Tagline:
To save his future he must alter his past.
Wide Release Date:
January 22, 2016
Directed by:
Jacob Gentry
Written by:
Jacob Gentry
Produced by:
Christopher Alender, Alexander Motlagh
Starring:
Chad McKnight
A. J. Bowen
Brianne Davis
Scott Poythress
Michael Ironside
PREGAME THOUGHTS
♫ ♬♫ ♬
We know you
They know me
Extrasensory
Synchronicity
A star fall
A phone call
It joins all
Synchronicity
♩ ♪ ♫ ♬♩ ♪ ♫ ♬♩ ♪ ♫ ♬♩ ♪ ♫ ♬
THE 750(ish)-WORD SYNOPSIS
I think this takes place in the future! There’s this guy named Jim, a physicist, played by a guy named Chad McKnight who doesn’t even have his own Wikipedia page! This guy’s the star of the movie! He kinda has a young Daryl Hall look to him. You see, this Jim guy, he’s cracking time travel! He and his two buddies, the less nerdy Chuck (A. J. Bowen) and the more nerdy, possibly profoundly autistic Matty (Scott Poythress), work hard, sleepless nights trying to create a wormhole from the machine via very dangerous and expensive practices. One wrong move and everything explodes and takes out half of North America with it! Maybe. They didn’t actually say that in the movie, but it’s part of my overflowing Synchronicity headcanon. The machine requires radioactive material that is supplied from a company owned by Klaus Meisner (Michael Ironside), who is their principal funder and he’s got them all by the balls.
It’s important to know that one test creates one half of the wormhole, and a second test creates the other half of the wormhole. That part’s important. Don’t forget it or the next paragraph won’t make sense! Got it?! Good!!!
Ok, let’s get into it! Jim and Co. run their first test and receive a Dahlia flower encased in a glass cylinder from the wormhole. That’s cool! They don’t have enough radioactive material anymore to run a second test, which is something they should have planned ahead on. Jim and Co. can’t prove the machine actually works without the second half of the wormhole, so they beg Klaus for more money. He wants 50% ownership of the machine and the process, but Jim gives him 49%. Klaus is ok with that. For now. The second test is scheduled one week ahead.
Jim meets Abby (Brianne Davis), an impossibly attractive young woman, right outside of the facility. Jim gets suspicious right away because she kinda sorta seems to maybe know who he might be. Possibly. Things get weirder when his beardy buddy Chuck calls him and tells him not to trust Abby at all. It’s like, how does Chuck know this unless… *gasp* …did she come through the wormhole along with the Dahlia?!??!?!
Well, whatever. Jim starts boning Abby who, for some reason, likes him back. They bone for a while until Abby does something untrustworthy: tells Klaus about the flower. Now Klaus, because the flower is property of another one of his companies (?), threatens Jim with a big fat lawsuit and extorts him for 99% percent ownership of the machine. Little Jim gets 1% and now he’s a sad sack.
So now that Jim is all busted up and broken, he gets impulsive during the second wormhole test and runs through the machine in front of his friends, Abby, and Klaus. This is proof that he sent something through the wormhole that wasn’t Klaus’ property. Jim is transported to one week prior, the day of the first test.
This is when the movie gets Back to the Future II on our asses. New Jim plays through some of the events on his own time as Old Jim starts his relationship with Abby, including meeting Abby before Old Jim meets her, and telling Chuck to call Old Jim to warn himself about Abby. Among other things, Abby interacts with both of them and New Jim learns that her motivations with him did not involve scheming or unseemly motives. As time goes on, New Jim’s health starts deteriorating from what I can only fathom as TIME SICKNESS, especially when he’s in close proximity to Old Jim. Paradoxes and whatnot. Things in this world are slightly, ever so slightly, different. Parallel universe, one Jim cannot live while the other survives. It’s a real trip, man.
When the day of the second test arrives, New Jim tries to leave the city. When he tries to get a room at a hotel, he learns that he himself has already booked a room. He finds another version of himself dead on the bed.
New Jim goes back to the hotel across from Abby’s apartment that he has been staying at to avoid Old Jim, where he learns that Abby was attempting to get more radioactive material to open the second wormhole to save New Jim’s life. It didn’t work! Abby finds him dead as a doornail, which is quite dead, in fact. Very dead.
