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Journey to the Center of Time 1967 Remastered MagicFilms a division SnowMagicFilms The Very Best In Remastered Rare And Hard To Find Cult Classics And Films
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00:00:01During the span of man's evolution, time has been measured by the journey of our planet through the darkness of
00:00:09space.
00:00:10Scientists use our solar system and the cold, vast regions of the universe as a giant timekeeper.
00:00:18Time has a quality as hazy and distant as the perimeter of our own galaxy.
00:00:24The haze occasionally clears for those minds which inquire into the very nature of the fabric of time itself.
00:00:33And a glimpse of the true meaning of time is revealed.
00:00:38Time, from creation to now, tugs toward all yesterdays almost as strongly as the unborn tomorrows that stretch toward all
00:00:49eternity.
00:00:51Someday, man will strike a balance between these two great universal forces, the past and the future.
00:00:59And then, will man make a fantastic journey to the center of time.
00:01:06The End
00:01:07The End
00:07:59Hey, it worked great.
00:09:13You're good.
00:09:17I'm...
00:09:21So, this is...
00:09:24You're here to work.
00:09:24work. Nothing worth doing is done easily. Was there any damage, Karen? Nothing serious. The
00:09:32circuit breakers all worked. Oh. Mark? Something's burned out. It looks like one of the time selector
00:09:37circuits. Nothing drastic. But that takes care of our demonstration very nicely. Good heavens,
00:09:45I've forgotten all about that. Well, if I know Stanton, Jr. and his one-man committee to, quote,
00:09:50investigate and evaluate existing research projects to determine future appropriations,
00:09:55unquote, he hasn't forgotten. And he and his sharp little blue pencil are due here any minute.
00:10:02Doctors Manning, Gordon, and White, please report to main conference room. Mr. Stanton has arrived
00:10:08with Mr. Denning. How's that for a cue? It'll do. Let us go. Gordon. You know Mr. Stanton. He's very
00:10:18eager to learn more about this project of yours. Mr. Stanton, Mr. Denning, my colleague,
00:10:23Ms. White, Dr. Manning. Gordon, Gordon, Gordon. Oh, yes, Gordon. Yes, Dr. Gordon, I believe my
00:10:32father granted you the largest appropriation of any research project of last year. Fourteen million
00:10:37dollars. Uh, to be exact, it was, um, oh, yes, thirteen million, seven hundred and ninety-four
00:10:43thousand, five hundred and twenty dollars and twelve cents. Why? We're working on a project which
00:10:49is entirely new, Mr. Stanton. That means new types of equipment, new techniques, much
00:10:54experimentation. Why, Dr. Gordon? What makes your project so important? Perhaps this might interest
00:11:02you, Mr. Denning. This is what really started Dr. Gordon on the project. Why, it looks like an old
00:11:06newspaper clipping. It is. Uh, may I? Well, don't keep it to yourself, Mr. Stanton. Let me in on it.
00:11:15All right,
00:11:15Washington, D.C., November 27th. An announcement has been made concerning an airborne eye that sees
00:11:20the past as well as the present. Now, what this particular instrument accomplishes is this. Operating
00:11:25from a height of some forty thousand feet in space, the eye looks down and reflects moving images of
00:11:30people and objects not then present, but, uh, that were there on the previous day. But that's impossible.
00:11:37Uh, developed by the Department of Defense and used to gather information on missile bases in Cuba,
00:11:42the TV lag eye somehow picks up reflections of activity and things from some time before, referring
00:11:49them to an observation screen. For instance, the eye may pass over an empty parking lot to capture pictures
00:11:55of the spot when it was filled with cars during the day. You photographed the past? Well, that's
00:12:03substantially correct. I don't know, but taking pictures of a parking lot the way it appeared a few
00:12:07days previous, what strikes me is the height of useless occupation. Hardly worth almost 14 million
00:12:13dollars. As useless as raising a crop of mold on old bread? Yes, if you like. That's probably exactly
00:12:18what they told Fleming before he called his mold penicillin. Now, see here, Manning. Gentlemen,
00:12:24gentlemen, please, why don't we all sit down and let Dr. Gordon explain how this multi-million
00:12:30dollar gizmo of his works? Certainly, I'd be glad to.
