TIME AFTER TIME: Blu-ray (Warner Bros. 1979) Warner Archive
Take two icons
of the 19th century – one infamous (Jack the Ripper), the other renowned
(visionary novelist, H.G. Wells), toss in a dash of whimsy and a pickle of a
plot – the latter, clumsily supplied with crippling contrivances, far too
conveniently concocted coincidences and more than few glaring narrative pot
holes by screenwriter/director, Nicholas Meyers - and populate the claptrap
with three very fine performances from Malcolm McDowell, Mary Steenburgen and
David Warner, and you have a fair idea where Time After Time (1979) is headed…or not. The implausibility of time
travel is one thing. The thorough silliness of this movie’s meandering
stratagem is quite another; and yet intriguingly realized, despite some glaringly
inexplicable oversights. As example, Wells’ time machine, made out of spare
parts in his basement no less, and, looking very much like a Coney Island
pinball arcade novelty, is supposed to function on harnessed solar power. Yet,
it manages to levitate, firing animated sunbursts of rainbow-bright color,
inside windowless rooms without any assistance from the sun.
Okay, ‘it’s only a movie’, as Hitchcock would
say; and seventies’ psychedelic sci-fi, no less. Still, Time After Time ought to have already been a disaster in the
making. Indeed, it did little box office in its own time, but has since
cultivated a reputation as a cult classic. Oddly enough, I found myself
engrossed by it in fits and sparks. When Meyers can think of something clever
to say, he and cinematographer, Paul Lohmann exhibit a remarkable presence for
creating energetic cinema space with their glossy ‘show and tell’, wallpapered from main title to end credits in a
deliciously over-the-top score, written by one of Hollywood’s éminence grise; Miklós Rózsa. Alas, in directing his first
movie, Meyers falls into at least one predictable trap as a novice, taking us
on a Cook’s Tour of San Francisco; the locations arbitrarily chosen simply to
show them off in travelogue fashion (The Golden Gate Bridge, the Hyatt Regency
– where parts of The Towering Inferno
were shot, the Palace of Fine Arts, built for the 1915 exhibition, and so on).
While these locations are greatly enhanced by Lohmann’s superb framing, they
really have nothing at all to do with the plot, nor are they even, arguably,
the best locations one might have chosen to stage the action.
All things
considered, Time After Time has to
be one of the nuttiest screwball pseudo-Wellsian outings ever machinated for
the movies. It earned a paltry $13 million back in 1979 (hardly a
heavy-hitter), but acquired legions more adoring fans on reputation alone. Many
continue to regard it with uncharacteristic fondness even today as – strangely,
again after a hiatus of nearly twenty-five years, I sincerely do. I would not
go as far as to call Time After Time
‘every bit as magical as the trick around
which it revolves’, but there is an unmistakable ‘quality’ to it – of unprepossessing innocence and ingenuity – that
lingers with a curious zing and smite against contemporary pop culture; also,
fervently in search of the ‘feel good’,
dwindling throughout the 1970's and ruthlessly in even shorter supply from our
movie-going compost these days. I wanted to enjoy Time After Time more than I did, and yet, cannot deny I
unexpectedly appreciated it more than I ought – having already seen far too
many ‘better’ movies about time
travel and thus grown incredibly jaded in my opinions. But Time After Time has the benefit of a terrific cast, the three
principles able to sell its tripe as treasures aplenty. Even without McDowell,
Warner and Steenburgen, Time After Time
is already plugged into our collective wish fulfillment DNA with its life
contemplation and ‘what if?’ scenarios. Stop me if you have already heard the
one about the guy who dreamed he could go back and change something about his
past or journey into the future.
Time travel
has always fascinated mankind in much the same way as the proverbial fountain
of youth. Authors have had great fun with the notion our perishable bodies
might find eternal preservation, either through the looking glass (Lewis
Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland) or
off in Never-Neverland (J.M. Barrie’s Peter
Pan). Wells was, of course, an extraordinary daydreamer on such matters;
his life’s work committed to a sort of occultism in his search of immortality (The Time Machine, The Invisible Man). Time
After Time isn’t particularly interested in Wells' Darwinian
philosophizing, or even his more clairvoyant powers of social observation.
