Time Lapse is a 2014 American indie sci-fi thriller and the directorial debut of Bradley King. The film centers upon a group of friends who discover a machine that can take pictures of things 24 hours into the future, causing increasingly complex causal loops. It premiered on April 18, 2014 at the Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival.
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Plot
Finn (Matt O'Leary) is a painter with a creative block, who lives together with his girlfriend Callie (Danielle Panabaker) and his best friend Jasper (George Finn) in an apartment complex where Finn works as a manager. Because the elderly tenant, Mr. Bezzerides (informally called "Mr. B" by the protagonists), across the way has not paid his rent in two months, Callie goes to check on him, and discovers a strange machine in his apartment that takes Polaroid photos of their living room's picture window--apparently 24 hours in the future, always at 8 pm, although Mr. B's photo display includes daytime photos. The friends check Mr. B's storage unit and find his inexplicably charred corpse; he has apparently been dead for a week. Gambling addict Jasper pushes to use the machine to win bets, as he usually loses, and the next day's photo confirms they will do just that. It also shows that Finn has finally created a new painting; copying the work in the photo gets him past his block. Based on what happened to Mr. B and notes in his journal, they realize they have to make sure the events in the photos--whatever they may be--have to occur, or their timeline will stop, and they will therefore cease to be.
Several days go by. The friends cover up Mr. B's disappearance, including lying to the complex security guard, Big Joe, claiming the old man is in the hospital. After a week they get a disturbing photo: Callie kissing Jasper, while Finn paints in the background. The actual kiss goes on too long while Finn paints, and he gets angry and jealous. Jasper's violent bookie Ivan learns of the machine, and forces the friends to now pose for the photos with many more event results for Ivan to make bets on. Finn and Jasper's friendship is strained by these events, as Ivan will be keeping each night's photo, preventing Finn from seeing his painting. Even so, Jasper gets a cellphone picture of the next photo before giving it to Ivan's goon, Marcus. This photo shows a hastily made skull and crossbones on the canvas, which Jasper believes is a warning to themselves.
The next evening, Finn runs into Big Joe at the gate, who has just gotten a job as a police officer. Marcus sees their meeting and calls Ivan, who does not believe their story about Big Joe just dropping off his keys. Ivan threatens all of them, but Jasper convinces him that tonight's new photo is of Ivan's death. While Ivan is retrieving the photo, Jasper stabs Marcus, then clubs Ivan to death on his return. They hide the bodies in Mr. B's storage unit. Finn and Callie fight, so Finn sleeps on the couch. Later that night, they are visited by Mr. B's colleague, Dr. Heidecker, who levels a gun at Finn and Jasper and forces them to reveal events. Mr. B had mailed Heidecker a photo that covers the next night, but taken before his death, meaning that the machine could be set to take photos more than 24 hours in advance. The photo shows blood on the window, Mr. B's hat on the friends' couch (Jasper has taken to wearing the dead man's hat), and a picture of a green coil that resembles the broken device on the ground next to Mr. B's corpse. As she does not know how to adjust the settings of the machine, Jasper shoots Heidecker dead using Ivan's gun.
The next night's photo shows Callie and Jasper having sex in the window. Finn talks to Jasper, trying to figure out a way to prevent events, but Jasper knocks him out and locks him in Mr. B's storage--he intends to prevent a paradox and make sure the photo happens, no matter what. Trying to find a way out of the locked storage unit, he searches Heidecker's purse and finds the photo that includes blood on the window, Mr B's hat on the couch, and the painting on the coil, and realizes that he will paint the coil in the future the next day so that that Mr. B would die in the storage room in the first place, thus allowing him to escape using Mr. B's keys. He escapes and threatens to destroy the machine if Jasper does not stop. A fight ensues, culminating with Callie smashing Jasper's head in. When making the painting to match Heidecker's photo, Finn realizes a discrepancy. He discovers that the camera also takes a photo at 8 am, a truth which Callie kept to herself. Callie reveals that she has been using the morning photo to send herself messages to manipulate events and rekindle her relationship with Finn; the sex photo is one of those missing from Mr. B's wall, from a drunken night a month ago. Finn rejects Callie and goes to destroy the machine, so she shoots him, creating the blood splatter on the window from Heidecker's photo. While Callie is attempting to send herself another message to change the timeline, Big Joe stops by, discovers the murdered Jasper and Finn, and arrests her.