00:12:41Our experiments here are an extension of one of the fundamentals of Einstein's theory
00:12:48of relativity, the curved universe. Theories, Dr. Gordon, only theories. Proven, Mr. Stanton, proven.
00:12:56We know that there is a definite relationship and a peculiar one between time and the three
00:13:02dimensions of space. Time may therefore be considered a fourth dimension. I'm afraid I don't
00:13:08follow you, Dr. Gordon. Now, take this booklet. It may be set to exist in space in three dimensions,
00:13:17length, width, and height. Of course. Ah, but it wasn't always like that. Before it took that shape,
00:13:23it existed as paper, as wood pulp. And at any time, it may change its dimension. So,
00:13:32it still exists, but its three-dimensional description is no longer valid except for a
00:13:38certain period of time. Time is therefore a necessary fourth dimension.
00:13:45Yes. In fact, every object, every object from this booklet to the entire universe,
00:13:50may be set to exist in what the scientists call the space-time continuum.
00:13:55Doctor, may we come back to just what contribution you have made to this matter, please?
00:13:59Certainly.
00:14:01All right. Have you had any success ever with any of your experiments?
00:14:04Yes. Partial success. We've been able to go back in time 24 hours.
00:14:1124 hours.
00:14:19Not at all. We're working with an entirely different principle.
00:14:26Well, Dr. Manning?
00:14:28Instead of the infrared beam principle used in the early experiments, our system is based on a laser beam.
00:14:33Laser beam?
00:14:34It stands for light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation.
00:14:39Oh, I see.
00:14:42It's a one-color coherent light beam, which is extremely selective.
00:14:46It doesn't spread like ordinary light. The rays stay parallel.
00:14:50A laser beam is like one perfect note from the virtuoso's violin, while ordinary light is like the
00:14:57noise from a practicing high school band. It's...
00:15:01May we dispense with your lyrical classroom lecture and get down to the facts, please?
00:15:05Now, I still don't know what it is you gentlemen are trying to do, if you'll excuse my ignorance.
00:15:09If it's all right with you, it's all right with me.
00:15:12Gentlemen. Gentlemen.
00:15:13Uh, so you think you can take a peek at the good old days there with this laser beam system
00:15:20of yours,
00:15:20Doctor?
00:15:21Yes.
00:15:22The past, of course, still exists.
00:15:25Oh?
00:15:26Suppose a scientist on a planet some 50 light years from here were observing Earth.
00:15:32He would, at this moment, be looking at light rays that left this Earth 50 years ago.
00:15:37He might very well be watching the First World War.
00:15:40In effect, some full 50 years of history would be contained in those beams traveling to that distant planet.
00:15:48That's quite an idea.
00:15:50It's more than an idea, Mr. Denning. It's fact.
00:15:54And since space-time is a continuum, the present is only a point moving constantly along that continuum.
00:16:02When you put it like that, Doctor, even I can understand it.
00:16:06Theoretically, with our equipment, we should be able to cut in anywhere along that continuum.
00:16:11Actually, journey to the center of time.
00:16:15And why haven't you been able to get beyond the 24-hour mark?
00:16:18Well, that's a question to which we haven't found the answer yet.
00:16:21Now, Doctor, I understand that you refer to this, uh, watching the past as phase A of your project.
00:16:25Yes.
00:16:25And that phase B is really the important aspect of it.
00:16:28That's correct.
00:16:29Would you mind telling me just what is phase B?
00:16:39Looking into the future.
00:16:41Oh, really? Looking into the future?
00:16:44Now, despite all the trouble you've had looking into the past, you still think you can succeed in this, uh,
00:16:50scheme?
