2002 remake had a objectively better take on the eloi and Marlocks since they changed them so much rather them just keeping them the same but removing all the social commentary they originally had in the book.
And to think that George Pal gave SERIOUS consideration's to casting David Niven to the role instead!😳Thank God that didn't happen; in turn led Rod Taylor to his first leading role.
“Has it ever struck you that life is all memory, except for the one present moment that goes by you so quick you hardly catch it going?”― Tennessee Williams
Two things I have always loved about this scene 1.)George makes sure that the doubting Dr.Hillyer is the one to throw the switch 2.)I love how at timestamp 3:48 Bridewell discreetly slides his glass of champaign over to Filby and then walks away; it's as if he's saying "I've seen it all now, here Filby you're going to need this" lmao. Here's a Kudos an tribute to the great acting of the past and special effects from artist's like Wah Chang before CGI when it was actually an art
Fantastic scene from a classic sci-fi film! Such an inspirational film; the outstanding special effects and the great film score. I especially liked 'Philby's theme' which is played at multiple times in the movie.
Three Disney voice actors appear in this film! Rod Taylor (Pongo( 101 Dalmatians), Sebastian Cabot (Ector in sword and the stone, Bagheera in jungle book), and Alan Young (Scrooge McDuck and Hiram flavors ham in great mouse detective).
I watched this many times on WGN's Family Classics on Sundays. They had many movies in their weekly rotation that inspired young children like myself back in the 60s, pirates, Robin Hood, and sci fi greats like Mysterious Island, The Lost World, Journey to the Center of the Earth, War of the Worlds, and this one. There is a certain innocent beauty about this film, Rod Taylor was very good and the music scoring was perfect.
I'm 71 now, and I remember seeing this as a kid when it was new and I was about 8 years old. A article came out about it in a magazine called "Famous Monsters of Filmland". I don't know if it's still in print, but the article had in it pictures from the movie and a fairly thourough write up about the film and how it was made. It was written on an adult level about special effects, the actors, and other things pertaining to the movie. I'd like to get my hands on one of those magazines from back in the day! P.S. Note Sebastian Cabot, the actor who played "French", the "gentleman's gentleman", or butler from the 60's TV sitcom "Family Affair".
Sitting in my time machine blasting through all time Watching fractured memories, my future is left behind Seasons passing in a blink, days pass by to years Take me to a better place, save me from my fears The future, the past New horizons, through time I blast Race against time Past the golden gates of paradise In the land that time forgot Retrieve the wishes of your dreams The things in life you sought Beyond your wildest fantasies, your eyes you won't believe Pioneer a new frontier, another concept to conceive Travelled through the centuries of uncalculated time When laws of physics are broken it's not considered a crime You can stand and watch as battles rage and people die in vein Like watching an old time movie over and over again No future, no past Lost horizon, will we last? Race against time
The hairs still stand up on the back of my neck whenever I hear the title music... an impressively imaginative film of an even more imaginative novel. I was in love with Yvette Mimeux after watching it. The effects were state of the art for the time (and still mostly impress), and the ending is surprisingly touching. One of those films I can rewatch with joy. :-)
I think tis is where I got my fascination with clocks. In my Livingroom I have 4 clocks from 1880, 1910, 1905 and a newer one, older ones have pendulums. Other room 3 from early 1900's all pendulums.
Happy 90th, Rod from future year 2020! Gotta love Mr. French's skepticism! I first saw this in the '70s on a B&W TV, Late Late Show Philly Channel 10. Antenna picked up a very staticky signal (I was closer to NYC).
I like how in the book they point out that if he sent the machine into the past they would have seen it at that very spot last Thursday when they met together and the Thursday before that and so on...
IN CHARGE OF HIS DESTINY..??. I FIRST WATCHED THIS FILM IN THE MID 1970S.....I LIVED IN AN OLD VICTORIAN BASEMENT IN CHELSEA....LOTS ROAD...WOW...EVERY ONE CAN FEEL TIME AND SPACE.... THE FILM CAME LOOKING FOR ME...!!!
This is great . Thank you ever so much for uploading . Can you please upload more scenes from this movie in HD? I watched this film when I was a little kid in France thanks to my Dad who was in charge of the Film-Club in the school where he taught. I was mesmerised. My Dad passed away a few months ago. This is very emotional for me.