As Callie is led away by Joe - confident that the timeline will reset - the note she left falls off the window, making permanent the events that have taken place. The camera takes the photo that Mr. B had mailed to Heidecker before he died, and generates another photo, which is left unrevealed.
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Cast
- Danielle Panabaker as Callie
- Matt O'Leary as Finn
- George Finn as Jasper
- Amin Joseph as Big Joe
- Jason Spisak as Ivan
- David Figlioli as Marcus
- Sharon Maughan as Dr. Heidecker
- Judith Drake as Mrs. Anderson
- John Rhys-Davies as Mr. Bezzerides
Influences
The premise of being able to see 24 hours into the future is also the basis of several other movies and television shows. Who is Running?, Early Edition, The Queer Story of Brownlow's Newspaper a story by H. G. Wells which was made into an episode of The Infinite Worlds of H. G. Wells, and Paradox.
The relationship dynamics among the three main characters and the single location in Time Lapse are also drawn from Danny Boyle's 1994 film Shallow Grave. As a low-budget drama focused on time paradox, it has been compared with Shane Carruth's Primer.
Time Lapse also has several elements in common with episode 46 of The Twilight Zone called "A Most Unusual Camera": there are 3 protagonists, two male and one female, they come in possession of a camera that can take pictures of 5 minutes into the future and they also happen to use it to win money from horse races.
Reception
Critical reception for Time Lapse has been positive. Bloody Disgusting praised the film, and The Hollywood Reporter complimented it for making "the most of a simple brain-teasing premise". The Digital Journal also praised the movie, writing "It's not unconventional or particularly ground-breaking, but it is a solid piece of storytelling." Variety also reviewed the movie positively, stating that "the pic never feels claustrophobic despite largely being confined to the protagonists' flat. All tech/design contributions are savvy but unobtrusive, never wresting attention from an ingenious narrative measured out in unhurried yet always-engaging terms."
Rotten Tomatoes currently lists the film at 71% fresh.
Awards
- Best Actor/Actress for Danielle Panabaker at the London Independent Film Festival (2014, won)
- Best Feature at the Fantaspoa International Fantastic Film Festival (2014, won)
- Best Feature at the Thriller Chiller Film Festival (2014, won)
- Best Feature at the Portsmouth International Film Festival (2014, won)
- Best Feature at the Atlanta Underground Film Festival (2014, won)
- Best Feature at the Burbank International Film Festival (2014, won)
- Best Feature at the Austin Other Worlds (2014, won)
- Best International Feature at the London Independent Film Festival (2014, won)
- Best Foreign Feature at the Fantafestival (2014, won)
- Best Drama Feature at the Atlanta Horror Film Festival (2014, won)
- Best Feature Audience Award at the Ithaca International Fantastic Film Festival (2014, won)
- Best International Sci-Fi Feature at the Trieste Science+Fiction Festival (2014, won)
- Best Sci-Fi Feature at the Feratum Film Festival (2014, won)
- Golden Honu Award for Best Feature at the Big Island Film Festival (2014, won)
- Best Horror/Sci-Fi Feature at the Crystal Palace International Film Festival (2014, won)
- Shriekfest Award for Best SciFi Feature at the Shriekfest (2014, won)
- Vortex Grand Prize Best Sci-Fi Feature at the Rhode Island International Horror Festival (2014, won)
- Best Screenplay at the Maverick Movie Awards (2014, won)
- Best Screenplay at the Orlando Film Festival (2014, won)
- Best Screenplay at the Austin Other Worlds (2014, won)
- Best International Screenplay at the Rojo Sangre Film Festival (2014, won)
- Indie Cities Breakthrough Film at the Twin Cities Film Festival (2014, won)
Source of the article : Wikipedia
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