00:16:51We do.
00:16:52And for what purpose, may I ask?
00:16:53We are on the threshold of space travel, Mr. Stanton.
00:16:59Actually traveling to other planets.
00:17:02Our existing predictor instruments are not adequate.
00:17:06Predictor instruments, Doctor?
00:17:08Instruments that are used in jets, rockets, spacecraft.
00:17:13They give predictive information about the future.
00:17:16Look into the future, as it were.
00:17:18But their capacity is measured only in seconds.
00:17:21Now we need to look ahead hours, days, even weeks.
00:17:26Fascinating, Dr. Gordon.
00:17:28Absolutely fascinating.
00:17:30Yes, it's all very interesting, Doctor.
00:17:31But I must say it's also, also very, very far-fetched.
00:17:37It's all very interesting, Doctor.
00:17:37Doctor, are you prepared to demonstrate this, uh, looking into the future for us now?
00:17:42No, not quite yet.
00:17:43No, I thought not.
00:17:45Well, gentlemen, I'll take into consideration your request for funds, but I'll have to warn you.
00:17:48If you don't come up with anything more concrete within 24 hours, I'll be forced to shut down this section
00:17:53and convert it to weapons development.
00:17:55Good day.
00:17:59Doctor?
00:18:01Young Stanton isn't quite like his father.
00:18:04He hates to put the family money into anything that isn't going up.
00:18:08And why doesn't he put it all into taxes?
00:18:10That's the only thing sure to go up.
00:18:13You shouldn't antagonize the man, Ma.
00:18:16He's a farmer's fool.
00:18:18Oh, we know that empty vessels make the most noise, but unfortunately we're dependent on this one.
00:18:31We wondered where you disappeared to.
00:18:34Just getting a little fresh air.
00:18:37Boring won't do any good.
00:18:39I guess not.
00:18:42It's such a lovely evening.
00:18:45The mountains look so much softer in the moonlight.
00:18:49Yeah.
00:18:52It doesn't get to you at all, does it?
00:18:59What?
00:19:01All this.
00:19:05What would you like?
00:19:07A serenade?
00:19:08Poetry?
00:19:09Why not?
00:19:11All right, I can be poetic.
00:19:14Let's see.
00:19:15Uh, a lady of science named White will travel much faster than light.
00:19:19She took off one day in a relative way and returned on the previous night.
00:19:24You nut.
00:19:28You know, you're actually...
00:19:34You're actually quite pretty for a girl.
00:19:36Well, you're not entirely impossible yourself.
00:19:42There's even a full moon.
00:19:46The perfect setting for romance.
00:19:52It's a shame for it to go to waste.
00:19:56What do you say?
00:19:59Help yourself.
00:20:25Susan.
00:20:26Good morning, Mr. Denning.
00:20:27How are you this morning?
00:20:29I'm not so sure after getting caught in that rainstorm last night.
00:20:33Here today for the test?
00:20:35Oh, yes, yes. I'm looking forward to it.
00:20:37It should be very interesting.
00:20:40Yeah, we were just discussing that.
00:20:42Mr. Stanton come in yet?
00:20:43I saw him in the hall a little while ago.
00:20:46He was on his way down to the time vault.
00:20:49I think he's going to watch the test from there.
00:20:51Oh?
00:20:52Well, I won't be in the way if I watch it from here, will I?
00:20:55Oh, no, not at all.
00:20:55Dr. Gordon just told monitoring to stand by.
00:20:58I think they're ready for countdown.
00:21:01Oh, I'd better get a move on then.
00:21:02See you later, Mr. Denning.
00:21:03Right, Dave.
00:21:08I've changed the settings gradually.
00:21:10Now, I'm sure the circuits are all regular.
00:21:12Right.
00:21:14Stay with it for a while, Dave. We're running a check.
00:21:17No hurry.
00:21:17I've got all the time in the world.
