life is enchanting and believable, and you'll be rooting for the characters.
      • Millennium (1989)** A future time-travelling society infiltrates the past to take bodies of those who are about to die on plane crashes. Stars Kris Kristofferson. The best parts take place in the "present", and the somewhat lame explanation of paradoxes (and the resulting "time quakes") mar the film, slightly. Also- a hokey ending. ("Goof": Watch her hair when she enters the bar, then when inside. She got quite a perm in that doorway!!)
      • Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure (1989)*** Two teenagers from California travel through time in a phone booth to get ready for their history report, which is very important for them to pass. They end up in a future world where their (yet to be unwritten) music is the basis of all of society- a frightening thought, once you hear the music and the platitudes that go along with it! For their history report, they bring back personalities like Socrates, Abraham Lincoln, Joan of Arc, Sigmund Freud and Napoleon. (Forget continuity, forget plausibility, just enjoy it!) Look for George Carlin playing their mentor. The film explores paradoxes in a funny way (watch the scenes where they sneak around the police station- and try to follow it!)
      • Warlock (1989)  - A warlock flees from the 16th to the 20th century, with a witch-hunter in hot pursuit.
      • Time Barbarians (1990) - A medieval warrior chases a bad guy to modern day Los Angeles to avenge the death of his wife.
      • Beastmaster 2: Through the Portal of Time (1991)
      • Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey (1991) * Not as good as the first film, though this sequel features a hillarious series of contests with "Death". ("Twister", anyone?)
      • The Spirit of '76 (1991)  Twenty-Second Century time travelers, distraught with their own time, try to go back to 1776 to see what went wrong in their world. Instead, they end up on 1976!
        Terminator 2: Judgment Day  (1991)  ***- The second Terminator movie. Skynet, the 21st century computer waging a losing war on humans sends a second terminator back in time to destroy the leader of the human resistance while he is still a boy. His mother is the only one who knows of the existence of Skynet's Terminators, and is in an insane asylum because of her first encounter with them. The humans send a protector back to protect the boy, John Connor, future leader of the human resistance. This film was a pioneer of many special effects, including "morphing". The story is told well, and relies on the viewer knowing a great deal about the first film. It's well worth renting.
      • Freejack (1992) ** A maniacal billionaire wants to transfer his mind into a younger body. To do this, he takes the body of a race car driver who is about to die in the past, and brings him into the future, just before his car is destroyed in a race. Look for Mick Jagger as the billionaire's security chief. Emilio Estevez is the driver.
      • The Grand Tour: Disaster in Time (1992)**** - (Link)  A widower who is about to open a small inn is greeted by strange guests who insist on renting some rooms even though the inn is still under construction. He accepts, but begins to suspect that something about them isn't quite right. Yup, they're time travellers, and what he finds out shocks him. He must do something to redeem himself and soothe his tortured conscience (I don't want to give ANYTHING away on this one, because this is a high quality film, despite an obvious paradox.)
      • Time Runner (1992)
      • Waxwork 2: Lost in Time (1992)
      • Army of Darkness (1993) -   A modern-day man travels back to medieval time to fight an army of the dead.
      • The Philadelphia Experiment II (1993) ***  - (Link) Nine years after the events of the first film, it turns out that the experiment has been reinitiated. Using the time-traveling capabilities of the experiment, a scientist sends a Stealth Bomber back to Nazi Germany, where his father- also a scientist- uses it to win the war for Germany. One of the protagonists of the first film, living in 1993, is thrust into a parallel universe caused by the change in history. Interesting exploration of parallel universes and paradox- especially the "grandfather/father paradox". Though the Nazi version of America is somewhat cartoonish and stereotypical, and there's a flaw or two regarding paradoxes, it's a well-filmed story.
      • Time Runner (1993)
      • 12:01 (1993) ***  An experiment to create a "supercollider" to power electric generators backfires, creating a "time bounce" at the point the experiment fires, causing the entire day to repeat itself over and over again. An employee of the plant that designed the device remembers the day (and knows that it's repeating) because he received an electric shock at the precise time the device fired. Re-living each day on his job at the plant, he must stop the device from firing - and prevent a murder.