Malcolm MacDowell’s H.G. is instead a sort of avuncular time-traveling buffoon,
whose scientific powers of observation border on genius, even if his mercurial
social skills barely rank him two points above an autistic savant. The
time-honored movie-land cliché has always been that men with very large brains
equally suffer from a tragically emasculated libido, and general inability to
relate to women. And so it is with McDowell’s Wells. He hasn’t a clue what to
do with a good woman – even a provocatively batty one, preferring the
cloistered company of a group of intellectuals – and one raving psychotic.
Ironically, the estate of H.G. Wells did not take umbrage to the movie’s
pretense Dr. John Leslie Stevenson (a.k.a. Jack the Ripper, and, played with
seedy aplomb by David Warner) was Wells’ best friend. But in matters of
romance, our H.G. needs a liberated boy-crazy airhead from the future, spouting
mutilated feminism (Steenburgen’s Amy Robbins ought to have been reincarnated
as a peroxide blonde), to smartly yank his crank a quarter turn to the left.
Wells was, after all, a bit of a socialist.
Time After Time begins in foggy/soggy London,
circa 1893. We are in the thick of the White Chapel district, dark and gloomy,
highlighted by a singular splash of color; an inebriated prostitute, Jenny
(Karin Mary Shea) exiting a local pub. She is stalked by an unseen ‘admirer’
who presently offers her a quid for what she believes is a few minutes work in
a nearby back alley. But only several moments into having hiked up her skirts,
the ole girl hears a memorable melody coming from the stranger’s pocket watch
before having her throat slashed. The Ripper departs. But his handy work is
discovered by a bobby (Clement St. George), who makes chase, signaling for
assistance with his whistle. Nearby, popular science-fiction writer, Herbert
George Wells (Malcolm McDowell) has gathered a group of intellectuals for
dinner. Though none are aware of it, as yet, Wells intends this to be his
farewell party. For, having studied and presumably mastered the space/time
continuum, Wells has erected a solar-powered time machine in his basement. The
contraption includes a non-return key, to keep the machine and the traveler's
destination in sync, and, a ‘vaporizing equalizer’ to maintain the traveler and
machine on equal terms. Soon, Wells will embark upon his great journey into the
future where he believes mankind will have founded a utopian society. Boy, is he in for a culture shock!
The party is
interrupted by the late arrival of Dr. John Leslie Stevenson (David Warner),
still carrying his medical bag. After being shown the time machine, the small
group of friends is startled when the housemaid announces two Scotland Yard
detectives, Inspector Gregson (Laurie Main) and a Sergeant (Michael Evans)
waiting at the front door. The detectives forewarn ‘the ripper’ has struck
again nearby. They are conducting a search of all homes in the vicinity. Alas,
Stevenson has left his blood-stained gloves from his latest victim in his
medical bag. He flees into the time machine and escapes incarceration. However,
not in possession of the ‘non-return’ key, the machine later returns to Wells’
home without its occupant. Wells notes the machine’s dateline has stopped on
Nov. 11, 1979. Determined he should pursue John into the future to apprehend
and return him to his own time in order to face the consequences of his
actions, Wells arrives in 1979; his time machine and other collected works all
part of a travelling museum exhibit currently on display in San Francisco.
Reasoning John would have to exchange English pounds to U.S. dollars before
embarking upon his exploitation of the future, Wells begins to frequent the
various banking institutions and make his inquiries.
At the
Chartered Bank of England, Wells is introduced to Foreign Currency bank
manager, Amy Robbins (Mary Steenburgen) who, after openly flirting with Wells,
offers up the necessary information. Not only did she wait on a man matching
Well’s description, but she also recommended the Hyatt Regency as a place he
might call home while staying in San Francisco. Wells hurries to the Hyatt,
finds John and threatens to take him back to London in the time machine. John
is impressed with his old friend’s powers of deduction, but equally as
unimpressed by his pedestrian faith in virtue, honor and integrity. Told by
Wells neither of them belongs in the future, John is quick to reason that the
future has caught up to his insanity. In a world utterly gone mad, even he
appears to be a novice. “I belong here,”
John explains, “…completely and utterly.
I'm home. Ninety years ago, I was a freak. Now... I'm an amateur.” A
struggle ensues, John nearly murdering Wells before a hotel maid stumbles upon
their fight, causing John to make a daring escape. Wells makes chase, but John
is struck by a passing car. Wells hurries to the hospital, but is told by a
mistaken nurse that a man matching John’s description has since died of his
injuries.