00:21:20Past, present, and future.
00:21:22Don't worry about a thing.
00:21:24I'm going to run a computer check for myself.
00:21:34Oh, by the way, maintenance replaced the burnout circuits last night,
00:21:37so everything should be A-OK.
00:21:40Cut the image stabilizer.
00:21:43Switch is off.
00:21:45Stand by.
00:21:47Setting minus one.
00:21:55Sitting minus two.
00:22:13Morning, Gordon.
00:22:14Oh, Mr. Shantel.
00:22:16Setting minus three.
00:22:18Mr. White, Manning, Mr. Stanton.
00:22:22Well, I hope for your sake,
00:22:23you people have something to show me this morning.
00:22:26In a minute, Mr. Stanton.
00:22:27Setting minus four.
00:22:29No, I'm not against sinking money into research.
00:22:32As long as it pays off.
00:22:34It didn't take Stanton long to get into the act.
00:22:37Setting minus five.
00:22:39Setting minus six.
00:22:45Seven.
00:22:51Eight.
00:22:52Nine.
00:22:54Ten.
00:22:56There, that does it.
00:22:57Circuits check.
00:22:58Standing by for exterior systems check run.
00:23:02OK, that's what we're waiting for.
00:23:03Phase B.
00:23:04OK, phase B it is.
00:23:07Resetting time selector.
00:23:08And starting recheck on countdown.
00:23:13Ten.
00:23:14Nine.
00:23:15Eight.
00:23:16Seven.
00:23:18Six.
00:23:19Five.
00:23:20Four.
00:23:21Three.
00:23:22Two.
00:23:23One.
00:23:24Marked.
00:23:25Time synchronization 100.
00:23:28It's all yours, Doc.
00:23:30Take her away.
00:23:31I set the time selector at zero plus 24 hours towards the future.
00:23:47Time selector set.
00:23:49Stand by to activate time transport circuits.
00:23:52Standing by.
00:23:54Five.
00:23:56Five.
00:23:58Five.
00:24:01Five.
00:24:02Five.
00:24:03Five.
00:24:05Five.
00:24:05Five.
00:24:12Switch on.
00:24:15Switch is on.
00:24:17Time transport system indicators...
00:24:19...no go.
00:24:23How's it for you in there?
00:24:24Negative.
00:24:27I'm going to increase the power input.
00:24:30Save the overload indicator.
00:24:31I'll only take it to maximum capacity.
00:24:55Take it.
00:24:58There's only one other thing we can try.
00:24:59Accelerate the laser beam cycling.
00:25:03Mark, we've never subjected the unit to such speed.
00:25:05It's a risk. I say take it.
00:25:07Now, wait a minute, Manning.
00:25:08You have no authority to make a decision as rash as that.
00:25:11Dr. Gordon is in charge of this project, not you.
00:25:16It may shatter the laser's ruby, Mark.
00:25:18Or it may not.
00:25:19If it does, we're out of business.
00:25:21But if we don't get this damn thing working, we're out of business anyway.
00:25:26Very well, we'll try it.
00:25:40Oh, that's enough, Mark.
00:25:45What's the reading?
00:25:46I don't know.
00:25:48I can still accelerate, but the needle's glued to the top of the flash pulse indicator.
00:25:51No way of telling what our cycle speed is.
00:25:53Better decelerate.
00:25:55No.
00:25:56Wait.
00:25:56It could be the time transport calibrations.
00:25:58They may be off.
00:26:01Try moving the transport ahead.
00:26:10Keep going.
00:26:18To the top.
00:26:24Keep going.
00:26:25That's it, Mark.
00:26:26I've passed the maximum of input now.
00:26:28How far?
00:26:29Oh, a hundred thousand years.
00:26:31There's twice that.
00:26:32Even more.
00:26:35I'm bringing time transport back.
00:26:38Time transport back to zero hours.
00:26:41Hold it there.