I love this movie and it's my second favorite, next to the "Back to the Future" trilogy. I've seen this movie hundreds of times and I just now noticed something odd in this scene. At first, we see the cigar has a pointy tip and extends all the way to the front, touching the bar on the model. But when the model begins to travel through time, the cigar is actually smaller. It doesn't have the pointy tip and it doesn't extend to the front bar. I'm surprised I didn't catch that before. Anybody else notice? RJ
Makes me ask the questions:- Can or will man ever travel in time? Has God arranged our future already? Why are we here? Does time exist, or is there just the present? What happens to us when we die? When will man ever learn to understand and live in harmony with nature? The kind of films that makes us wonder about deep things are the best ones.
You would think, since he is such a great inventor and engineer, you could put a little mechanism into the model to snap the activation lever back to off a variable amount of time after it is turned on. Then they would see the machine appear and disappear, AND put a pocket watch on board. You see the protype disappear, reappear, about an hour later, then check the on board watch and see that only a few seconds had ticked on the watch. Also, he says that the machine does not move in space. But he must mean "in space relative to the room it it sitting in." because through time, the earth itself moves at about 5000 miles per hour. in fact is a a real challenge to know what "still" even means, in the cosmic sense. Nothing, fails to move in space.
It probably would be much more difficult to create a small size time machine than a normal size time machine. And imagine that little time machine, it's still traveling onward through time, with a cigar on the seat. That could have massive consequences! What will happen to it when the universe collapses? What will God do if he end time and space and finds that this thing is still speeding through time? ;-)
If there isn’t an end to time, then the machine would continue on uninterferingly. If there is an end to time then the machine would simply reach it sooner (from our perspective) but not from the perspective on someone at the end of time
THE CLOSEST YOU WILL GET TO THIS IS MAN LANDING ON THE MOON...AND YES...THERE WAS PEOPLE BORN IN VICTORIAN TIMES..WITNESSING....IT ALL....SAME FEELING ...FAR OUT MAN .....DID YOU LIKE THAT SIXTIES STYLE ...??
I’m imagining these Victorian gents sitting around in George’s living room getting baked and discussing time travel while pouring wine and passing joints
The story said the morlak are destroyed.. so the peoples from surface are free.. but the earth is so big.. its not logical that all those morlaks only Summarize or existing in that small area..
It's a brilliant and classic movie and I'm sorry to say this but around 0:49 I just hear in my mind Cat from Red Dwarf saying...'So what is it?' 😄 Also I can't help but chuckle at the fact he could make a tiny scale model of the machine when we know he couldn't logically have built one at that scale knowing the technology and parts he had at the time. BUT...I still love it obviously, the remake was OK and there were some very cool and funny bits in it but this will always be my favorite. Has much more spirit and a much better and more accurate sense of wonder from the book I think.
Just to be clear, building a time machine would be hard enough. Building a working model would be even harder. Imagine the tiniest parts in the actual machine, now picture them model sized to be built. 🤣
I'm fairly sure no one in the late 1890s had machining tools small enough to work on such a device, but H.G. Wells added that touch I guess to add to the mystery of the Time Traveler.
Why would it be gone? It does not travel through space, just time. If it would work and you put a wtch on it, it would allways sit there and the clock would look like it is frozen.
It carried on into the future until _eventually_ its power source eroded away and was able to stop and wait for whoever stumbled upon it at whatever point in time they happened to stumble upon it. Hopefully the whole machine itself didn't erode away in the meantime. :)
It keeps geeting speed when it travels (like 100 days per second or more), so it would be pretty much invisible to anyone outside its sphere of influence.
If the machine is travelling forward (at any speed) in time, it wouldn't disappear. Come to think of it, neither would it disappear if it were going backwards; it'd already be visible, surely? My head aches. I'm definitely overthinking this.
Maybe it was traveling to fast to any "exterior light" hit the machine and bounces back to our eyes - what creates the possibility that any Time Travel would be in complete dark.
Because it is compressing time either in front of it or behind it, what is happening is essentially the same thing as the bow shock when a vehicle approaches the speed of sound, or light. It disappears because the moments in which it exists are infinitesimally smaller than our frame of time. One second in our time is maybe a femtosecond or attosecond in its time, depending on how high a compression rate we're talking. It still exists in that space but for such a tiny period of time in any one instant that it can't be touched or seen.
If I could go back in time to 1950 and tell the world the dangers of Climate Change and how it could push Earth into another mass extinction by 2050, that would be great!
And it would be as big a fabrication in 1950 as it is now. The earth has always changed climate. It's driving force is the sun. Quite simple, actually. Everything else is merely politics.