      • APEX (1994) **  In an obvious steal from the "Terminator" movies, in 2073, a time travel lab inadvertently loses control of an experiment that goes to a desert in 1973. An APEX (Advanded Prototype EXtermination unit - think "Blade Runner") is sent back in time to "sterilize" the area, but one of the scientists goes back with it when he notices a young child caught in its sights. This causes a "time paradox", and he's sucked back into an alternate future- a world in which the clones of the original robot, who stayed in the past with the command to "sterlize" the area of people, are still programmed to kill all living things. The "paradox" plot has massive holes, such as "Who built the time travel lab in the future created by the paradox?", and "How are the same people together in this timeline?" You'll find yourself focused more on the unnecessary "R-rated" language than the plot, what there is of it.
      • Star Trek: Generations (1994) ** A mad scientist-type creates a "ribbon of time", in which both captains of the Enterprise (Kirk/Picard, Shatner/Stewart) must work together. The paradoxical sommersault of a plot devise used to bring the two captains together is a masterpiece of scriptwriting. Yet, it makes no sense at all.
      • Time Chasers (1994) - An inventor comes up with a time machine, but must  prevent its abuse at the hands of an evil CEO.
      • Timecop (1994) **** Jean Claude Van Damme plays a cop who's assigned to a special unit set up to protect Time Travel from being misused. Of course he's too late, and he must go back in time to stop a corrupt Senator from manipulating the past for his own power. This film explores the paradox problem well. Look for some- but not much- of Van Damme's kickboxing skills! The film inspired the short-running CBS TV show in the fall of 1997 which was fairly well done.
      • The Drivetime (1995)
      • A Kid in King Arthur's Court  (1995)
      • The Langoliers (1995) * - Made-for-TV time travel adventure with an ensemble cast. Everyone who's read the Stephen King novel has told me to read it instead of renting this four-hour psychodrama. Ten passengers on an airplane are caught in a "time rift" and must discover what's going on before it's too late, and they are eaten by 1995-vintage computer-generated Pac-Man-like beings. At points in this VERY long film, one wishes that the entire cast would die, especially the one played by Bronson Pinchot, who gave an over-the-top performance that was not necessary. The film could  be cut by 60 minutes or more, doing little damage to the  plot. However, the concept of time here was handled cleverly.
      • Timemaster (1995)
      • Twelve Monkeys (1995) ***  Bruce Willis plays a man who lives in a world that has been ravaged by disease brought on by biological terrorism. Following leads discovered by a ruling caste of doctors, he is sent back to 1996 to prevent the "Army of the 12 Monkeys" from carrying out their anti-human plot. The film is a perfect example of circular logic, i.e., all of the "clues" were/are sent by the person going back in time to follow-up on the clues! Besides this, the film is well-acted (see Brad Pitt as a convincing psychotic!) I'll have to see it again, because it's a bit confusing, but the ending is good.
      • Star Trek: First Contact (1996) **** The Enterprise, upon encountering a Borg vessel near earth, witnesses a pod going back in time to the 21st century, in order to prevent earthlings from developing a warp drive which will allow them to have interstellar spaceflight. They follow it, only to find the world now dominated by by the Borg. They must go back to make sure that "First contact" occurs between humanity and the first race in this quadrant. The time travel theme is well developed and plausible (within the Star Trek genre themes, as developed by the TV show.)
      • Crime Traveller (1997) - Detective Jeff Slade teams up with scientist Holly Turner, who has created a time machine that can travel back a matter of hours. Together they solve mysteries using the device.