00:26:42I'm going to open the photon cycling all the way.
00:26:44No.
00:26:45Don't do that, Mark.
00:26:51You are welcome.
00:26:51I'm going to open theìš´rd in theinga.
00:27:01That's enough.
00:27:04Don't reverberate.
00:27:04Don't listen to me.
00:27:04No.
00:27:05No.ivo,
00:27:13purposes, come on. No,
00:27:14don't be offended when you get associated with the FR- releasing. You won't
00:27:15throw away. You can go
00:27:23THE END
00:27:55THE END
00:28:22THE END
00:28:25THE END
00:28:26THE END
00:28:28THE END
00:28:39THE END
00:28:52THE END
00:28:54THE END
00:28:56THE END
00:29:10THE END
00:29:11THE END
00:29:11THE END
00:29:23THE END
00:29:27THE END
00:29:30THE END
00:29:43THE END
00:29:45THE END
00:29:49THE END
00:29:51THE END
00:29:51contact with them, wherever they went.
00:29:56Susan, has a monitoring been able to establish a bearing on the lab?
00:30:00Negative.
00:30:01Monitoring tried to establish contact, but any attempt at communication with the lab has
00:30:06failed.
00:30:06Apparently, everything's been cut off from within their unit.
00:30:09Then that means they're really lost, doesn't it?
00:30:12No, not necessarily.
00:30:13They're still getting a faint but steady signal from their laser beam pulse system.
00:30:17Monitoring is attempting to trace that signal now.
00:30:21Trace it?
00:30:21To where?
00:30:24To whatever dimension in time or space they've traveled into.
00:30:29You mean they've traveled somewhere into time?
00:30:32Well, I follow you, but not very far.
00:30:36Well, you're familiar with the time-space continuum?
00:30:39I'm familiar with the theory.
00:30:41All right, then.
00:30:42Now, that lab is still inside the time vault, but somehow they've transported themselves
00:30:48through some warp in the continuum.
00:30:50Monitoring has just completed their test data from the recorder into the computers.
00:30:55We should know very shortly how far and in what direction the lab has traveled.
00:30:58Then what do we do?
00:30:59Well, it's a wild chance, but before the overload, all our systems and circuits were synchronized
00:31:04with those in the lab.
00:31:05A central control is equipped to take over complete control of the lab in the event of any emergency,
00:31:10such as a power failure from within the lab.
00:31:13Monitoring reports that time synchronization to the lab was set on plus factor, phase B.
00:31:19They've traveled into the future.
00:31:20The future?
00:31:22How far?
00:31:23Well, there's no way of telling their exact time coordinates, but according to the laser beam,
00:31:28the lab has stopped moving.
00:31:30Quick, get engineering up here right away.
00:31:32I want all the plans of the time transport circuits inside that lab.
00:31:36The overload burned out certain vital circuits and apparently has created new ones.
00:31:41New ones that somehow, somehow we're going to have to duplicate here in our master control
00:31:46if we ever hope to bring them back.
00:31:48We've done it.
00:31:49The future.
00:31:51A window 5,000 years into the future.
00:31:56I almost wish we hadn't.
00:31:58Why do you say that?
00:32:00It's almost as if we've discovered the end of the world.
00:32:03We don't know that.
00:32:04There can't be as much to do.
00:32:06We've got to take note of every reading, record what fuses have been made,
00:32:10and what new connections have been made in the transport system.
00:32:13I don't know if those circuits are stable enough not to burn out.
00:32:17We'd better work fast.
00:32:18It won't be long at this cycling speed before the laser explodes.
00:32:25You know something?
00:32:27It looks like you could step right out into it.
00:32:33We're in the center of some sort of nuclear war.
00:32:36Doctor, get us out of here before we get killed.
00:32:38This is not a window into the future.
00:32:41This is real.
00:32:42The lab, we, have been transported here physically.
00:32:45A time rift.
