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Time Gentlemen Please
Rod serves up an historical Perspective of HG Wells' 'The Time
Machine' - in print, as well as HG's recent sfx-dripping voyage onto
the big screen.
The Time Machine - an Historical Perspective.
by Roderick S. MacDonald
At 32,000 words, 'The Time Machine' by HG
Wells is more a novelette than a novel. Project Gutenberg's website
at www.gutenberg.org
is an excellent place to download this and a host of other books
zloty free (also free in other currencies including the Euro).

Not overly arduous to read, you'll comfortably zoom through the
somewhat staid Victorian text on a rainy Sunday afternoon, and there's
been plenty of them recently.
The first thing you'll notice is that the original varies considerably
from both the 1960 film starring Rod Taylor and the recent abominable
effort which was reviewed in the July edition. The Time Traveller,
as he is referred to in the novelette, relates his experiences in
first person to a group of his associates, most without names too.
We have the Medical Man, the Psychologist and the Provincial Mayor
to name a few and this anonymity gives the impression that any one
of us could be the Time Traveller himself. Perhaps Wells intended
this to be the case? Either that or he couldn't think of names for
his characters.
At any rate, the Time Traveller is more of a Dr. Who figure than
a man with a specific mission. (Perhaps it's wrong to compare him
to someone who came later but this is all about time travel, isn't
it?) He is an adventurer. Maybe, as we all have, he has a few qualms
about society and the way it is progressing but this isn't his reason
for wishing to travel through time. He wants to see what's out there.
He wants to rise above the lives of ordinary humans to see what
destiny decrees for our pitiful existence.
Wells should have attempted to write more adventures for the Time
Traveller thus giving us a collection of Dr. Who type stories going
backwards and forwards in time. We'd have more educational stories
than Dr. Who because I think Wells would have attempted to socially
analyse time periods other than his own.
This in itself would have been interesting for us today. Reviewing
other times from the viewpoint of 1898, when the original was written,
would also give us considerable understanding of late Victorian
attitudes but it would fall down on its science. A lot has happened
in the last one-hundred-and-four years.
After his encounter with the Morlocks and Eloi about eight-hundred-thousand
years hence, the Time Traveller decided to see what the future had
in store for earth. Travelling thirty million years forward, he
came to a dying world where our planet always kept the same face
towards the sun, much as the moon's rotation has been captured by
the Earth today as a result of tidal forces.
Though this will happen to Earth, it won't be for billions of years
and it will be caused by the Moon's gravity, not the sun's. Huge
crab creatures moved over the beach while overhead strange flying
things circled in an endless quest for food. It was a depressing,
futile place.
In the Wells future, the sun was a cool, giant sphere near the
end of its life and all the planets had all spiraled inwards to
become quite close to this meagre source of heat. The latter, he
simply got wrong because it had been known for some time before
1898 that planetary orbits don't behave in this way. Irrespective
of how old the sun is, planets don't move closer unless something
acts to slow them down.
It's also the case that in thirty million years time, the sun
will be little different from what it is today. In fact, we'll have
to wait another five billion years before the sun begins to end
its life, first as a bloated red giant which will envelope the inner
planets, and then as a progressively cooling white dwarf star.
A century ago nobody knew what process acted to make the sun hot.
It was speculated that a huge cloud of gas had condensed and the
energy released from the friction of this event kept it at a reasonable
temperature.
Physicists of the time calculated that the energy derived from
the collapse of a mass of gas the size of the sun would only keep
it going for a few million years - a long time to us but totally
insufficient for all the geological processes to form the Earth's
surface and for evolution to produce us. They didn't know about
nuclear fusion! It was, however, a brave attempt by Wells to show
what fate awaited the Earth.
Wells also had no idea when writing the novelette that, within
his own lifetime, two immensely destructive world wars would be
fought. In his fictional future where the Time Traveller met the
Eloi and the Morlocks, this separation into above and below ground
species had been caused by the divergence of society from its social
groups.
This rigid stratification was so deeply ingrained in Victorian
society that Wells must have considered it to be permanent and beyond
change. The upstairs/downstairs life of the time was extrapolated
to produce the Eloi and Morlocks. This being the case, one wonders
if Hudson was a cannibal in the making!