@@joehamlet7576 that is a weak excuse, because the difference between what’s happening now, and what’s been going on in the past, is that it’s changing at a faster rate then ever before. Do you know what happened the last last time the earth came even this close to such a dramatic chance in climate in such a short span of time. The extinction of 95% of all life on the planet 252 million years ago
I don’t understand... why build models and not the real thing ? I got mine powered up .... The disk drive was tricky ... But I got it generating energy...
Seen it many times now, so anymore I stop watching when he gets to final destination of eternal children and little green monsters. The first half of the film is great,.
In my humble opinion one of the best movies ever made
One of the best rides I ever took ..
Watched the T. rex hoax being created from kangaroo mirror.
2002 remake had a objectively better take on the eloi and Marlocks since they changed them so much rather them just keeping them the same but removing all the social commentary they originally had in the book.
Agreed!
So underrated
I am 56 years old and this is one of my favourite films and has been for as long as I can remember.
C'est mon film préféré aussi. Où peut on le revoir?
36 here and I agree, it's an oldie, but a goodie.
Rod Taylor was a great actor, R.I.P.
Agreed hit fit/ acted the role of George perfectly. Every time I read the book I envision him as George.
And to think that George Pal gave SERIOUS consideration's to casting David Niven to the role instead!😳Thank God that didn't happen; in turn led Rod Taylor to his first leading role.
Im a teen and love time travel. Watching this movie for the first time was special. It is so wonderfully made!
Again.. I'm watching this in 2023. First saw it about 1965 or 1966. Still a favorite. Rod Taylor and the great Alan Young and Yvette Mimieux.
The BEST time travel movie of all time. "Time After Time" is a close second. BTW, I've got that model complete with the Tantalus box and cigar!
which digar???? 2 were used in this scene as can clearly be seen (if you look close) in the cjip,
Are you for real...
This and the first Back to the Future
I've just acquired the other next Wednesday
Thomas, I'm writing to you in the year 2075. I to had that model but mine was real!
I love how after the time machine disappears the guy sets his drink down and pushes it away. "Yea I think I've had too much" lol
LMAO I just got done writing a comment about that, I thought I was the only one who noticed that; because he was far to drunk already.
Nothing can beat this classic!
I love the way George manages to bend the cigar to fit the seat in the time machine perfectly first time. Never noticed that before. :-)
I love that he's chillin w Scrooge McDuck and Bagheera the panther.
Not to mention that George was played by Pongo.
Gotta love Mr. French's skepticism!
Bagheera is also Sir Ector and the Narrator from Winnie the Pooh. Scrooge McDuck is also Mr Flaversham from Great Mouse Detective
Alan Young would seriously have been a great choice as an actor for Scrooge McDuck in a real-life movie adaption.
I was obsessed with this movie when I was little, and of course I recognized their voices and knew who they were as voice actors.
“Has it ever struck you that life is all memory, except for the one present moment that goes by you so quick you hardly catch it going?”― Tennessee Williams
Two things I have always loved about this scene 1.)George makes sure that the doubting Dr.Hillyer is the one to throw the switch 2.)I love how at timestamp 3:48 Bridewell discreetly slides his glass of champaign over to Filby and then walks away; it's as if he's saying "I've seen it all now, here Filby you're going to need this" lmao. Here's a Kudos an tribute to the great acting of the past and special effects from artist's like Wah Chang before CGI when it was actually an art
Fantastic scene from a classic sci-fi film! Such an inspirational film; the outstanding special effects and the great film score. I especially liked 'Philby's theme' which is played at multiple times in the movie.
Three Disney voice actors appear in this film! Rod Taylor (Pongo( 101 Dalmatians), Sebastian Cabot (Ector in sword and the stone, Bagheera in jungle book), and Alan Young (Scrooge McDuck and Hiram flavors ham in great mouse detective).
The talking rings were the narrator in donald mathmagicland and the haunted mansion
Considering that MGM and Disney have worked together, it makes sense
Alan Young played Wilbur in Mr Ed.
Always fascinated me that he didn't choose to explore the past. Superb cast and solid screenplay. Morlocks were chilling.
Still a good film, with incredible effects for the time.
*a great film
R.I.P Wah Chang ( Who went on to make Star Trek great as well)
Loved this scene when I first saw it :)
One of my favorite movies watched it many times 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
I watched this many times on WGN's Family Classics on Sundays. They had many movies in their weekly rotation that inspired young children like myself back in the 60s, pirates, Robin Hood, and sci fi greats like Mysterious Island, The Lost World, Journey to the Center of the Earth, War of the Worlds, and this one. There is a certain innocent beauty about this film, Rod Taylor was very good and the music scoring was perfect.
