The key here is to keep things moving without letting the logical (or illogical) complications weigh down the action, and [director] Vigalondo does this well.
Timecrimes (2008)
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Reviews Counted:14
Fresh:12
Rotten:2
Average Rating:6.8/10
Consensus: Timecrimes is a low-budget thriller that's well-crafted and loaded with dark humor and bizarre twists.
Theatrical Release:Dec 12, 2008 Limited
Synopsis: In the early evening, Hector figures he deserves a little break from moving into his new house and retires to his lawn chair in the backyard. He won't have traveled more than a mile from this spot... In the early evening, Hector figures he deserves a little break from moving into his new house and retires to his lawn chair in the backyard. He won't have traveled more than a mile from this spot before he falls into a spinning wheel of existentialist dread--a stunning nightmare that pushes RASHOMON-style multiple-perspective storytelling so far past its outer limits that it flips into its very inverse. Through his binoculars, Hector spies something in the nearby trees--it appears to be a woman undressing. Hector's inevitable investigation results in a bizarre but fleeting encounter with a terrifying figure wrapped in pink head bandages, followed by an intense escape that takes him to a strange silo which houses a mysterious machine. The events that "follow," to use a term loosely, make for what might be the most flawless time-travel story in the history of movies. Where BACK TO THE FUTURE, TERMINATOR, and most other beloved time-tampering films are accepted only because they fudge the implications of causality in an entertainingly forgivable way, the Spanish-language TIMECRIMES does no fudging; it simply hurtles its audience into an unnerving thought experiment and, from there, never submits to a significant break in logic. Propelled by mesmerizing déjà vu, twisted yet camouflaged tragicomedy, and a low-key sense of queasy dread, this TWILIGHT ZONE-ready tale effortlessly transforms its rather mundane setting into a disturbingly surreal landscape. There is nothing out-of-the-ordinary about the grassy yards in which the movie takes place; it's just that they're lit by the kind of natural twilight of dusk--at once familiar and strange--that makes everything seem as if it's playing out in the mind's soundstage. Through its subtle, uncommon characterization, TIMECRIMES deftly reconciles its temporal-mind meditations with an eerie account of a loving man who acts in spite of himself. [More]
Starring: Karra Elejalde, Nacho Vigalondo, Candela Fernandez, Barbara Goenaga
Starring: Karra Elejalde, Nacho Vigalondo, Candela Fernandez, Barbara Goenaga
Director: Nacho Vigalondo
Director: Nacho Vigalondo
Screenwriter: Nacho Vigalondo
Producer: Esteban Ibarretxe, Eduardo Carneros, Javier Ibarretxe
Composer: Chucky Namanera
Studio: Magnet Pictures
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Release:
Mar 31, 2009
Reviews for Timecrimes
The director operates his metaphysical contraption with enough wit to jolt away your skepticism.
The modest satisfactions of Timecrimes come down to a protagonist divided against himself.
Timecrimes is like a temporal chess game with nudity, voyeurism and violence, which makes it more boring than most chess games but less boring than a lot of movies.
The idea isn't bad, and Vigalondo makes the pretzel logic of the situation lucid, but he doesn't have the chops to give the tale the suspense and humor it needs.
It begins slowly, but when it gets going, it rings a series of amusing, if not entirely unpredictable, changes on the theme 'what if you went back in time and changed things?'
It's not the first time a movie has played with the idea of a time traveler encountering an earlier version of himself, but the exceptionally gripping film takes the concept to a new level of devilish circularity.
Spanish filmmaker Nacho Vigalondo's low-budget brain-drainer Timecrimes is only half as clever as it thinks and even less entertaining.
Proof positive that a naked hottie and whiz-bang pacing can disguise gaping narrative cracks, Timecrimes makes sci-fi lemonade out of low-budget lemons.
Even though Vigalondo's obvious direction lingers over every carefully arranged tile in the toppling-domino plot, there's still some sinister amusement in watching them stack and fall.
Its verve and smarts more than make up for its occasional lapses in technique and casting.
Twisty time-travel drama is rather hard work, but ultimately provides modest pleasures.
The latest in a line of effective, low-budget genre items out of Spain, Nacho Vigalondo's feature debut shows that good cinematic time travelers can be done on a shoestring with the right script.
Latest News for Timecrimes
November 27, 2008:
It should come as no surprise that Hollywood is going to mess it up, sorry, we mean remake it . . . ![]()
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November 27, 2008:
It should come as no surprise that Hollywood is going to mess it up, sorry, we mean remake it . . . ![]()
More...
November 26, 2008:
Trailer & Poster review ![]()
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August 28, 2008:
A SciFi brainteaser with a noirish morality at its heart, Nacho Vigalondo's Time Crimes is a twisted, at times darkly comic tale of flawless construction. ![]()
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