The middle act
of Time After Time is an awkward
blend of romance and pathos. Wells inexplicably returns to Amy at the bank. She
takes the rest of the afternoon off to go sightseeing with him. Yet, despite
having only just met, Amy confides in her best friend, Carol (Geraldine Baron)
she has found ‘Mr. Right’. After a fashionable lunch, a stroll through
the sequoias, and, a very late supper, Amy attempts to get to know Wells better
in her apartment. Predictably, the couple falls into bed. But Wells keeps his
identity to himself for a while longer, soon realizing John is still alive and
stalking women in Frisco’s red light district. He confides in Amy. She
naturally does not believe him. So, Wells takes her to the museum and shows her
the exhibit dedicated to his life. He also encourages Amy to take a trip in the
time machine. Very reluctantly, she agrees; Wells advancing the dateline meter
by only a week to prove to her time-travel is possible in an instant. Alas,
upon their arrival into this not so distant future, Amy reads a newspaper with
a sensational headline about her own murder. As she is listed as the ripper’s
fifth victim, Wells deduces they must go back in time to prevent the murder of
the fourth; a prostitute named, Dolores (Shirley Marchant) who was still very
much alive when they made the leap into the future.
Using the
newspaper’s account of the grisly discovery of Dolores’ body dredged from a
pond in Prospect Park, Amy and Wells race ahead of the ripper, who has already
picked up Dolores inside a seamy discothèque and is also presently headed for
the park to finish her off. Regrettably, Amy’s car experiences a flat en route.
While Amy fixes the tire, Wells rushes to a nearby phone booth to alert police
of the approaching murder. All are too late to intervene in John’s latest
killing; Amy and Wells arriving just in time to witness the police fishing Dolores’
body from the water. Wells now has
another idea. Since Amy is not scheduled to be killed until later the next
afternoon he leaves her locked in her apartment to go to the police and explain
the entire scenario. Unfortunately, Lt. Mitchell (Charles Cioffi) clearly
thinks Wells is a nut. It doesn’t help matters, that in order to conceal his
identity, Wells lies to Mitchell and his assistant (Read Morgan) his real name
is ‘Sherlock Holmes’. Meanwhile, back at the apartment, Amy takes a heavy
sedative to calm her nerves. Instead, it knocks her out. She awakens with mere
minutes to spare before impending doom. Back at police headquarters, Mitchell
has decided Wells might actually be the ‘San Francisco Ripper’. Realizing time
has run out, Wells, determined to save Amy whatever the cost, tells Mitchell he
will gladly confess to all the unsolved murders, if only the police will hurry
to Amy’s apartment to save her from becoming the latest victim.
Agreeing to
this bargain, Mitchell deploys two officers to Amy’s apartment. They discover
the door ajar and the brutally dismembered remains of a woman inside. Knowing
now Wells cannot possibly be the ripper, Mitchell sets him free. Tormented at
having presumably failed the only woman he has ever truly loved, Wells blindingly
walks back toward Amy’s apartment, passing the darkened Palace of Fine Art. He
is confronted by John who is holding Amy hostage at knifepoint. She tearfully
explains how the dismembered remains found in her apartment are Carol, whom she
had invited for dinner a week earlier. John wants Wells’ non-return key in
trade for Amy’s life. With the key, John can escape into the time machine and
never be found again. Wells complies. But John is not about to let Amy go. The
pair escapes in a car and Wells makes chase, remembering from his earlier ride
with Amy, how to operate her vehicle. The three meet at the museum after hours;
John breaking the glass doors to get inside and thus setting off the alarm.
With only moments to spare before they are found out and likely arrested, John
pushes Amy aside and steps into the time machine with the key. But Wells now
reaches for the machine’s external vaporizing equalizer. Without it, John and
the machine will travel at different speeds of light; hence, John’s molecules are
vaporized and he is destroyed. Before museum security arrives, Wells tells Amy
he must go back to 1893. He still has much important work to do. She hesitates,
but at the last possible moment elects to make the journey with him. To hell
with her feminist ideals. This is love! The movie concludes with an epilogue,
explaining Wells and Amy Robbins were married until her death in 1927.
What is the
correct label for Time After Time?
It’s not a mystery – conventional or ‘un’.
