In these films the time machine is quite a mysterious device and in no way is it portrayed as a technology that is easily accessible to anyone in the future. It is constructed, in both Back to the Future and The Time Machine by the odd ball scientists and done in a very do it yourself fashion, not some sort of marketable futuristic product from a company. Because there is no known existence of a physical time machine its form is up for interpretation by the films. The designs of both time machines are a product of the times they are built in, in the films. In The Time Machine it took on a sled like look with a large rotating dish, a Victorian chair for the pilot and brass railings around the chair as described in the H.G. Wells novel, which the film is based on. Being that the film took place in 1900s they could not yet use the idea of the time machine being powered through any sort of atomic or nuclear power and again went back to

Both films abided by a similar principle: you can travel through time, not space. Both machines never moved spatially upon arriving in the past or future, they arrived on the exact spot that they occupied in the present time. However, both films chose to display the act of time travel quite differently. Back to the Future had Marty cruising at 88mph then sparks whirled out from the car and it appeared to almost instantaneously explode and reappear in another time period. Another difference from The Time Machine is that the DeLorean has to be set a to a specific date to travel to, whereas H. George Wells simply pulls a lever where time passes faster the more he pulls the lever. Time-lapse photography and stop motion animation were used in The Time Machine to show George

Time travel has yet to be proven possible but no one has proven it impossible either. We currently cannot travel through time in the same sense that Marty or George did in the films. In our measurements of time there have small ways one could technically travel into the future. Through suspended animation the organs of the body are slowed and in a sense frozen in time while everything else continues. Of course this can only be done for a short amount of time before damaging the body but it technically brings one forward in time without aging for that amount of time. There are also various other theories on the possibility of traveling back in time using a wormhole, which appears to be possible in comparison to Einstein’s ten equations of general relativity. There are many theories of time travel but we have yet to be able to harness the power needed to do so. Even if we have the power to travel through time, we would have to be cautious as to what the repercussions of traveling through time might do to our present time. Paradoxes such as the Grandfather Paradox, in which say a man travels back in time and kills his grandfather before meeting the traveler’s grandmother and in turn never being able to create the traveler. This would mean that the traveler could have never traveled in time to kill his grandfather. These paradoxes could be explained away by the theory that in traveling back in time you instantly create a parallel universe as suggested by Hugh Everett’s many worlds interpretation. His thoughts were that “there is a very large, perhaps infinite, number of universes and that everything that could possibly happen, or could possibly have happened, in our universe (but doesn't) does happen in some other universe(s).”
Back to the Future clearly addresses the issues of time travel and the possibility tearing the fabric of time and space. One of the main struggles in the film is for Marty to make sure his father gets back with his mother after intervening in how his mom and dad were supposed to meet. As the film progresses and the further the younger versions of his parents drift apart he sees a photo of his brother and sister and him begin to disappear. This would happen because if his parents don’t get together there is no way Marty can exist. It also proposes the notion that

Although the reality is that we may never experience time travel; these films help us realize that we need to make the best of the time we are in now. Knowing the possibility that our world could be a dark decrepit place can only inspire people to become better with the environment and with others. While we wait for the most intelligent minds in the world to discover the possibilities of traveling through time, we will be immersed in fantasy films like these that help us visualize what time travel could possibly be like and let our imaginations do the rest.
1. Back to the Future. Robert Zemeckis. Perf. Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd, Lea Thompson, and Crispin Glover. 1985. DVD, Universal
2. The Time Machine. George Pal. Perf. Rod Taylor, Alan Young, and Yvette Mimieux. 1960. DVD, Galaxy Films Inc.
3. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_travel
4. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Everett
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