00:32:48A warp of the space-time continuum.
00:32:52That matter
00:32:53can pass through.
00:32:55You're traveling 5,000 years in a matter of seconds.
00:32:59Come on, the condition will deteriorate suddenly.
00:33:02The readings.
00:33:03The new circuits, quickly.
00:33:05Look, the hatch.
00:33:22You're not be alarmed.
00:33:23We mean you no harm.
00:33:26We observed your craft as it appeared from nowhere.
00:33:30You'll please come with us.
00:33:31Hold it.
00:33:33How do we know?
00:33:34But how do you know you'll be safe?
00:33:36You don't.
00:33:37But if you're found here, outside of our barrier,
00:33:40you will surely be destroyed.
00:33:43We must hurry.
00:33:44Come with us.
00:33:44We seem to have very little choice.
00:33:46Where are you taking us?
00:33:49To the council chambers within our starship.
00:33:51To Dr. Vina.
00:33:53Dr. Vina will be as interested in asking you questions
00:33:55as you are in having yours answered.
00:34:28Monitoring this is central control.
00:34:30Now, I've reprogrammed the time selector
00:34:31and transport circuits in our master control.
00:34:34I'm going to attempt to utilize
00:34:35the laser beam pulse system
00:34:37as a guide to pick up video image.
00:34:39Please stand by and record all phases
00:34:40of our first contact.
00:34:44All right, Susan.
00:34:45Stand by to activate time screen.
00:34:47Standing by.
00:34:49All right.
00:34:51Screen activated.
00:34:55Image activated.
00:34:59Reception 100.
00:35:00Standing by.
00:35:04Susan, try advancing the time selector slowly forward.
00:35:09Just what do you hope to accomplish
00:35:11by all this, if I may ask?
00:35:13We know they went forward into the future.
00:35:15It seems logical that
00:35:17if we can beam in on the lab's last position
00:35:19and slowly advance,
00:35:21we should be able to pick up their image.
00:35:22Negative so far.
00:35:24The vault's beginning to fade out.
00:35:28Keep trying, keep trying.
00:35:29Try changing the time coordinates.
00:35:31Still negative.
00:35:32I don't think it's going to...
00:35:33Wait, wait, look.
00:35:34It's working.
00:35:38My God.
00:35:40Where are they?
00:35:41Lost if we don't act fast.
00:35:44We've got to take a chance.
00:35:45Try to bring them back before it's too late.
00:35:47Dave, we're drifting.
00:35:49I don't think we'll be able to hold them much longer.
00:35:51Just long enough to try to bring them back.
00:35:53We're losing them.
00:35:58Quick, lock-in time synchronization.
00:36:02I can't. We're drifting.
00:36:03We've got to hold them. We may not get a second chance.
00:36:05But the circuits are unstable.
00:36:08Lock-in is impossible.
00:36:11They're gone.
00:36:12We've lost them.
00:36:15Keep trying, Susan.
00:36:16We'll get them again.
00:36:18They've got to.
00:36:18There's no telling where they are now.
00:36:23I've lost for explanations.
00:36:25Less than an hour ago, we were in our laboratory.
00:36:27In our own world.
00:36:29And now...
00:36:29You are still in your own world, Dr. Gordon.
00:36:32We are the aliens, not you.
00:36:35Aliens? I don't quite understand.
00:36:36Ours is a colonization ship.
00:36:39We come from a dead world.
00:36:40Far beyond your galaxy.
00:36:43And we have been searching for a new world.
00:36:45With an environment close to that of our own mother planet.
00:36:49This is still Earth.
00:36:51The year is 69-68.
00:36:54But yours is a dying world.
00:36:56A dying?
00:36:59How?
00:37:00I wish I could tell you that the reason was natural.
00:37:03But I am afraid that it is man's own folly.
00:37:06Ours was an untimely arrival upon your planet.
00:37:09Regrettably, we've landed in the midst of a devastating global war.
