2002
Rated: PG-13 for intense sequences of action violence.
Genre: Science Fiction/ Fantasy
Directed By: Simon Wells
Running Time: 1:36
Review by: Felix Vasquez Jr.
Review Date:
DVD Features:
Additional Release Material:
Deleted Scenes
Additional Footage - 1. Animated Sequence
Audio Commentary - 1. Simon Wells - Director
Featurette - 1. CREATING THE TIME MACHINE
2. CREATING THE MORLOCKS
Interactive Features:
Scene Access
Interactive Menus
If you like this, try: Time after Time, The Time Machine, Back to the future
THE TIME MACHINE

 

Based on the novel by H.G. Wells we meet Alexander Hartdegen (Guy Pearce  Memento, L.A. Confidential), a workaholic scientist who, on one night, is mugged along with his fiancée in a park. The fiancée is killed by the mugger as Alexander witnesses it. Years later he is obsessed with creating a time machine and decides to go back to that year, despite his friends warnings, and decides to stop her death. He succeeds and goes back into time with less than successful results. He is then, accidentally taken nearly a million years into the future and comes upon a race of humans called the Eloi, a primitive race of people who live along ledges and high trees. They are overrun and occasionally attacked by another primitive underground race called the Morlocks and now Alexander must help them once and for all.
    I've always love the original novel written by H.G. Wells and really enjoyed the special - effects of this. My favorite scene includes when Alexander is knocked unconscious and basically goes through evolution of the world once again and we witness it before our very eyes. Guy Pearce is a great actor and I was interested and stood by this movie all the way to see him act.

I was very disappointed with this movie. For a movie with such a big budget and such incredible special-effects, it's hard to believe this is such a bad movie. I think Guy Pearce is a great actor and should be in roles better suited for him rather than starring in low-level cheesy roles such at this. He tries his best to work with the material he's given in this movie and seems to work hard but it doesn't pay off simply because of the story. Director Simon Wells, great grandson of H.G. Wells and director of animated films such as "Balto" and "The Prince of Egypt" completely misses the point of the novel and turns this into a cheesy science fiction flick. The movie is loud and gaudy, often giving to the audience more style than substance and presenting a paper thin adaptation. It doesn't help that this movie has giant plotholes in the story; Writers John Logan and Simon Wells give so much plotholes that it left me angry and confused. How did he know how to build the time machine? Why didn't such a smart man figure out the result of his attempt to save his wife? How did he know to travel in the future and seek the guidance of a computer? These are some of the most annoying and large plotholes that plague this movie and it told me that the filmmakers obviously cared about showing a bunch of pretty effects and never intended on giving  us a logical and plausible story in the first place. Also, the writers completely miss the point of the Eloi and Morlock society and what they symbolize as a commentary on society. The Morlocks are annoying and badly done. You can often tell they're just men in rubber suits which is sad, because make-up artist Stan Winston is a master of his craft and is at his worst in here.
    The scenes where Alexander is co-existing with the Eloi are boring and dull leaving the audience to wait for the inevitable attacks. Ex- pop star Samantha Mumba took the role of Mara, the only person who can communicate with Alexander and the two inevitably fall in love, which brings another question: Weren't you hung up about your dead wife and now you're giving lovey dubby eyes to another younger chick? Naughty, naughty. The movie goes into this ridiculous plot of having Jeremy Irons provide the role as the villain. He plays an un-evolved Morlock who rules over the others. Why? They never tell us. Why he looks the way he does, they never tell us either but he confronts Alexander and the two fight for unknown reasons. Poor Jeremy Irons looks tired and bored in this, playing his role in his sleep and giving melodramatic lines and monologues. Then, in perhaps the dumbest ending of all time, Alexander makes one last sacrifice and destroys his machine killing the Morlocks which left me yelling at the screen. Why did he destroy the machine? What did that solve? Wasn't he looking for a way to save his wife? I thought he loved her? Why leave modern times and go back to a primitive time where there's no medicine or any source of transportation? This is just a really dumb loud movie that wasn't worth my wracking my brain over.

This is a loud annoying movie with poor directing and plotholes galore. You want an easy cheap thrill, watch this movie, you want quality, turn elsewhere.