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The Time Machine [DVD] [2002]
 
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The Time Machine [DVD] [2002]

Guy Pearce , Yancey Arias , Simon Wells    Parental Guidance   DVD
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (51 customer reviews)
Price: £3.68 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Product details

  • Actors: Guy Pearce, Yancey Arias, Mark Addy, Phyllida Law, Sienna Guillory
  • Directors: Simon Wells
  • Writers: John Logan, David Duncan, H.G. Wells
  • Producers: Arnold Leibovit, David V. Lester, David Valdes, John Logan
  • Format: PAL
  • Language English
  • Subtitles: Arabic, Dutch, English, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 1.77:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: PG
  • Studio: Warner Home Video
  • DVD Release Date: 27 May 2002
  • Run Time: 96 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (51 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B000062V97
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 15,388 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review

Reinterpreting HG Wells' The Time Machine, one of the most well-loved science fiction classics both as a book and in its 1960 film incarnation, was always going to risk critical condemnation. Yet despite all the problems experienced in making the film (reshoots, September 11 comparison fears, Guy Pearce breaking a rib), this new Time Machine is still great fun. Critics and naysayers may point at the obvious timeline gaffes, the lazy groundlaying for a sequel, or even the radical departure from Wells' scenario, but the film is still gorgeous to look at and imbued with a sense of carefree adventure. Pearce plays Professor Hartdegen with just the right touch of distraction turning into passionate resolve. The secondary cast all manage to make something of their brief on-screen appearances, too, notably Mark Addy as faithful friend Philby, Samantha Mumba as Morlock babe Mara and Jeremy Irons making more of his shadowy baddie than might be thought likely. The film's chief accomplishment is that it in no way supersedes the George Pal version. If anything, it enriches the spirit of fun it has happily inherited.

On the DVD: The Time Machine 2002 incarnation has picture (2.35:1) and sound (Dolby 5.1) that are as pristine as you'd expect from so recent a digital FX extravaganza. In the extras department there's plenty to keep you busy: a gallery of production drawings, an action sequence animatic, three trailers, four mini-documentaries on stunts, FX, Morlocks and building the Time Machine. The only thing missing is anything acknowledging the 1960 version or the link with director Simon Wells (the author's great-grandson). Wells joins editor Wayne Wahrman for one commentary track dealing with the broad strokes of conceptualisation and changes along the way. Commentary two is from the Designer, FX Supervisor and Producer, so is naturally more technically focused. --Paul Tonks

Product Description

Dreamworks, Region, 2 2002 96 mins

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
21 of 22 people found the following review helpful
By Kurt Messick HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:DVD
I must confess that I march to a different drummer when it comes to this film. I enjoyed it for the most part, and find it very clever in many aspects. The major drawback comes from the plot - it is far too simplistic for the elaborate care that went into both the visual aspect of the film as well as the nice touches at almost every turn.

The plot is rather simple - Alexander Hartdegen, a mechanical physics professor in turn-of-the-century New York (turn of the nineteenth-into-the-twentieth century, that is), has his head in his equations, apart from one thing, his love for Emma. When she is killed in a botched mugging (yes, New York at that time even had muggings in Central Park), Hartdegen drops everything to invent the time machine he'd theorised, in order to prevent Emma's death. He soon makes the discovery that it isn't possible to undo the past (at least not that aspect of the past), but becomes obsessed with finding the reason why. He speculates this is more likely to be answered in the future than in the past or present, and thus goes forward in time. He makes a few stops along the way before arriving at a far-distant future (nearly a million years in the future), in which the human race has evolved into two distinct species - one on the surface, and one below the earth.

So far, so good - departure from H.G. Wells' original classic (a great piece of literature) and from the earlier film, but not beyond the pale. The effects here are truly stunning in many respects - the time machine itself is a marvel (the DVD has a feature on the making of the machine), and the time transformation scenes are very inspiring, up to and including the zoom-away shot from the machine into the air all the way to the city on the moon. The Eloi city along the river is also a remarkable scene. The movie rightly won awards, including the Academy Award, for these effects. Unfortunately, effects do not a movie make. This is where the plot failure comes into play.

Hartdegen seems to give up far too early in trying to change the past, and his relationships (such as we get to see them) in the future are very stilted. Jeremy Irons (himself an Academy Award winner) has precious little screen time, to deliver what is perhaps the most anticlimactic resolutions I've seen in a long time. The overarching question should be 'why?', but seems to transformed into 'what if?' in an unclear way (the deleted introductory scene, available on the DVD, helps to more firmly establish the question, but, alas, it was deleted). Hartdegen remains in the future (like Wells' and the earlier film's scientists, albeit in a different way), perhaps to help transform the future, but we'll never know (a sequel is not likely).

Despite the thin plot, what I found most enjoyable (apart from the special effects) were the clever touches here and there, far too numerous to mention. When Hartdegen arrives in 2030 (prompted by an advertisement proclaiming 'the future is now'), he encounters a user-friendly library computer (personified by Orlando Bloom) with a real sense of humour and humanity. When Hartdegen asks about time travel, the library computer even incorporates Star Trek gestures and sound effects into its discussion (as well as the yet-unwritten musical version of 'The Time Machine', by Andrew Lloyd Weber). One woman in the distant future speaks English (now called the stone language, for the stone engravings that remain from store fronts and the like), but speaks without accent (strange enough, but even stranger that New Yorker Hartdegen sounds more British, as does the Morlock leader Jeremy Irons).

