THE TIME MACHINE
In this updated (Rod Taylor starred in the 1960 version) cinematic adaptation
of the classic H.G. Wells novel, the angular Guy Pearce plays a
turn-of-the-century time traveler whose primary concern is not science but an
issue of the heart. His fiancée has been killed, so he invents a
chronology-traversing contraption in an attempt to alter her history, but no
matter how many times he redirects the circumstances, she still dies. In search
of answers, our intrepid protagonist heads 800,000 years into the future, only
to get marooned in a bleak world where civilization is no more and humans are
cattle for the Morlocks, a sadistic lot of subterranean humanoids who make the
Orcs in The Lord of the Rings look civil.
In the hands of director Simon Wells (H.G.'s great-grandson), the slick
contemporary FXs cook up plenty of visual sizzle, and Pearce does convey a
compelling resolve, but it's not until our erudite hero is tossed into the
atavistic futurescape that the story begins to titillate. Orlando Jones is a
cheeky plus as the ageless New York librarian with almost all the answers, and
Jeremy Irons nearly swipes the show as the pasty-head Morlock with an extra
cerebellum sprouting from his spine. At the Apple Valley, Entertainment,
Holiday, Hoyts Providence 16, Showcase, and Tri-Boro cinemas.
Issue Date: March 8 - 14, 2002
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