
For example, consider Planet of the Apes, Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure, and 12 Monkeys. Time travel exists but we need'nt worry about our protagonists fucking things up.
Then there are movies that focus quite specifically on this paradox, but do it with so much style and thought, we are moved to forgive them. The excellent and perplexing Donnie Darko is a good example of this.

I'm not sure how much more I want to tell you about it, except that it's probably worth seeing. Many, I'm sure, detested it. My god, this movie is probably the worst possible thing I could have my father watch. But I appreciated how seriously the writers took the topic of time travel - the paradoxes form the basis of the entire narrative structure.
The only way to resolve time travel paradoxes (and it's not entirely satisfying, of course) is to create alternative time-lines (universes) every time someone activates a machine. This is necessary because the mere presence of an individual in the past creates a different future. Furthermore, it prevents infinite loops that would halt all of reality (travel back to the past, live, eventually travel back to the past, live, etc. - the so-called, predestination paradox).
Here's a simple schematic of the time travel in Primer, which could very well apply to every story featuring temporal movement.


It's the complete breakdown, created by some committed fan of the work. After watching the movie, you might want to at least glance at it to see if some of your suspicions are confirmed. Regardless, my tiny human brain could not process all of these possibilities at once - and so, ultimately, Primer must be judged on whether it is a satisfying artistic experience. I'm not sure if it is. It really is all about the time travel - there's nothing else that matters - and if that frustrates the hell out of you, the film-makers say, "too bad, you probably shouldn't have rented this."

Fortunately, you can enjoy the book as historical fiction about what it may have been like to be a pirate in those days. Wolfe is obsessive about his research, and if you know anything about the history of piracy, you'll be able to identify important events and patterns in the text. For example, at one point early in the story, our protagonist, Chris, is left on the island of Hispaniola by the English privateer, Capt. Burt. On Hispaniola, Chris falls in with Frenchmen surviving by hunting wild cattle - the historical origins of the buccaneer. It's an action-oriented plot, and it's about pirates god damn it, so there's killing and torture and raids and booty and even hidden treasure. Wolfe never forgets the essential trappings of whatever genre he is writing within.

I'm curious to know how other people feel about time travel as a narrative device. Leave a comment if you're so inclined.
My favorite time-travel movie is the ridiculous film "Time After Time." Malcolm McDowell plays HG Wells, father of science fiction. He builds a time travel machine, and in it travels to modern day (1979) San Francisco. The real kicker in the film is that our hero HG isn't alone: Jack the Ripper manages to come along for a ride into the future!!!! What a great plot! What awesome seventies cheese! Truly great.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.geocities.com/malcolmtribute/timeafter.html
a). the universe is deterministic. done and done.
ReplyDeleteb). also, our model of time or time-space is probably insufficient for this kind of thing. i think without the proper tools (e.g., neural hardware) to 'perceive' time correctly, this dialogue inevitably spirals into discussions of reality. and we all know how that ends. or rather, doesn't end.
threeve). Bill and Ted (-10.5) over D. Darko.
My fave time travel book is The Man Who Folded Himself, by David Gerrold... he really gave the paradoxes of time travel some thought and makes it work.
ReplyDeletehey, great suggestion, ed. i just checked it out on amazon and it looks awesomely old-school and interesting. i'll see if my local library has it.
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