Time and Again (TV Movie 2007) Poster

(2007 TV Movie)

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6/10
Surprisingly Good
Jackie_Michele6 May 2007
I prefer movies that make me think. I had to think a lot with this movie when I saw it last night. I kept telling my roomie...this is a hard movie to understand. This is a very interesting take of time travel itself. That is ultimately what got me to sit through this movie.

I recommend this movie if you want something other than fluff. It is interesting and it is deep. However, you should realize this is not a movie that was made for the theaters. Unfortunately, you have to ignore the Forrest Gump wannabe or simply take him with a grain of salt. I didn't care for many of the supporting characters and would have preferred other people but it wasn't my choice. I will say a lot of the characters you have to grin and bear.

Overall, the acting was good. It could have been better.

Everything does come together at the end in a very nice "Aha!" moment. Do your best to sit through the end and you will get it all.
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6/10
Ending doesn't make sense!
noelle100029 January 2008
Warning: Spoilers
***SPOILER*** OK...the ending was "feel good"...but it really made no sense. If the music box changed things every time it was opened...and she decided to destroy it to stop the changes...then theoretically the "time stamp" should have put her back to when she first opened the box. Instead, she is placed 6+ months before that to the exact time when she could prevent her family from getting into a fatal accident. Why that exact time?

And, try to wrap your head around this, if it puts her back at that exact moment...then her aunt hasn't died yet and she hasn't inherited the house yet and hasn't discovered the box yet. I cant take it!!!! hmmmm I smell a paradox

And I TOTALLY agree with comment #1. A total Forest Gump wannabe. At least he didn't talk about "his momma"
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5/10
What???
Christampery18 February 2016
How do I rate a film that I don't even believe exists? "Time and Again", the beloved novel from the 1970's by Jack Finney, was never made into a movie, despite a number of ill-fated attempts over the years. The latest I saw was to be directed by Doug Liman after he finished the Tom Cruise/Emily Blunt sci-fi film; before that, it was Robert Redford. There was even talk at one time of Spielberg being involved. At one point, there was even thought of it being a Broadway show.

"Time and Again" is one of my favorite books that I have read a number of times. I would love to see a movie of it; I just wish that it actually existed at this "time".
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5/10
Leave the past behind
sol-kay10 May 2007
Warning: Spoilers
**SPOILERS** Confusing as well as mind bending past altering and time travel story that has to do with this cockamamie music box that whenever its opened and plays its tune strange things begin to happen to the person who activated it. The movie "Time and Again" tries to be mysterious in it starting off six months into the future from the events that we'll soon be exposed to. We see poor and totally confused Anna Malone, Brooks Burns, being interrogated in the police station about something that she did which can put her behind bars for a long long time. As the movie slowly unfolds we start to get an idea of what Anna was involved in that put her in the predicament that we find her in and it has to do with this music box that she found hidden her her late Great Aunt Helena's house.

We get to see that Anna is filled with guilt over the deaths of her husband and daughter Neil & Chloe, David Ingram & Erika-Shaye Gain, in that she forgot to bake some home-made cookies for them that had both Neil and Chloe drive to the nearby bakery only to end up getting killed in a car smash-up. As we're trying to get a grip of what Anna is going through in her depression over the deaths of Neil an Chole she receives a visit from this lawyer James Elliott, David Franco. Elliott tells the shocked and surprised Anna that she inherited the house, as well as the seven acres of land around it, of her recently departed Great Aunt Helena Bruckner whom Anne never even knew existed.

It's when Anna is cleaning out Great Aunt Helena's home that she finds under lock and key this lock-box that has, after she bangs the lock open, this antique music box that turns out, according to her antique dealer friend Susan (Morgan Bryton), to be worth a small fortune. It also later turns out that the box is cursed and whoever plays with it, like her late Great Aunt Helena, ends up losing their mind. It's not until Anna runs into the somewhat simple-minded handyman Billy, Paul Anthony, who offered to help her renovate the house that she got an idea of just what this strange box is all about. What she finds out is so unbelievable that it takes the rest of the movie for Anna to realize what a danger it represents to not only her but even Neil and Chole who, at least up to that point in time, are no longer around to be effected by it.

The movie "Time and Again" is just like it's title says in that time and again were subjected to a number of unrelated events where the persons in them, like Anna, switch sides from being a victim to being a victimizer. You get the feeling that the film is suffering from a bad case of film-editing where those who made it seem to have no idea of just what they think the movie is supposed to be all about. Billy the Forrest Gump-like handyman tries to warn Anna to get rid of the box, that we learn from him was the work of the Devil, before it drives her to go insane. But being who he is a simpleton who also has a very serious speech impediment he's only treated with benign contempt by Anna only with her later realizing that he, despite his trouble communicating, was right on target in what he was telling her.