      • Event Horizon (1997)
      • Retroactive (1997)
      • Sphere (1998)
      • Lost In Space (1998) **  Loosely based on the 1960s TV show, it was panned by the critics. It features a time travel sequence, which is crucial to the plot. The graphics are very well-done, and the acting is...adequate. There are problems with time travel in this film, however. After renting it, and watching it, ask yourself these questions: "Isn't he STILL infected with the bug, even after they went back in time? Aren't they STILL in danger?" Hmmm. "Still in Danger, Danger, Will Robinson!" (If I'm wrong, please tell me.)
      • Pleasantville (1998) - (Link) - Two kids living in 1998 is transported back to the  Leave it to Beaver world of the 1950's by being "zapped" into a 50s TV show. Predictably, those folks back there are living "boring", colorless lives, until they show them how to "lighten up". From all accounts, a vicious attack on what Hollywood considered "uptight" morality.
      • Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999) ***  - This sequel to the first "Austin Powers" movie employs time travel as a devise to great effect, as Austin Powers must go back in time to regain his "mojo" (his sexual powers), stolen by Dr. Evil. Don't look for continuity here, just laugh. Dr. Evil steals the show here with his hillarious send ups of modern culture and his strained relationship with his son and "mini me". It's not an excellent film, but go just to see Dr. Evil.
      • Blackadder: Back and Forth (1999) - To fool their friends on Millenium Eve, Blackadder and Baldrick build a bogus time machine and charge people to bring back artifacts (which Blackadder already owns). Trouble is, the time machine actually works!
      • Blast from the Past (1999) - Brendan Fraser plays a naive man who comes out into the world after  being in a nuclear fallout shelter for 35 years. Sets up numerous funny lines and situations.
      • Carnivale (1999) - Animated tale by former Tim Burton art director Deane Taylor has many of Burton's dark themes. Children playing by the sea shore are lured into a time travel portal where they are taken to an amusement park. There they are having loads of fun until they discover that if they don't escape immediately, they will be forever trapped there as inanimate objects.
      • The Love Letter (1999) - (Link) - A made-for-TV movie about a contemporary man who buys an antique desk and finds that he can correspond with a woman from the 1860's.  Based on a beautiful and creative short story by Jack Finney.
      • Time Shifters (1999) *** - (Link) - Made-for-TV movie about a reporter who stumbles across photos of various disasters - including the Hindenburg and the Titanic - all of which feature a mysterious stranger in the background. His investigation leads him to the Time Shifters, a group of thrill-seekers who travel back in time to witness similar calamities throughout history. Merrick desperately tries to avert future disasters - a plane crash, a subway crash, a bomb in an athletic complex - and protect the lives of his son and ex-wife.  A well-acted film with a good plot.
      • All Over Again (2000) - A 17-year old boy meets up with his 67-year old self, who tries to warn him of the things that took him down the wrong path in life.
      • Frequency (2000) ****- (Link) - An excellent film in which a man connects with his long-dead father who is using his ham radio thirty years ago. An accidental cross-time radio link connects father and son, who are embroiled in an adventure when the son tries to save his father's life. This is a supurb film which surprisingly works as well as a mystery film as it does as a time travel film. The acting is top-notch by Dennis Quaid as the father and James Caviezel as the son. Aging Boomers will enjoy visiting 1969 again, and younger viewers will enjoy the "tips" sent back to that era from the man's son in the present. One could quibble with some of the time travel elements (such as burning desks, etc) but I won't, because the film exceeds any minor flaws in physics with its emotional impact. Read my glowing review of this incredible film on http://www.imdb.com/ .
      • For All Time (2000) **** - (Link- Loosely based on the classic Twilight Zone episode "A Stop At Willoughby," this intelligent and heartwarming CBS made-for-TV movie stars Mark Harmon and Mary McDonnell as two people from different centuries who fall in love. This film features a beautifully-filmed, family-friendly and romantic plot.
      • Happy Accidents (2000)  (Link) Sam Deed "backtravels" from the year 2470 to save Ruby of 1999's New York. The whole story reinforces time-loop, reoccurring events as Sam's actions help create problem he came to fix. Very interesting effects of time-travel, Sam experiences the "Drag," a residual effect of backtravellers where they become transfixed and time is experienced backwards. Co-starring Marisa Tomei.
