Project Almanac

2015 "Today is better the second time around."
6.3| 1h46m| PG-13| en
Details

A group of teens discover secret plans of a time machine, and construct one. However, things start to get out of control.

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Reviews

WasAnnon Slow pace in the most part of the movie.
SnoReptilePlenty Memorable, crazy movie
Noutions Good movie, but best of all time? Hardly . . .
Reptileenbu Did you people see the same film I saw?
ventura-jose35 The only parts I liked were the classroom scene and the ending.
Pjtaylor-96-138044 'Project Almanac (2015)' is so utterly bland, not to mention ultimately forgettable, that you simply can't care about anything happening on-screen. It almost doesn't matter that the film relies so heavily on convention and breaks its own rules a number of times, mostly those relating to its overall presentation rather than its time-travel mechanics, that it becomes nothing more than a time-looped repeat of better films past... almost. There's nothing to draw you in here, not the hackneyed plot or hokey acting or humdrum presentation, and there's no real surprises to keep you interested once you are. You can totally check-out and still understand the purportedly 'complex' plot. 5/10
ziggy-6 I really liked the cast and storyline but just cannot get past the erratic camera work..ditto with all those others of similar style (Cloverfield, Chronicle etc.)... sometimes i found myself looking for a character who seemed to have left the screen suddenly....why why why do this
vsd324 Right off the bat this movie has two strikes against it. First, I can't stand found footage films. This technique is used to make things seem more "real," but it just makes it hard to watch. If I'm watching a move with any kind of sci-fi, paranormal activity or supernatural elements, I suspend reality and enjoy the movie. If a movie says that a being torments and kills people by getting at them through their dreams, I accept those terms for the movie and that's the end of it. If I don't suspend reality, the concept is outrageous whether the film is from a shaky camera or neatly edited by a post-production staff. The second element I can't stand is time travel whether it's in a comical movie like "Hot Tub Time Machine" (2010), a serious plot such as "The Terminator" (1984), or even in the form of blatant science like the Stephen Hawkins documentary "A Brief History of Time" (1991). Time travel means infinitesimal points exist of which traveling to can alter the entire path in that existence therefore there are infinite realities, and an infinite copy of every atom in the universe (therefore every person). If that statement confused you…GOOD! In this movie, an intelligent high school senior finds a time machine created by his father who passed away when he was 7. He and his friends get it to work, with the limitation that they can only travel to the recent past. They begin to see how their actions largely affect the present (now which present?) like in "The Butterfly Effect" (2004). The concept that small changes can radiate into larger, even catastrophic changes IS an interesting philosophical concept, and was the saving factor of this movie in the movie, memories are altered as they travel back. What determines which time travel's alterations stick? The most recent? But what is recent when you're traveling through time? And why with the time travel, memories get altered, but one thing that never changes is the video being recorded?