Within the first five minutes we already know who the ripper is and why he has
come to the future. And Meyer is not particularly interested in catering to the
sci-fi aspects of this endeavor either. Once we make the quantum leap from 1893
to 1979 and Wells concludes his rather lugubrious dissertation on utopia, there
is a decided absence of the supernatural suspension in our disbelief. Superficially, Time After Time ought to have been a harrowing thriller…except its’
middle act is mired in a convoluted screwball notion of becoming an ageless
love story: one that simply fails to captivate. The movie’s finale is pure
‘race against time’ pulp – literally. I suppose if I had to call it like I see
it, then Time After Time is clearly
a mutt; its’ one salvation being, that like most mongrels, it is woolly and
careworn, but ultimately lovable, warm-hearted and satisfying.
Time After Time is a fairly unsophisticated
oddity at best: albeit, teeming with a sugary sweetness that only
intermittently fails to entertain. The picture’s shortcomings do not negate its
joyously obtuse charm and that is saying quite a lot for Nicholas Meyer; also
about the acting chops of Malcolm McDowell, David Warner and Mary Steenburgen.
But Meyer has managed more than a minor coup; to entangle the audience in his faux
historical piece of fluff and fancy, adding a dash of the macabre to the
excursion, and mixing it all up in the enigma of time travel. If only he had
been a little more bravely daring, a dash extra sure-footed too, especially in
his middle act, then Time After Time
might have been truly memorable. As it stands, it is modestly engaging
throughout, with an infectious vitality and some competently rendered little
jabs of pleasure. Wells’ heavy-handed platitudes about the perennial fate of
societal evolution – predicated on the violence men do – hampers our
appreciation for the lighter caper aspects in this adventure yarn; as does the
awkward segue from wild-eyed adventure to tepid romance. There is no getting
around it. It’s the middle act that threatens the picture. It just feels like a
roller coaster stuck at the top of its first apex, delaying, rather than
augmenting, our heady slalom down the other side of the hill; mere filler until
Meyer can figure out how to maneuver us into his last act finale.
Malcolm
McDowell’s performance is undeniably Time
After Time’s redemptive standout; full of recurrent pantomime, empathy and
the occasional flash of very wry wit; in short, very British. His H.G. Wells is
an unexpected cross between a refractory intellectual and Benny Hill. Asked by
Amy to quantify whether the suit he is wearing is the fashion in England,
McDowell’s diminutive Brainiac replies, “It
was when I left.” When he speculates that “…every age is the same…only love makes any of them bearable” his
words resonate with heavy-hearted remorse. MacDowell is an undeniably gifted
thespian. He can effortlessly toggle between these blithe moments of glib
repartee and the more meditative bits, selling most ever situation as
authentic. The ruse is not quite as convincing with David Warner; director,
Meyer resisting to show us the moments when John’s artificially affable
exterior gives way to the heated frenzy of his sexual psychoses. Still, Warner
is delightfully sleazy in the part; a glint of something not quite right
pithily caught in his eye as he exacts vengeance on the unsuspecting victims
for the atrocious ‘maternal’
influence that presumably hewed an unspeakable monster from this man.
Cumulatively, the victims are ripe for the slaughter; an atypical flock of
mindless sex kittens a la the seventies ‘twinkle-twinkle/get
down and let’s boogie’ ilk. Those old enough can recall, with fond
embarrassment, the era that gave us Mop n’ Glow commercials with women swabbing
their kitchen linoleum in high heels and a ball gown or provocatively hunched
in a micro-mini and go-go boots. What can I tell you? It was the seventies.
Under any
other circumstances, I might have given Mary Steenburgen the Razzie Award for
playing the perfunctory witless and tit-less bubble head in a role tailor-made
for Diane Keaton, except, herein, Steenburgen gives us flashes of befuddled
sincerity and astuteness, even if the middle act relegates her to a Valium
stupor as our cursory damsel in distress. Modern day feminists will likely
bristle at Steenburgen’s take-charge, sexually free, if marginally vacuous and
frizzy-haired working gal, feigning forthwith and no nonsense, but actually
just looking the part while exceedingly desperate to leave her knickers in a
ball on the backseat of the first Cadillac sporting a gentlemanly pair of
trousers behind the steering wheel. A girl can get into a lot of trouble that
way. But the burning and itching herein is mostly cerebral – alas, no cream
and/or pill for that – as Amy seduces H.G. without much effort or even much
consternation about the morning after on his part. Given Wells is from a far
more stringent era, he discouragingly and unpersuasively falls into line with
the erotic notions of this ‘wanna hump-hump’ disco baby. Still, Steenburgen’s
Amy is a fairly amusing and occasionally heartrending third wheel in this
buddy/buddy comedy turned ugly and surreal.