The Time Traveller acquired a female companion by the name of Weena
but she was a child-like being who required his protection against
the Morlocks. There was no sexual attraction between them. Unfortunately,
the poor girl was roasted in a forest fire, probably after she was
killed, and the Time Traveller while somewhat put out, was nonetheless
glad she'd escaped the jaws of the cannibalistic Morlocks.
The 1960 film, produced and directed by George Pal, is the one
most of us are familiar with when it comes to 'The Time Machine'
story. Here, the Time Traveller is a more congenial and human figure.
Again, he is an adventurer but he's also dismayed and distraught
at the almost constant state of war which seems to exist in his
time.
Looking for something better in the future, he almost comes to
grief in a nuclear war and is entombed within a massive lava flow
which forces him to travel eight-hundred-thousand years into the
future. In fact, it's the nuclear war which causes events on Earth
to transpire as they do.
This is a delightful film. With its time-lapse photography which
gives the illusion of speeding through the hours, days and months,
we were intrigued and enchanted by its effects. It was a mistake
to try this again with a new film. The Time Traveller, George by
name, took sides with the Eloi in the future conflict and he developed
a romantic liaison with Weena.
Admittedly, the Morlocks are sloth-like creatures afraid of a burning
match but in their situation, they probably didn't have to be much
more than this. After all, for thousands of years they only had
to cope with the mindless wimps from the surface which hardly necessitated
them being battle-hardened storm troopers.
The 1960 Academy Award for best special effects went to Gene Warren
& Tim Baar for 'The Time Machine'. The ferocity of the nuclear
explosion that destroyed London was chillingly effective, especially
because it was dated to occur in the mid-sixties, right in the middle
of the cold war. Overall, this film was enhanced by the quality
of direction and special effects and also by Rod Taylor who gave
a good performance as George.
I bought the DVD version of this movie. It also included a contemporary
lengthy feature on the making of the film and other aspects of its
production, hosted by Rod Taylor, which explain how the actual machine
was constructed, how it was sold to a travelling showman and subsequently,
it's retrieval and refurbishment.
The machine used in the recent film is very similar to the above
version. In fact, with its time bubble, I'd say the new version
is better than the old but other than that, the 1960 film is far
superior in just about every way.
I would even say that the 1960 film is better than the original
story by Wells. It's more complete, compassionate and poignant.
Where the original Time Traveller wanders through time, almost as
a tourist, the Rod Taylor portrayal is more like us. He cared enough
for Weena to return to the future to be with her and to help rebuild
civilisation whereas the novelette version just disappears in time,
seemingly depressed at the fateful final outcome to Earth's history.
One thing that is never explained in any of the versions is the
modus operandi of the time machine itself. Sure, we have explanations
about time being the fourth dimension, which is just an extension
of the other three dimensions of length, breadth and height but
nobody tries to explain how the machine actually passes through
time.
This is probably because nobody has the faintest idea. Perhaps
the disk of the machine would have to rotate with an angular velocity
in excess of light but, as we all know, this is impossible for a
vast number of reasons, Einstein's relatively notwithstanding. Anyway,
should someone actually know how it's done, they'd likely use their
machine to skip into the future, write down the lottery numbers
and then return to make a fortune.
Why was the Time Machine story successful? There's a certain fascination
we all have about looking into the future. Some try it with cards,
tea leaves, fortune tellers or the entrails of a goat, each method
probably as effective as the other, while the more intellectual
try to study trends in history, physiology, sociology and the stock
market, with a similar lack of success. The future isn't determined!
Even if we have a good idea of how things may go, it's only guesswork.
Like H. G. Wells, we are unable to predict what will happen in the
next fifty years.
Making a journey through time would be a fascinating experience.
We would be surprised and shocked to see what will materialise.
And, as the traveller, we'd see our friends and family grow old
while we remained untouched. For a while, it would seem that we've
escaped the whole process of time itself. We'd be as gods.
But it isn't like that. In the 1960 film, George met his friend's
son on two occasions, first to be told that the old friend had been
killed in the First World War and second, when the son was an elderly
air raid warden, just before the nuclear bomb exploded. In the additional
DVD material, an aged George travels back to prevent his friend
being killed.
This time, the ageing was in reverse.
Time catches up with us whatever we do.
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