Later, while Abby sits alone in a café, she is approached by Old Jim. He’s in good shape! This is because when he entered the wormhole, this time all the Jim’s were dead. The universe he ended up in had no Jims. No Jims to make anyone sick. Jimless. Do you get it? Good. Abby continues her relationship with him.
TOM’S DISCUSSION CORNER
TOPIC 1 — General Movie Thoughts
Time travel paradox movies are tough to pull off because such a story needs room to breathe. Over the course of a multiple TV episode arc, if done right, can be real satisfying trip. 100 minutes? Oof, good luck. I think Synchronicity almost gets it right until they start talking about parallel universes and multiple dimensions with slight differences. I’m a firm believer of the “whatever happened, happened” Lost rules of time travel vs. the “YOU HAVE TO FIX THE FUTURE, MARTY” Back to the Future rules of time travel. Even if Back to the Future is in my top five movies of all time, it still irks me that altering the past can influence the future. Because I have a Bachelor’s in Astrophysics (literally), you can take my word as gospel that time is a constant as a temporal dimension — the fourth, if you will — and it already exists as it is and as it forever shall be. Don’t get me started on philosophical conversation of determinism vs. free will, damnit. That’s a topic for another laborious crafted blog post.
I thought the movie was following the Lost tenet of time travel until Matty talks about the impossibility of two Jims existing in the same universe, pointing out the necessity of a jump into a parallel universe for it to have happened. Boo to that! It’s perfectly fine for New Jim to just flat out die as he does in the same universe, ending the Jim continuum once and for all. That’s when Jim’s time should be up. Instead, they bring in a third alternate Jim dead on a hotel bed after New Jim attempts to book a room, which wasn’t kosher. Plus, little differences between the universes such as location of Abby’s notebook (Abby’s apartment in one, Jim’s pocket in another). It makes for a knotty, somewhat confusing narrative.
The story was ok, but the acting wasn’t the greatest. I don’t know who Chad McKnight is; he must be a friend of Jacob Gentry. Dude doesn’t even have a Wikipedia page. His acting was probably better than anyone else’s in the movie, save for Michael Ironside. Brianne Davis sucked, but she was the obligatory sci-fi movie eye candy. I liked her haircut, but not her acting!
This movie is apparently a love letter to Blade Runner, but I can’t comment upon that since I’ve never seen either Blade Runner. So I’ll just make a bold claim, sight unseen, that yes, this is just like Blade Runner! You are quite welcome.
TOPIC 2 — Putting Myself in Jim’s and Abby’s Shoes
Here’s something I like to do! I like to place myself within movie and TV characters because I’m a big, insufferable nerd. Abby’s plot path is more interesting, but let’s start with Jim. His adventure begins when he opens up the first half of the wormhole and thinks that the girl of his dreams stepped out of it. He’s got people telling him not to trust her, he’s got himself to tell him not to trust her, and she seems to be doing things that happen to be untrustworthy. OK. Fine. And he spends most of his time rerunning through the week gripping his head and grunting. Then he dies. That must suck. Time travel sucks.
ABBY! She gets to see New Jim right before Old Jim leaves the facility, so she has the upper hand in this relationship before the end of minute one. In the second half, you see Abby interact with both Jims back and forth. Keeping a relationship going, dealing with Jim’s paranoia about what turned out to be her own sci-fi story instead of a collaboration with Klaus, and trying to help save him as he’s dying. A tall order for two weeks of knowing someone who is likely half-delirious from lack of sleep.
What about Klaus’ shoes? No. Fuck that guy.
IMDb TRIVIA FUNHOUSE!
According to the director’s commentary, the scene in which Jim runs out of the lab and encounters Abby was filmed under the Georgia Dome.
They had to work around the Atlanta Falcons’ practice session. Chad McKnight got hit in the head with a football 43 times during only 5 takes.
During the scene where Jim is driving away from dinner. The bat signal is shown in the sky from one of the buildings.
LOL! SOMEBODY IS A BATMAN FAN! NEEERDS!
IS IT WORTH A WATCH?
I kinda liked it! But you probably won’t. And I won’t see it again. The reviews are horrible across the board, but I’m extremely forgiving when it comes to time travel stories. It’s my favorite stupid sci-fi plot device, after all. If you’re a similar idiot, then give it a shot.
Plus, it’s kinda cool how this film looks like it’s right out of the ’80s. They did a good job with production. OK, I’m done.
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