I have always loved this movie!!!
I'm 71 now, and I remember seeing this as a kid when it was new and I was about 8 years old. A article came out about it in a magazine called "Famous Monsters of Filmland". I don't know if it's still in print, but the article had in it pictures from the movie and a fairly thourough write up about the film and how it was made. It was written on an adult level about special effects, the actors, and other things pertaining to the movie. I'd like to get my hands on one of those magazines from back in the day!
P.S. Note Sebastian Cabot, the actor who played "French", the "gentleman's gentleman", or butler from the 60's TV sitcom "Family Affair".
Sitting in my time machine blasting through all time
Watching fractured memories, my future is left behind
Seasons passing in a blink, days pass by to years
Take me to a better place, save me from my fears
The future, the past
New horizons, through time I blast
Race against time
Past the golden gates of paradise
In the land that time forgot
Retrieve the wishes of your dreams
The things in life you sought
Beyond your wildest fantasies, your eyes you won't believe
Pioneer a new frontier, another concept to conceive
Travelled through the centuries of uncalculated time
When laws of physics are broken it's not considered a crime
You can stand and watch as battles rage
and people die in vein
Like watching an old time movie over and over again
No future, no past
Lost horizon, will we last?
Race against time
What is that from?
@@TimeTravelinc Race Against Time, by Anvil - A Canadian heavy metal band.
Well said.how wonderful it must be.love this comment
Time passes quickly Live every day!
The hairs still stand up on the back of my neck whenever I hear the title music... an impressively imaginative film of an even more imaginative novel. I was in love with Yvette Mimeux after watching it. The effects were state of the art for the time (and still mostly impress), and the ending is surprisingly touching. One of those films I can rewatch with joy. :-)
I think tis is where I got my fascination with clocks. In my Livingroom I have 4 clocks from 1880, 1910, 1905 and a newer one, older ones have pendulums. Other room 3 from early 1900's all pendulums.
TIMELESS movie! ...thanks from NZ 👍🇳🇿
Happy 90th, Rod from future year 2020! Gotta love Mr. French's skepticism! I first saw this in the '70s on a B&W TV, Late Late Show Philly Channel 10. Antenna picked up a very staticky signal (I was closer to NYC).
Can only imagine how much the special effects blew away the movie going audience of 1960
I'd say it's a mixed bag. Some optical composites like these look great, but the movie has also some really uneven matte work in places.
LOL the way the guy at the end just puts his glass down and walks away
To quote Doc from Back to the Future, ""You're going to see some serious shit."
I never noticed that until now and I'm laughing so hard lol
This film just fills me with joy every time I watch it. The quality of the film making is beautiful. Steve 👍
I like how in the book they point out that if he sent the machine into the past they would have seen it at that very spot last Thursday when they met together and the Thursday before that and so on...
IN CHARGE OF HIS DESTINY..??. I FIRST WATCHED THIS FILM IN THE MID 1970S.....I LIVED IN AN OLD VICTORIAN BASEMENT IN CHELSEA....LOTS ROAD...WOW...EVERY ONE CAN FEEL TIME AND SPACE.... THE FILM CAME LOOKING FOR ME...!!!
Excellent
Fabulous film 👍😊
They don't make them like that anymore. Brilliant film
This is great . Thank you ever so much for uploading . Can you please upload more scenes from this movie in HD?
I watched this film when I was a little kid in France thanks to my Dad who was in charge of the Film-Club in the school where he taught. I was mesmerised.
My Dad passed away a few months ago. This is very emotional for me.
My sincere condolences for your loss Heimat, may your dad rest in peace.
@@Loverboy19691 Thank you Andrew Dexter. You're very kind.
Alan Young was in The Time Machine 2002
Rod looks remarkably like Robin Williams.
Dana James I absolutely have to agree big time !
Now I cant unsee that. He doesn't really; I can see what you are getting at though.
I love the clothing they are wearing
I love this movie and it's my second favorite, next to the "Back to the Future" trilogy. I've seen this movie hundreds of times and I just now noticed something odd in this scene. At first, we see the cigar has a pointy tip and extends all the way to the front, touching the bar on the model. But when the model begins to travel through time, the cigar is actually smaller. It doesn't have the pointy tip and it doesn't extend to the front bar. I'm surprised I didn't catch that before. Anybody else notice?