Indeed, there are so many little pieces here is seems that the writers spent more time trying to incorporate bits of cleverness throughout the script than making sure the script as a whole had thorough soundness.

Another piece I really liked was the music. The sombre brass tones, the triumphant orchestral arrangements, the folk/modern synthesis for the Eloi, and the dramatic scoring really enhanced this film beyond measure. The DVD has bits of the score that replay on a loop sequence during menu screens, and I've sometimes left these on to hear the pieces over and over again.

The DVD has one of the better menu sequence set-ups I've seen, simulating the machine effects in visuals and sound, as well as incorporating score elements and special effects. DVD extras include the delete scene, commentaries by many of the crew, several pieces on the special effects (including one on the time machine itself),

This is a fairly good film, despite its flaws. Overall I would award it three-and-a-half stars, but will round up to four in honour of the effects, the music, and clever pieces.

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
By J. Glen VINE™ VOICE
Format:DVD
This is a most enjoyable remake of H G Wells classic story. His great-grandson has done his story justice in this in this well acted, well filmed story.

The action bowls merrily along and Guy Pearce makes a good job of portraying the hero Alexander and an intelligent script, explaining the reason why he wished to travel in time, enhances the story. It would have been easy to make this film a load of hokum but that trap has been neatly avoided.

Jeremy Irons role as the Uber Morlock whilst not being that big is excellently played, he portrays intelligent menace with great elan and is totally convincing. Where the film falls down slightly is in not explaining enough about why the Morlocks live as they do. They are shown carrying out various tasks in their underground home but we never find out what these all mean, the most passing of references would have done this and filled out their place in the storyline.

That small quibble apart this is a film well worth seeing and I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

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24 of 29 people found the following review helpful
By Steve
Format:DVD
What a dissapointment. I was expecting it to be so and I was sadly right.
Once again, a classic tale has been spoilt by the need to satisfy the mass American market. Instead of using modern effects to produce a film closer to the original story, effects are used to jazz it up into something quite different.
The 1960 version at least maintained names and locations but not even these are acceptable to mass America, who appear to insist on making everything their own.
The Eloi are now cliffhanging, bi-lingual tribes people (from New York) with a grasp of their own destiny and welfare and a well defined, caring society. Why could we have not had the simple, diminuative, responsibility free, childlike people of the book? This would have been almost impossible to do in 1960, but absolutely acheivable today. The Morlocks are now a complex, multi-layered society employing hunting specialists instead of the hideous, subterranean Eloi farmers, who are themselves victims of their own subterranean culture. H.G. Wells created both peoples for a specific purpose - to show the extreme diversity of Earths inhabitants. This key theme was carelessly discarded. Day-time is as unsafe as night now and the film has hunt scenes that could have been lifted directly from Planet of the Apes. As for the fiancee rescue attempts - what on earth were they thinking of? It verged on comedy.
Don't get me wrong, this is a good film in it's own right. It goes at a fair pace, has its tensions and added violence that all films must have now. But so much of this film is not part of the original story that it should have had the last vestiges of the H.G. Wells story removed and been made as an original film - oh! of course they did that - they have made Planet Of The Apes.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
The best time travel machine film out there!!!
The time machine is such a great film with a great concept. I am a huge sci-fi fan. And I Love films, and if your looking for a good time travel film this is the one.
Published 28 days ago by Master Z. J. Fowler
An exciting, science fiction adventure
Many of the reviewers he will criticise this film for being untrue to both the book and the cheesy original film, however the brilliant thing about this absorbing, action packed... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Sam
The Time Machine
Alot of people have told me that this version of the H.G.Wells classic isn't all that good.But I have seen it now and my opinion is,it's a great film,and version of the old... Read more
Published 3 months ago by woodpigeon
Not a bad remake but enjoyable to watch
Not a bad remake but enjoyable to watch, still wont replace the original version as that is a true classic. But its a good remake, could've done worse. Thankfully not.
Published 4 months ago by Mr. G. Simpson
the time machine
dvd inpefect condtion and came in 3 days of dispatched will buy from this person sagin very fast sevice im am very happy hope to more buying soon
Published 6 months ago by mickey
Fabulous ,,, considering :
This film had a tough ride to make it to the screen. Director problems and then editing decisions left this film barely recognisable from the original storyboarding. Read more
Published 8 months ago by JrF
The Time Machine
If your bored :Cable : Sky, same old repeats. The Time Machine.Carnt go wrong. Don't forget pizza plus a drink with your movie :)P
Published 14 months ago by lazer
Ignore all the negatives & snobbery of other reviews
I am appalled at the number of low marks given for this movie on this site.

I first saw the 1960's Rod Taylor Version of HG WELLS' story when I was about 11 on TV way... Read more
Published 14 months ago by goldenbrown
Guy should have stayed in neighbours
Not a tad on the orginal, i mean why would you cast a guy who played a bit part in neighbours (guy pierce) and the sixth spice girl sam mumba and her entire family playing bit... Read more
Published 18 months ago by lmp
honest comment
Although I prefer the original version this one wasn't to bad it just lacked a little depth like most films of today focusing more on the action and less on the story
Published 21 months ago by daniel haddlesey
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