If only
Nicholas Meyers had had the temerity to truly break out and away from the most
pedestrian ‘fish-out-of-water' clichés, then Time After Time might have clicked
with more staying power. It lingers in the consciousness – that much is
certainly true – but only as an inelegantly constructed and extended dream
sequence. The brief time-travel SFX severely date the movie. But even these are
not enough to sink the project. I suppose I ought to thank Nicholas Meyers for
forgoing the usual evocations of the modern age as an overcrowded,
drug-saturated/gang-banging dystopia; the more fashionable interpretation in
American movies back then; exalting urban blight and decay. Fair enough, not
all of what we see in Time After Time is beautiful; but even the sordid ‘blue’
nightclubs frequented by the ripper are back-lit by some impressive neon tubing
and strobe lights, impeccably lit and photographed by Paul Lohmann. Don’t get me wrong. I continue to regard Time After Time as a very enjoyable way
to kill a couple of hours (pun
intended). But I am still sincerely trying to figure out the reasons why.
I have to
admit I was singularly underwhelmed by Warner Archive’s Blu-ray presentation of
Time After Time. For starters, a lot
the visuals are softy focused to the point of occasionally appearing blurry.
Never having seen this movie projected theatrically, I really am unable to say
whether or not this ‘look’ is stylistic the result of Paul Lohnmann’s
cinematography, or a sincere flaw in this 1080p transfer. While exterior
photography in then ‘present day’ San Francisco has that distinctly bright,
flat appearance of an extended TV episode ripped from Kojak or Starsky and Hutch,
interiors tend to adopt a sort of washed out patina of garish hues. Fine detail
is wanting throughout; the diffused cinematography really lending nothing to
Blu-ray’s superior capabilities to bring every minute detail to light. I
detected no ‘wow’ moments in skin tones; no refinements in hair or fabrics, and
contrast that, at best seemed either ratcheted up a notch during the exterior
scenes, but less than punctuated during others shot under the cover of night.
The movie’s prologue, supposedly taking place in London (but actually
photographed on the same Warner sound stages where two decades earlier Phyllis
Kirk’s scared goat of a girl fled from Vincent Price’s deformed artiste in House of Wax, 1953) are blurrily
nondescript herein; obscured by mood lighting and fog effects, suffering from a
decidedly anemic spectrum of desaturated colors, with contrast slightly weaker
than anticipated. We get lost in this indistinguishable muddy brown/beige/black
mess. Only close-ups satisfy. There is also some weird residual blurriness that
creeps in around the peripheries of the film frame. Consider the scene where
Amy and Wells lay their plans to set a trap for John while seated at Amy’s
kitchen table; Amy, in the left of the anamorphic frame, momentarily annoyed by
her lover’s apprehensiveness, adjusting herself in her chair, her face suddenly
and inexplicably going out of focus.
The pluses
here: a remarkably clean print with no hint of the occasional dirt and/or scratches
mildly distracting on Warner Home Video’s old DVD. Otherwise, Time After Time looks average instead
of spectacular. You won’t be amazed. Oddly enough, you also shouldn’t be too
disappointed. The 2.0 DTS is a marked
improvement over the old 2.0 Dolby Surround on the DVD; more subtly nuanced in
unexpected ways. Alas, it too exhibits a few unhealthy distortions; a line of
dialogue uttered by one of Wells’ colleagues in his basement, suddenly
crackling and unclear; dialogue occasionally overwhelmed by Rosza’s score to
the point where it sounds awkwardly balanced. Extras are limited to a trailer and audio
commentary from MacDowell and Meyer: well worth a listen but ported over from
the old DVD release. Bottom line: Time
After Time is a movie I hesitate to recommend because it is saturated in glaringly
shortsightedness of an unevenly paced narrative I generally abhor. Curiously, my
affections for this movie remain intact. So, yes – see it. But accept it for
what it is: B-grade nonsense with a few very fine performers thrown into the
deep end of pool of nonsense. Clever? – hardly. Entertaining? – generally. But another 'time' and another 'Welles' would have made far more of this inventive claptrap! Regrets.
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
3.5
VIDEO/AUDIO
3.5
EXTRAS
2
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