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  2. Reviews. The Time Machine. Roger Ebert March 08, 2002. Tweet. Now streaming on: Powered by JustWatch. "The Time Machine" is a witless recycling of the H.G. Wells story from 1895, with the absurdity intact but the wonderment missing.

  3. 76% Tomatometer 38 Reviews 80% Audience Score 10,000+ Ratings Scientist H. George Wells (Rod Taylor) builds a time machine, and despite the warning from his friend David (Alan Young) against...

    • (38)
    • George Pal
    • G
    • Rod Taylor
    • A Depiction of Social Doomsday
    • A Semi-Horror Show
    • A Rallying Social Cry
    • An Overexaggerated Essence of Humanity
    • A Less-Than-Accurate Description

    The outcome of Wells’ refinement of his book ‘The Time Machine‘ is comparable to a commentary on social doom prophecy. We see a presentation of a bleak future where our present-day tech-inclined and innovative-minded elite have become carefree, unworried, and indifferent about controlling the driving forces of society. Apparently, the unexpected in...

    Although the prototype is built around progressive scientific thinking, worrying social order, and the exploits of the most cutting-edge tech ever created yet, the book is not entirely saved from being a horror show as occasionally one is left with one’s heart in one’s hands and chills trickle down the rail of one’s spin, and this is in exchange fo...

    H.G. Wells ‘The Time Machine,’ by its very nature, is much more than a fantastic product of literature. It is a belvedere. A social rallying cry. A platform superbly exploited by the author to vent his gall over the class division in society and how they’re eating up the progressive unity of the human race. Wells wasted no time in his social activi...

    There is a clear indictment over Wells’ continued quest to activate the story of the time traveller in an ultimate bid to extrapolate and by all means announce the increasingly broadened gap between the upper and lower class in Victorian England. Although such proclivity could have largely been influenced by Wells’ personal experience given that he...

    Wells’ description of the Morlocks and Eloi is hardly buyable or accurate, and this goes beyond their mere physical appearances. The depiction of the Eloi as creatures that are infallible to diseases is blatant, bogus, and overstating no matter the level of medical sophistication the Eloi will have attained. To truly wipe out every possibility of t...

    • Signet Classics Edition
    • Paperback
  4. 521,925ratings16,449reviews. Kindle Unlimited $0.00. Rate this book. “I’ve had a most amazing time....”So begins the Time Traveller’s astonishing firsthand account of his journey 800,000 years beyond his own era—and the story that launched H.G. Wells’s successful career and earned him his reputation as the father of science fiction.

    • (521.2K)
    • Paperback
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  5. Mar 8, 2002 · The Time Machine: Directed by Simon Wells. With Guy Pearce, Mark Addy, Phyllida Law, Sienna Guillory. Hoping to alter the events of the past, a 19th century inventor instead travels 800,000 years into the future, where he finds humankind divided into two warring races.

    • (130K)
    • Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi
    • Simon Wells
    • 2002-03-08
  6. The Time Machine Reviews. All Critics. Top Critics. All Audience. Verified Audience. Kevin Carr Fat Guys at the Movies. It has the epic feel that you need, and it hasn't quite gotten to the...

  7. By Nell Minow, Common Sense Media Reviewer. age 12+. A good movie based on H.G. Wells' classic novel. Movie PG-13 2002 96 minutes. Rate movie. Parents Say: age 12+ 8 reviews. Any Iffy Content? Read more. Talk with Your Kids About… Read more. A Lot or a Little? What you will—and won't—find in this movie. Violence & Scariness.

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