      • Black Knight (2001) (Link) - Martin Lawrence plays Jamal, an employee in Medieval World amusement park. After sustaining a blow to the head, he awakens to find himself in 14th century England
      • Forever (2001) - As the long-distant past beckons to a modern Australian woman, drawing her into a reluctant  journey of self-discovery crossing 700 years and two continents, a story emerges, piece by  piece, of trust, love, revenge, forgiveness, hope and redemption told through choices made and fates embraced, as she faces a second chance that could change her destiny, and those around her - forever.
      • Just Visiting (2001) -  A medieval knight and his vassal are transported through time to modern Chicago, where he meets his distant descendant (Christina Applegate), a dead-ringer for the medieval woman he loved.
      • Kate and Leopold (2001)  -  Kate McKay (Meg Ryan) is a modern-day executive, a 21st century woman driven to succeed in the corporate world. Leopold (Hugh Jackman), the Third Duke of Albany, is a charming bachelor in the 19th century. Each has grown weary of waiting for love. But when a dramatic twist of fate lands Leopold in present-day New York, they must confront the prospect of a love affair 100 years in the making.
      • Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001) - (Link) - a secret society called the Illuminati is seeking an ancient talisman that gives its possessor the ability to control time. However, they need a certain clock/key to help them in their search, and they have to find the talisman in one week or wait until the next planetary alignment to find it again. Lara happens to find that key hidden in a wall of her mansion.
      • Mark Twain's Greatest Adventure: "It's a Matter of Time" (2001) - (Link) - Mark Twain on the way home from one of his last speaking tours in 1906, is jostled on a train by 2 men, one in pursuit of the other, Twain picks up a newspaper dated 2001. He follows them and it turns out he is following H.G. Wells, who, in turn, is on a time travel chase of Dr. Noah, a brilliant Scientist who intends to destroy the world. Through time travel, Wells and Twain team up with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and a Young Jules Verne and wind up in 2001.
      • Minute Men (2001?) - Similar to "Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure" and "Ghostbusters," "Minute Men" revolves around three geeks who create a time machine that can only go back in time 10 minutes. Forming a company called "Minute Men," the geeks try to capitalize on the invention by using it to help people solve their problems.
      • "Power Rangers: Time Force" (2001)  When a crimelord from the year 3000 finds that times are too tough, he goes back in time to 2001. And the Power Rangers of year 3000 come back to battle him. Things only get crazier when the bad guy masters time travel, allowing him to pop up wherever he wants in the timestream.
      • Clockstoppers (2002) (Link)  -  A (Summer, 2002 release date) teenager accidentally activates a machine that enables him to make time stand still. Directed by Star Trek: The Next Generation's Jonathan Frakes (Riker). 
      • Minority Report (2002) (Link ) - (June 28, 2002 release date) Because of future technology they have somehow obtained, a police division arrests people before they commit crimes. But the tables are turned when one cop (Tom Cruise) finds himself arrested for a future crime. He must find out what he is accused of doing, and stop it. The film is based upon a Philip K. Dick story, and is directed by Steven Spielberg. Link is to the "Dreamworks fan site". (Also info on Internet Movie Data Base)
      • The Time Machine (2002) - (Link) - Scientist and inventor Alexander Hartdegen is determined to prove that time travel is possible, driven by a personal to want to change the past. Testing his theories with his time machine, he is hurtled to 2030, then 800,000 years into the future. This is a beautifully filmed and well-told story that remind us what good science fiction is supposed to look like. The film's view of 1899 is charming and its 2030 is not over the top.. Based on the classic science fiction novel by H.G. Wells, "The Time Machine," and directed by Wells' great-grandson, Simon Wells. This film was originally scheduled for a Christmas, 2001 release date. After the 9/11 attacks, the film was re-edited to take out a scene showing New York City being destroyed by an asteroid.

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