Time Travel has become such a huge part of modern American pop culture I think its only fair to talk about a little more in depth. I was recently asked: "If you could time travel into the past, where would you go?". It only took a few seconds to figure out my answer: 1969.
Why? Its obvious to me, first, I'd hit Woodstock, see all the musicians at THE original music festival. I'd see everyone. Over the next few years I'd catch the guys I missed, Dylan, the Beatles, Pink Floyd, all those guys. Essentially knock out my Classic rock favorites... everything I can only listen to on CD nowadays.
Back to the Future, H.G. Welles, Primer. Movie, Author/Prophet, Movie. 3 extremely different pop culture views of the mysteries and conundrum that is time travel. Welles did it first, in the 1800s, and for the most part, he had the grandest ideas out of the 3. If you haven't read "The Time Machine", I recommend it. Its been made into a movie 2 times. The first from 1960 is awesome. The 2nd, in the last 3 or so years, is standard mid 2000s over the top special effects with no substance. I recommend the book and the first movie.
But that brings me to my sleeper pick for awesome Time Travel Movie. PRIMER. Written, Directed, Produced and Starred in by Shane Carruth in 2004, it explores the geeky side of time travel on a small scale. I'm talking "hey, lets time travel back to this morning" small scale stuff. But it gets crazy. In it, 2 scientist guys accidentally invent a time machine. From that point on they start trying to use it to their benefit, playing the markets, making small changes to benefit themselves. It begins to destroy their trust in one another, and eventually, to destroy their essence as humans.
Primer is the type of movie that is very cerebral. It took me 3 views to really "get it", and I've since forgotten how it works. Its like Memento in the sense that its demanding for the viewer to be completely on top of it, and to some extent that can be frustrating if you are just looking for a casual film to watch. But its rewarding in a way, that I as a film maker and enthusiast appreciates to all hell.
Heres a little about Primer from Wikipedia for you to chew on:
Primer is of note for its extremely low budget, experimental plot structure, philosophical implications, and complex technical dialogue, which Carruth chose not to simplify for the sake of his audience. One reviewer said that "anybody who claims [to] fully understand what's going on in Primer after seeing it just once is either a savant or a liar." The film collected the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance in 2004 before securing a limited release in US cinemas, and has since gained a cult following.
Music to Time Travel To:
Blur - Blur (1997)
1. "Beetlebum" – 5:04
2. "Song 2" – 2:02
3. "Country Sad Ballad Man" – 4:50
4. "M.O.R." – 3:27 (Albarn/David Bowie/Coxon/Brian Eno/James/Rowntree)
5. "On Your Own" – 4:26
6. "Theme from Retro" – 3:37
7. "You're So Great" – 3:35 (Coxon)
8. "Death of a Party" – 4:33
9. "Chinese Bombs" – 1:24
10. "I'm Just a Killer for Your Love" – 4:11
11. "Look Inside America" – 3:50
12. "Strange News from Another Star" – 4:02
13. "Movin' On" – 3:44
14. "Essex Dogs" / "DanceHall" / "Interlude" (hidden track) – 11:24