00:37:12A war which will leave Earth dead and mankind annihilated.
00:37:17How do you plan to survive?
00:37:19On an Earth that's dying?
00:37:21We don't.
00:37:22There is a creeping death all around us.
00:37:24We cannot stay.
00:37:25But where could you go?
00:37:26We must return to the stars.
00:37:28To another planetary system where Earth-like worlds exist.
00:37:32Breakthrough. Breakthrough.
00:37:33Units 9 through 14.
00:37:35Report to fuel depot sector 6.
00:37:37Units 1 to 9.
00:37:38Report to repair.
00:37:39All other units on Earth stand by.
00:37:40How our efforts may be in vain.
00:37:43We're in a race.
00:37:44A race we may not win.
00:37:46A race?
00:37:47Attention all personnel.
00:37:49Attack imminent.
00:37:50Massive troop movement reported outside barrier.
00:37:53It is only a matter of time before the large-scale assault may succeed.
00:37:56We must make the necessary repairs on our ship before that happens.
00:38:00Or perish.
00:38:01Why?
00:38:04With all your resources, why don't you build stronger defenses?
00:38:08Our makeshift defenses are adequate to protect us for a while.
00:38:11But there is grave danger.
00:38:13If we cannot complete those repairs in time...
00:38:16Major breakthrough.
00:38:17Major breakthrough.
00:38:18Enemy has penetrated the barrier.
00:38:20Repeat.
00:38:21Barrier penetrated.
00:38:22Enemy forces rapidly approaching.
00:38:25This is council control.
00:38:26Activate secondary force field.
00:38:29Repeat.
00:38:29Activate secondary force field.
00:38:31You see.
00:38:33Even with our advanced technology, we are not invulnerable.
00:38:38Man's atomic weapons are as primitive to us as...
00:38:40As spears are to men.
00:38:42But even modern man can be killed by a spear.
00:38:45But if you're just here for repairs, as you say, why would they want to attack you?
00:38:49In hopes of procuring our weapons.
00:38:51Our advanced technology.
00:38:54To them it is a means to carry on their way of life.
00:38:57The waging of war.
00:39:02They've broken through.
00:39:13We shall not succeed.
00:39:15Our journey ends here.
00:39:17But you...
00:39:18You must return to the past.
00:39:21Taking with you the fate of mankind.
00:39:23Fate of mankind?
00:39:24You must return to your own time.
00:39:27Tell them.
00:39:28Tell them.
00:39:29Yes.
00:39:30Go on.
00:39:31Warn them.
00:39:33The laser weapon.
00:39:34They must control it.
00:39:36We have no laser weapon.
00:39:38You will have.
00:39:39It will leave your Earth a sterile, burned out, slag in space.
00:39:43It will...
00:39:47My people will help you re-enter your time space warp.
00:39:50You must go with them.
00:39:52You must return to your...
00:39:55Your...
00:40:07Follow me.
00:40:17Come on, man.
00:40:19All right...
00:40:20Come on, man.
00:40:30Oh pessoal!
00:40:31worshipping your missions first.
00:40:35T 2050miÅŸ backdrop
00:40:36Is that room for a type of time to yan?
00:40:38No.
00:40:41You?
00:40:44I can't do it, man.
00:40:44Quack, yeah?
00:40:44I know that crafts are worked for football.
00:40:44Do you have to play football?
00:40:44Let's go.
00:41:17Let's go.
00:41:53Let's go.
00:41:53Monitoring, this is central control.
00:41:55Stand by that video overload indicator.
00:41:56We're going to try it again.
00:41:58You ready, Susan?
00:42:00Ready.
00:42:02Screen on.
00:42:06I hope we're not too late.
00:42:08We're not, but there's no time to lose if we're going to get them out of there alive.
00:42:11What makes you even think they're in that time code?
00:42:14Coordinate.
00:42:15So far, we haven't seen any sign of them.