RJ
It is well known that cigars don't react like other objects when traveling through time. They shape shift.
A beautifully made movie of an H.G. Wells classic.
I just realized, this scene features Pongo (Rod Taylor), Bagheera (Sebastian Cabot) and Scrooge McDuck (Alan Young). Really cool.
And here I thought I was the only one that noticed Scrooge Mcduck in this
I bet to this day and year that little time machine is still going
Its a shame this model was destroyed in a house fire in the 60's.
Don't worry old chap. . .for it shall return. . . all in good TIME!
@@misterwhitman4368 damn ole crazy Doc Brown.
What a great movie that was and actor
Announcing The Return of George Pal's Puppetoons with "The Puppetoon Movie Volume 2" - Puppetoon.Net
I say John Rhys-Davies traveled into the past to cameo in this movie.
No, That is The Great Actor Sebastian Cabot
@@robertthomas5736Or maybe ua-cam.com/video/P4nfHAM7qiA/v-deo.html lol
I remember thinking he was the most beautiful man ever as a little girl 👧🏼
Makes me ask the questions:-
Can or will man ever travel in time?
Has God arranged our future already?
Why are we here?
Does time exist, or is there just the present?
What happens to us when we die?
When will man ever learn to understand and live in harmony with nature?
The kind of films that makes us wonder about deep things are the best ones.
Pongo, Scrooge McDuck, and Bagheera, in the flesh❕
I love this movie!👍👍👍👍👍
Homeboy straight up put his drink down and became a teetotaler
The main lead is the voice of Pongo from 101 Dalmatians
You would think, since he is such a great inventor and engineer, you could put a little mechanism into the model to snap the activation lever back to off a variable amount of time after it is turned on. Then they would see the machine appear and disappear, AND put a pocket watch on board. You see the protype disappear, reappear, about an hour later, then check the on board watch and see that only a few seconds had ticked on the watch. Also, he says that the machine does not move in space. But he must mean "in space relative to the room it it sitting in." because through time, the earth itself moves at about 5000 miles per hour. in fact is a a real challenge to know what "still" even means, in the cosmic sense. Nothing, fails to move in space.
It probably would be much more difficult to create a small size time machine than a normal size time machine. And imagine that little time machine, it's still traveling onward through time, with a cigar on the seat. That could have massive consequences! What will happen to it when the universe collapses? What will God do if he end time and space and finds that this thing is still speeding through time? ;-)
If there isn’t an end to time, then the machine would continue on uninterferingly. If there is an end to time then the machine would simply reach it sooner (from our perspective) but not from the perspective on someone at the end of time
Best movie ever, sadly Yvette Mimieux (Weena) died in January 2022 the last player in this movie.
For me this is a dream to be real until i die...
Its Aaron Slick from Punkin crick!
Super
THE CLOSEST YOU WILL GET TO THIS IS MAN LANDING ON THE MOON...AND YES...THERE WAS PEOPLE BORN IN VICTORIAN TIMES..WITNESSING....IT ALL....SAME FEELING ...FAR OUT MAN .....DID YOU LIKE THAT SIXTIES STYLE ...??
Rod Taylor (Jan. 11th, 1930-Jan. 7th, 2015). I saw the doctor's future: he's going to meet Buffy and Jody!
I’m imagining these Victorian gents sitting around in George’s living room getting baked and discussing time travel while pouring wine and passing joints
The Eloi went to Sunday Brunch and asked for "More LOX"
MY FAVOURITE PART OF THIS FILM....I HOPE TO AQUIRE A MODEL ...BUT...ITS GOING TO TAKE ..SOME TIME £££"😊
Yvette--R.I.P.
That's Pip from the Twilight Zone Episode, "A nice place to visit".
This movie as inspired a DJ of Geometry Dash doing the Song: Time Machine
The story said the morlak are destroyed.. so the peoples from surface are free.. but the earth is so big.. its not logical that all those morlaks only Summarize or existing in that small area..
kinda think he should have found that model millions of years later after its battery ran out and it stopped moving forward
It has no battery.
one of my ALL time favorite movies..I often dreamed of being able to Time Travel
Cool to see Sargon of Akkad was doing movies back in the 60’s
1:42 Things to Come is another HG Wells novel.
Yupyup iambob thanks again
🌹
Were I found the full video?
I guess it’s my Wilson gregory time machine now .
Wells is gone .
