The most memorable time travel movies | Yardbarker

2022-07-29 20:25:46 By : Mr. Sky Zeng

There are fun travel movies, often involving road trips. Bob Hope and Bing Crosby did it over and over. Sometimes, though, the travel isn’t across the globe, or even across space. They are across time. Time travel has been an oft-used trope of science fiction and other fantastical genres for years. Some of the biggest movies of all time involve time travel, but they aren’t the only memorable ones. These are the most memorable time travel films. If you don’t have time to read them now, well, maybe you need a time machine of your own.

The quintessential time travel movie. One of the biggest hits of all time. The progenitor of two very good sequels. (Yes, we like the third movie.) Marty McFly goes back in time in a DeLorean thanks to his friend Doc Brown and ends up intertwined in the life of his eventual parents back in 1955. Plus, all that Huey Lewis!

Another film that spawned a trilogy. This comedy is on the sillier side. Bill and Ted are dimwitted high school students who use their time machine to collect important historical figures so they can avoid failing. One of the breakthrough roles for Keanu Reeves, it’s indeed most excellent.

This time around, we had to go with a sequel in a series. The Terminator is a good movie, but a bleak horror film. Terminator 2 got a bigger budget and a much larger scope. It’s an epic ‘90s action film, the one that really made this a franchise with legs. It also helped take Arnold Schwarzenegger’s career to the next level.

Based on a French short film, Terry Gilliam made time travel trippy and grim. In the future, humanity has almost entirely been wiped out by a disease. Bruce Willis is sent back in time in order to figure out the cause of the disease, but he’s sent to the wrong time and ends up in a mental hospital. That just makes his quest that much harder.

After spending two movies dealing with evil spirits in a cabin in the woods, Ash finds himself traveled back to medieval times, but that doesn’t give him a break from all the ghouls that torment him. Army of Darkness is a slapstick horror comedy from Sam Raimi and star Bruce Campbell, but that works better than you might think. Hail to the king, baby.

Christopher Nolan loves to mess with time and create notable imagery. Interstellar was daunting even to people who watched Inception, as much for its lengthy run time as its heady plot. That being said, it delved headlong into a scientific notion of time travel, and the cast is also quite impressive. Time has been kind to the reputation of Interstellar.

In a way, Austin Powers travels through time in the first film, but that’s more due to cryogenic freezing. In the sequel, he actually travels through time. The Spy Who Shagged Me was a massive hit, and while a lot of it feels like rehashes of the first film, there was enough fresh stuff to keep the movie fun.

Mark Twain’s novel has been adapted several times, something loosely. This 1949 version is fairly faithful, and it also has quite the cast, led by Bing Crosby. With Crosby involved, they turned the film into a musical naturally.

If you like horror comedies, this under-the-radar film is one worth seeking out. A group of friends find themselves transported into a 1986 slasher film called Camp Bloodbath. The star of that film happened to be one of the character’s mother, who happened to die a few years earlier. As such, they are technically traveling through time and into a film.

Edgar Wright has done horror-movie pastiches in the past, but they were often loving comedic takes on the genre. This time, he made a straight-up horror film. A young woman in modern London travels back in time when she sleeps, but then she quickly realizes the past that she romanticized was far from ideal.

A fish-out-of-water romantic comedy, this time that fish isn’t just some fancy city folk in the country. No, he’s a duke from the 1800s, and he’s played by Hugh Jackman. You’d think that would be detrimental to Meg Ryan falling in love with him, but you’d be wrong.

Hey, the ‘80s, right? Hot Tub Time Machine is a raunchy comedy that is mostly a series of jokes about how the ‘80s were different. It’s not going to win any Oscars. However, it is called Hot Tub Time Machine, and it did spawn a sequel. It’s not a great movie, but it has a good cast and some memorable jokes.

Well, Avengers: Endgame is one of the highest-grossing movies ever, and the culmination of over a decade of films in the biggest movie series in the world. We’d call that fairly memorable. It’s hard to spoil a film that a ton of people have seen, so we’re OK with mentioning the fact that the surviving Avengers decide to use time travel to try and defeat Thanos after failing to do so initially.

What if time travel was verboten and also kind of banal? That’s the world of Looper. Joseph Gordon-Levitt plays a hitman who kills people sent back from the future by the future mob. However, someday he will have to “close his loop,” which is to say kill the future version of himself. Then, when his future self shows up — played by Bruce Willis — he manages to escape, and that really complicates things.

Source Code kind of ratchets up 12 Monkeys to a whole new level. A train has been exploded by a bomb, and Jake Gyllenhaal is sent into a digital recreation of the event to try and identify the perpetrator. He has to go into the same eight-minute stretch over and over, with things bending and shaping over time.

When they decided to reboot Star Trek, they also decided to add some time travel into the mix. This made for a time-and-space hopping story, for starters. However, it also allowed them to have Leonard Nimoy show up to play older Spock, giving this movie two different Spocks!

Men in Black was really good, but Men in Black II was lackluster. In order to add some spice back into the proceedings, time travel was added into the mix. Will Smith’s Agent J has to go back in time to try and save K from death. Then, he runs into young K, played by Josh Brolin doing a great Tommy Lee Jones impression.

Another Terry Gilliam film for the list. This is a lighter film than 12 Monkeys, though more a fantasy adventure than a comedy. It’s a story about a boy who joins up with, well, time pirates essentially. The crew of a ship travel through spacetime to steal treasures throughout the ages.

Hey, it may not be all that good, but Timecop delivers what it promises. It’s a silly Jean-Claude Van Damme action movie involving time travel. Basically, it’s what you expect from a movie called Timecop. It was a big hit, though, and it also featured a memorable end to Ron Silver’s character.

Nolan saw people’s reaction to Interstellar and thought, “Ah, clearly I made that film too straightforward.” Tenet is trippy and basically everybody is going to have trouble following it at least in fits and starts. It involves people experiencing time forwards and backwards simultaneously. John David Washington fights a backwards version of himself. Tenet is bonkers, but it’s also a ton of fun. Sometimes you just want to go along for the ride.

Chris Morgan is a sports and pop culture writer and the author of the books The Comic Galaxy of Mystery Science Theater 3000 and The Ash Heap of History. You can follow him on Twitter @ChrisXMorgan.

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