Review: Timeline

If at some point over the last few days you've done something that you might be feeling guilty about... something particularly mean and nasty.... bad enough that you feel you deserve to be punished in some way...

Then I highly recommend you rent Timeline and force yourself to sit through the entire thing.

I read the book by Michael Crichton when it first came out and actually enjoyed it quite a bit since I'm a huge fan of time travel stories. The one stray thought I had as I read the book, and I remember this quite clearly, was that I felt like I was reading a story that was not written as a novel, but written as a novelization of a movie. For some reason it just felt like he wrote this specifically for the big screen. Unfortunately, if that was his intent, it has been sadly served by this turkey.

The premise is that a Bill Gates kind of guy has tried to create a matter transporter ("which will put Fed-Ex out of business") but instead has inadvertantly created a time machine. They have no control over the time or place, which due to some random wormhole, has made the only possible destination 14th century France. People go back, get trapped, must be rescued, yadda yadda yadda.

An archaelogist (Billy Connolly, completely wasted here) has been getting information from this Bill Gates character concerning a specific dig site. Information so detailed that ol' Billy suspects there's something fishy going on and heads to the lab to investigate. Meanwhile Connolly's son (Paul Walker, who is... well, I'll get to that later) who is completely uninterested in things archaeological happens to be visiting. Walker is infatuated with a young digger (Frances O'Connor) to the point of distraction.

So. Dad disappears, son gets all fired up, and the whole archaeological team is invited to go to the secret lab. BTW, for some reason at this dig site, a physicist is part of the team. No, I don't know why either.

They must go back, find dad, and bring him back. Now considering the character of the guy in charge of the company, I'm not really clear as to why this was so imperative to him, unless this multi-billionare (one assumes) was cowed by one phone call by Walker.

It was obvious this movie was a stinker from the first 5 minutes, I kid you not. Richard Donner directed this, and I have to say the man is hit or miss as far as the movies he's made. I wanted to blame this movie on the editing, but that's just one of the many things wrong here. The editing, especially during the first 15 minutes or so was so choppy that I wasn't really clear on what was going on. The movie cuts between present day (in the lab) and the 14th century, and when it does it's just plain jarring.

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