My time machine is also disk drive and generates lots of power .
ROd Taylor...yuuuuuuuum
It's a brilliant and classic movie and I'm sorry to say this but around 0:49 I just hear in my mind Cat from Red Dwarf saying...'So what is it?' 😄 Also I can't help but chuckle at the fact he could make a tiny scale model of the machine when we know he couldn't logically have built one at that scale knowing the technology and parts he had at the time. BUT...I still love it obviously, the remake was OK and there were some very cool and funny bits in it but this will always be my favorite. Has much more spirit and a much better and more accurate sense of wonder from the book I think.
I WONDER !!!?
Now this is Waterflame powered.
1:05
1:31
Mr. French!!! 😊
What is the four dimensions of time
Where is the rest of the scene
1:31 Waterflame - Time Machine Part
Just to be clear, building a time machine would be hard enough. Building a working model would be even harder. Imagine the tiniest parts in the actual machine, now picture them model sized to be built. 🤣
I'm fairly sure no one in the late 1890s had machining tools small enough to work on such a device, but H.G. Wells added that touch I guess to add to the mystery of the Time Traveler.
Why would it be gone? It does not travel through space, just time. If it would work and you put a wtch on it, it would allways sit there and the clock would look like it is frozen.
It is travelling at an amazing speed (like 100 days per second), so it would be at any single day an infinitesimal amount of time.
Where'd it go?
It carried on into the future until _eventually_ its power source eroded away and was able to stop and wait for whoever stumbled upon it at whatever point in time they happened to stumble upon it.
Hopefully the whole machine itself didn't erode away in the meantime. :)
STONE HENGE IS THE CLOCK
If it was moving through time into the future, it shouldn't have disappeared.
It keeps geeting speed when it travels (like 100 days per second or more), so it would be pretty much invisible to anyone outside its sphere of influence.
I wonder where that cigarette would have ended up?
Cigar! :)
Look at the size of the thing! 🚬
⬆️ (Bigger than that!) ⬆️
If the machine is travelling forward (at any speed) in time, it wouldn't disappear. Come to think of it, neither would it disappear if it were going backwards; it'd already be visible, surely?
My head aches. I'm definitely overthinking this.
Maybe it was traveling to fast to any "exterior light" hit the machine and bounces back to our eyes - what creates the possibility that any Time Travel would be in complete dark.
Because it is compressing time either in front of it or behind it, what is happening is essentially the same thing as the bow shock when a vehicle approaches the speed of sound, or light. It disappears because the moments in which it exists are infinitesimally smaller than our frame of time. One second in our time is maybe a femtosecond or attosecond in its time, depending on how high a compression rate we're talking. It still exists in that space but for such a tiny period of time in any one instant that it can't be touched or seen.
I thought the same thing. The time for everything "on" the machine would just freeze.
Is that Sebastian Cabot?
yes
the tempolar experiment 1
If I could go back in time to 1950 and tell the world the dangers of Climate Change and how it could push Earth into another mass extinction by 2050, that would be great!
And it would be as big a fabrication in 1950 as it is now. The earth has always changed climate. It's driving force is the sun. Quite simple, actually. Everything else is merely politics.
Lol
In a way the humankind already know the dangers of climate change since the 1890s, but...
@@joehamlet7576 that is a weak excuse, because the difference between what’s happening now, and what’s been going on in the past, is that it’s changing at a faster rate then ever before. Do you know what happened the last last time the earth came even this close to such a dramatic chance in climate in such a short span of time. The extinction of 95% of all life on the planet 252 million years ago
In a week , I’ll film my time machine...
I’ll explain how I got the disk generating energy.
I don’t understand... why build models and not the real thing ?
I got mine powered up ....
The disk drive was tricky ...
But I got it generating energy...
The who,e point if the smaller model s just to show how it works
the demonstration makes no sense, tho it would've if he put in a candle (that later shows up) and showed that it doesn't decay but is somehow frozen
Your demonstration also doesn't make sense, since the model and the candle would vanish when it starts travelling at maximum speed forward.
@@ErickSoares3 suddenly ppl start replying to comments I made years ago. I wasn't "rectifying" the whole demo, as I said, it doesn't make sense
so that's why everyone in past smoked so much
The 2002 Reboot was ok, but this version wins out.
Seen it many times now, so anymore I stop watching when he gets to final destination of eternal children and little green monsters. The first half of the film is great,.
Thats one hell of a blunt
Too bad the that model was destroyed in a house fire.