Anna disregarding Billy's warning about the box uses it to bring back both Neil & Chloe only to have herself arrested by the police for kidnapping her daughter, where in fact she was the person who rescued Chloe from her kidnapper. Ann is now faced with either a long jail term or stay in a mental institution with the events of both Neil and Choles return from the dead being turned upside down in the dirty tricks the evil box is constantly playing on her.

The ending is a total downer in that Anna comes full circle in reliving the accident that took both Neil and Choles lives and we're, together with Anna, forced to go through the same scenario only to have some kind of surprise ending. That after you've seen it you begin to realize that it was only put into the movie in order to finally end it and thus end the suffering of those in it.
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7/10
filmed on location
wreck_beach12 June 2007
It is a nervous and exciting thing to see a film on the screen in a space so familiar to your life as your own house. I grew up in "the crazy aunt's" house in this movie. It was surprising to see how the floor plan of the house as it was in the movie changed from the way it actually is in real life. People would run through doorways and come into "the next room" only to be somewhere completely different, or they would come running down a stair case from a room that wouldn't make sense with where they had supposedly come from. Ahhh the magic of film huh?

As for the movie itself, I give it a high 6 to a 7 out of 10. It was better than I expected overall, however its always hard to get good acting out of a child and some of the lines seemed a little rough/weak either in their delivery or just in the dialogue. Its one that definitely does make you think. The plot is good but the character development would need a lot of work to turn this one into a theatre production. Besides, its only 1.5 hours--clearly made for TV.
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8/10
Excellent script on a budget
eb99913 March 2010
Warning: Spoilers
I was really pleasantly surprised by this film. I didn't have any high expectations, but I'm fascinated by time travel and will watch anything built around it. This script was really interesting especially in using the idea of parallel universes, but I kept thinking how much better the movie would have been if more had been done with it. I figure that a lot of this had to do with budget. Stripped down scenes (i.e. the whole original accident scenario being condensed into one talk between Anne and her psychiatrist) could have been fleshed out and shown on screen. Also, It bugged me that "Anne" seemed to always be wearing the same, or very similar clothing and that her hairstyle never changed. Again I put this down to budget, but it was noticeable.

Brooke Burns was quite good but some of the other actors were marginal. The woman playing her psychiatrist was unconvincing and the couple owning the bed and breakfast seemed a bit corny. Although the "simple" young man acted okay, his role was never explained effectively.

I think this script was good enough to have been made into a feature with a few tweaks and a topnotch production team behind it. Some of the plot twists were obviously telegraphed (Susan being dead in the second scenario) and could have been more delicately handled. Also, I think the child predator story line was really lame.

But overall, there was a strong structure to the plot and the ending was satisfying. Maybe, it will be made again with everything just a little better. I'd be happy to see it.
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8/10
Now Entering the Twilight Zone!!!
lavatch28 September 2019
Warning: Spoilers
"Für Elise" is a Beethoven composition with a haunting refrain. The mysterious Elise, whose identity is lost to history, is as enigmatic as the fictional Carl Dusseck, who made the music box that has tormented those who open it and listen to Beethoven's immortal music.

Anna Malone is a workaholic restorer of old houses, who loses her husband and daughter in a tragic car accident. She feels responsible because they had to go out of their way to the soccer field when she forget to purchase snacks.

Later, Anna may have an opportunity to atone, due to the magical music box that belonged to her mysterious aunt, Helena Bruckner. But does the music box really offer those powers? Or, does it merely send Anna on a frustrating journey into the Twilight Zone in different planes of time?

The conceit of the film is intriguing enough to do Rod Serling proud. Anna travels through time on each occasion that she opens the music box. But young Billy Moss may be prophetic in warning Anna about the box's dangers. He witnessed first-hand how it destroyed the life of Anna's aunt. Each time the music plays, a door opens to parallel time, sending the listener into the unknown. It is all random, and, according to Billy, it is a fate worse than death.

The actress playing Anna did a splendid job of capturing the Kafkaesque feeling of helplessness against the capricious music box. The teleplay offered a good assortment of supporting characters, including Anna's co-worker Charlie, her best friend Susan, and the elderly couple Mr. and Mrs. Walkin, who run a bed and breakfast dear Aunt Helena's home. The jovial Mac Walkin possesses one of the secrets that may offer Anna to end her torment once and for all.

The film was lively and well-paced with a good array of subplots. After watching this film, one will never hear a rendition of the popular "Für Elise" again in the same way. Next stop: The Twilight Zone!
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