If you have made a time machine, or inherited one, or even just come
across one by accident…DESTROY IT. This is advice that could save your
life. I’ve seen countless movies involving time travel of some kind or another and nine time out of ten it ends badly. Even
Back to the Future ends horrifically if you think about too hard. In writer/director
Bradley King’s Time Lapse we get a temporal thriller that adds a heaping helping of paranoia into the mix.
Finn (
Matt O'Leary) and his girlfriend Callie (
Danielle Panabaker) share a place with their best friend Jasper (
George Finn),
and though Finn is a struggling artist currently fighting an artistic
mental block while his long suffering girlfriend works a dead end job,
and Jasper blows his money on drugs and the dog races, they seem to be
living an okay life. Finn makes his money as the apartment complex’s
building manager and one day the landlord calls and asks that they check
in on a neighbour who hasn’t paid his rent in some time. That
newspapers are piling up outside his door is not a good sign, so Callie
offers to go and see if he's all right. She discovers something rather
disturbing.
"So are we thinking spy or a serial killer?"
Apparently the missing Mr. Bezzerides (
John Rhys-Davies)
has been taking hundreds of pictures of their place with some enormous
camera. But their neighbor, being some kind of Peeping Tom isn’t the
weird part; it’s when they find out that the camera he uses seemingly
takes Polaroid pictures of events 24 hours in the
future that things begin to get a bit crazy.
The Time Camera, only slightly bigger than the original Polaroid camera.
Callie
finds Mr. Bezzerides journal which reveals that something he saw in one
of the “future pictures” led him to believe he was going to die. He had
decided to break the cardinal rule of time and causality by changing
the future in the hopes of preventing his own death. At first our little
band doesn’t believe this time camera is for real, but when evidence
too hard to ignore builds up they quickly come to grips with the
possibility. Things get scarier when they discover the dead body of Mr.
Bezzerides in his storage locker, its flesh is burnt and desiccated but
the suit he is wearing looks fine. Based on this and the notes in the
journal, and the bizarre appearance of the corpse, they come to the
conclusion that they have to make sure the events in the “future pics”
comes to pass or they themselves could end up like Bezzerides.
Destiny can be a bitch.
Good
hearted Finn wants to notify the police of the dead Mr. Bezzerides
while Jasper immediately sees the money potential in such a device.
Jasper says there is no need to call the cops because if they had they’d
already be looking at a photo of the police investigating the death. So
obviously they don’t call the police. So with that bit of logic they
decide to cover up his death and Jasper uses the camera to win money
from betting on the races. Even Finn uses glimpses of his
future paintings to inspire him because copying a picture you did in the future is not cheating. Right?
I
If Leonardo da Vinci had built a time machine he totally would have done this.
Sadly
that may not be the only cheating going on here, and this is when the
movie starts to really get interesting. One of the photos pops out
showing Jasper and Callie kissing while Finn paints off to the side,
seemingly oblivious. This evidence of his best friend making out with
his girlfriend obviously upsets Finn but going by their theory that
those events
MUST take place, or end up as dead as Mr. Bezzerides, they have to follow through with it.
“I have to cheat on you to save the space time continuum," is one of the oldest lines in the book.
So to keep themselves from being killed by “
The Forces of Time”
they go ahead and stage the kissing event for the camera, but this
leads to an interesting question, what were the original events that led
up to that kiss? How drunk would you have be to cheat on your boyfriend
when he’s only bloody five feet away? Or has that picture
always been of them kissing because they found the picture of them kissing, and were forced to re-enact it?
"This chicken and the egg shit drives me crazy."
At
this point events begin to spiral out of control as paranoia and danger
seeps into the cracks of their relationships, threatening to destroy
everything and everyone. Toss in an evil bookie (
Jason Spisak), who is very interested in how Jasper keeps winning, and you have a recipe for disaster.
It seems that 2014 was quite the year for time travel movies; there was Michael Spierig's fantastic sci-fi thriller
Predestination, but then we also got the incredibly stupid
Project Almanac, so with
Time Lapse it makes it two excellent films to one terrible one, which I guess isn’t too bad.
I
simply loved this film; the characters and ideas put forth by Bradley
King are not only clever and well thought out but take into
consideration the most dangerous element of time travel…the people
themselves. If absolute power corrupts absolutely can you think of a
greater power than the ability to shape your future via temporal
alterations? Rent it, buy it, view it and then go back in time and view
it again. You won't regret it.
I give this film a big temporal thumbs up.
Note:
John Rhys-Davies had two scenes in this film but they unfortunately hit
the cutting room floor, so alas he is but a corpse in the final cut.
No comments:
Post a Comment