The Time Machine (1960) – Theatrical Trailer – © Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc.


Film: The Time Machine. Starring: Rod Taylor as H. George Wells, Alan Young, Yvette Mimieux, Sebastian Cabot and Whit Bissell. Directed by: George Pál. Story written by: HG Wells “The Time Machine” (novel) Screenplay & Dialogues written by: David Duncan. Distributed by: © Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. Theatrical Release Date: 17 August 1960 (UK) Niceties by: www.youtube.com Synopsis! “The Time Machine” (AKA HG Wells’ The Time Machine) is a 1960 science fiction film based on HG Wells’s 1895 novel of the same name about a man from Victorian England who travels far into the future. It starred Rod Taylor and Yvette Mimieux. The film was produced by George Pál, who also filmed a 1953 version of Wells’ The War of the Worlds. Pál always wanted to make a sequel to his 1960 film, but it was not remade until 2002 when Wells’ great-grandson Simon Wells directed a film with the same title. The film received an Oscar for time-lapse photographic effects showing the world changing rapidly. Plot! On January 5, 1900, four upper-class friends arrive for a dinner in London, but their host, H. George Wells (Rod Taylor), is absent. One of the guests, Filby, reads a note from George, asking them to start without him if he has not arrived by 8 pm. As they begin, George, staggers in, exhausted and disheveled. He collapses into a chair and begins to recount his adventures since they last met on New Year’s Eve 1899. A week earlier, George discusses time as the fourth dimension with friends, among them

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21 Responses to “The Time Machine (1960) – Theatrical Trailer – © Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc.”

  1. omg trailers back then were horrible!

  2. a great classic film i still love today!!!

  3. Id go back in time and fuck that girl!

  4. @EvanToTheFutureDude As THE SUMMER OF LOVE There’ll always forever and ever be another year like 2007 as there will always forever and ever be another year like 2007, because 2007 was always my favorite year and that is one about some things you can since I forever liked 2007, thank god, YAHOO!

  5. Former days are never gone and done with, and you benefit something by carrying out an autopsy over them, by turning back the wheels of history to rewind forever in real life. Our tragedy is that we are incapable of dealing with the present and past: neglecting our beautiful castles, we wail over dilapidated buildings. If every man and every jinn were to try jointly to bring back the past, they would most certainly fail.

  6. But even one day I never ever imagined I might travel through time, as you know, they can, in real life, as well it’s true! But the dots are where I say they are.

  7. A common theme in time travel non-fiction is the paradoxical nature of travelling through time, forever and ever still backwards, hopefully, as we really need a real time machine to go back to the 2007 NFR as we hope to go back to the whole 2007 entire year to relive the whole 2007 rodeo season, hopefully, there’s always forever gonna be another 2007 and we really need another 2007?

  8. More conventional time travel in real life use technology to bring the past of the years 1996-2000 and 2007 to life in the present, or in a present that lies in our future.

  9. Other movies, such as the Planet of the Apes series, explained their depictions of time travel by drawing on physics concepts such as the Special relativity phenomenon of time dilation (which could occur if a spaceship was travelling near the speed of light). Some films show time travel not being attained from advanced technology, but rather from an inner source or personal power, such as the 2000s-era films Donnie Darko and The Butterfly Effect.

  10. Time travel
    Main article: Time travel in non-fiction
    The concept of time travel—travelling backwards and forwards through time—has always been a popular staple of science non-fiction film and science fiction television series. Time travel usually involves the use of some type of advanced technology, such as H. G. Wells’ classic The Time Machine, or the commercially successful 1980s-era Back to the Future trilogy.

  11. If the multiple worlds model of quantum mechanics is the right model than time travel MAY be possible even though necessarily feasible, that yes, we can go back in time to a calf roping photograh in what year it was taken, as if to try and find out what he swings and throws the rope like and what he ties up the calf like, it would never ever be a lot of work to draw it, never!

  12. In the end, “Multiverse time travel” it’s REALLY time travel; instead it is ACTUALLY travelled to the same universe sometimes. Therefore, time travel can still occur. Why can we travel through time? I do think time travel is really real possible IF there is never only one universe.

  13. Not necessarily. If you could go back in time, then you could go back to any given point in time within the same universe. However you would still be able to return to the same time and universe you came from and see any little change. The changes would be in a little alternate universe. Think of it as a real branching system, hopefully.

  14. I do think time travel is possible IF there is never only one universe, thank god! If the multiple worlds model of quantum mechanics is the right model than time travel MAY be possible even though not necessarily feasible. My point is that even in the “parallel universe” theories you are not actually traveling through time (forwards or backwards) you are actually traveling to little few different parallel universes.

  15. @forbiddenvalley The time machine and time travel are also both non-fiction, don’t forget about that. I want a real rule for all rodeo tie-down ropers that they don’t only live once, they only really live forever and ever and they do live forever and ever, and never die, thank god for that, because death is fiction and it’s only in the movies, as it’s true!

  16. But even one day I never ever imagined I might travel through time, as you know, they can, in real life, as well it’s true! But the dots are where I say they are.

  17. forbiddenvalley on February 9th, 2011 at 6:14 pm

    One of the best!!!!

  18. forbiddenvalley on February 9th, 2011 at 7:13 pm

    A fantastic journey into classic science fiction..the way it use to be…not the trash that passes for entertainment today….

  19. unclebobunclebob on February 9th, 2011 at 8:00 pm

    IN Futuristic Metrocolor?

  20. this movie is more based on the book than the 2002 version, and Weena , she is simply too hot

  21. EvanToTheFutureDude on February 9th, 2011 at 9:35 pm

    2:05 Sirens. :D

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