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About Time is a 2013 romantic science fiction comedy-drama film written and directed by Richard Curtis, [6] and starring Domhnall Gleeson, Rachel McAdams, and Bill Nighy. The film is about a young man with the ability to time travel who tries to change his past in hopes of improving his future. [ 7 ]
A guy in love uses a photobox to travel back in time to change his life. 2018 A Wrinkle in Time: Ava DuVernay: Thirteen-year-old middle school student Meg Murry struggles to adjust to both her school and home life ever since her father Alex, a well-renowned scientist, mysteriously disappeared. 2018 Tamizh Padam 2: C. S. Amudhan
The opening credits appear in outline block letters in light blue against the background of space, in the same style as the Superman films. [4]Many of the promotional items for this movie feature a stylised image from the film, of the male leads, standing in a similar pose to Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd in posters from the Back to the Future franchise.
Back to the Future, Prisoner of Azkaban, and 13 other all-time great time travel movies.View Entire Post ›
Whenever there's a debate about the best time travel movies or television shows of all time, nine times out of ten, the person you're debating will mention the 1985 classic, Back the Future. And ...
The agent time travels with the skeptical John to Cleveland in 1963, admitting that he works for Robertson's secret agency, the Temporal Bureau, which uses time travel to prevent crimes. Following instructions for finding Jane in the past, John unwittingly falls in love with his younger self and realizes that the agent set him up to become Jane ...
It’s a rather heady concept for a family film, but most time-travel movies are about more than just joyriding through history. In Netflix’s The Adam Project, Ryan Reynolds plays Adam Reed, a ...
The site's consensus states: "This incoherently plotted addition to the time-travel genre looks and sounds cheesy". [7] On Metacritic the film has a score of 28% based on reviews from 32 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews". [8] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade C+ on a scale of A to F. [9]