00:42:18Just this futuristic holocaust.
00:42:21They're out there, Mr. Denning.
00:42:22How can you be so sure?
00:42:24You see, we're picking up this image from the lab's equipment.
00:42:26In other words, everything we see on this screen is identical to what Dr. Gordon and his crew see from
00:42:30the lab.
00:42:31Then as long as this picture remains stable, that means they're intact?
00:42:35Yeah, that's basically correct, but we have no way of knowing if they're still inside the lab.
00:42:38Well, I doubt very much if they'd step out into that.
00:42:41Monitoring reports, they've just picked up a change in the time selector settings from the lab.
00:42:45Does that mean they're coming back?
00:42:46That's a good bet.
00:42:48Reset our time selector to the present.
00:42:49Re-establish video contact within the time vault.
00:42:58Time selector set at zero minus 5,000.
00:43:01We should be back in seconds after we left.
00:43:03I've tried to minimize any chance of us colliding with ourselves in time.
00:43:06We'll make it.
00:43:08Of course we will.
00:43:09And we'll bring back her warning.
00:43:11We will not.
00:43:12What makes you so sure?
00:43:16Well, isn't it obvious, Manning?
00:43:18The war did happen.
00:43:19We didn't get back without warning.
00:43:21Maybe we did.
00:43:22Maybe they just didn't listen.
00:43:23Sometimes people don't listen to warnings that might save them.
00:43:26But whether or not they must be something we can do.
00:43:28At least we can...
00:43:28Gentlemen, please.
00:43:30Cabin.
00:43:31Laser beam pulse system, go.
00:43:33The overload indicator shows that we've overloaded the laser's ruby.
00:43:36Could shatter if we're not careful.
00:43:38Does that mean we'll be trapped here?
00:43:40No, Stanton.
00:43:41Our lair may be set adrift.
00:43:43And we'd wander aimlessly through time and space like a ship at sea.
00:43:47All set, Doc.
00:43:48Standing by for time synchronization.
00:43:50Standing by.
00:43:51All right.
00:43:53Mark activate time transport.
00:43:57Time transport activated.
00:43:59We should be back in the time vault in a few seconds.
00:44:02I wonder...
00:44:03Doc, Karen, the screen.
00:44:06Something coming at us and fast.
00:44:09Whatever it is, we're on a direct collision course.
00:44:17Laser beam pulse system increasing in strength.
00:44:21Causing heavy static interference and video reception.
00:44:24All right.
00:44:25Activate image stabilizer.
00:44:29Image stabilizer activated.
00:44:34It looks like they're coming back our way.
00:44:39Monitoring confirms.
00:44:40Dr. Gordon's time selector has been reset to the present.
00:44:45How long will there be before we see them?
00:44:47Well, I imagine just a matter of seconds,
00:44:48unless it takes longer to come back than it does to go.
00:44:52How accurately can they time their return?
00:44:55Within a few seconds of their original departure,
00:44:57they're safe if they return within 24 hours in either direction.
00:45:01But we're not taking any chances on losing them again.
00:45:04Stand by to attempt time lock-in on the lab
00:45:06as it passes through our time,
00:45:08plus or minus 24 hours.
00:45:11It looks as if we're not the only ones traveling in time.
00:45:15Vision course.
00:45:21The radio.
00:45:22It may not work, but it's our only chance.
00:45:29This is Dr. Manning.
00:45:31We are from the year 1968.
00:45:34We're traveling the time-space continuum
00:45:36on a direct course with you.
00:45:38Collision imminent.
00:45:40Unable to correct.
00:45:42Over.
00:45:46I repeat.
00:45:47Collision imminent.
00:45:49Unable to correct.
00:45:51Do you hear us?
00:45:53Please reply.
00:45:55The laser system.
00:45:56Perhaps we can fire a warning
00:45:57without overloading the laser.
00:46:01I've set the discharge at 50%.
00:46:03Any more than that
00:46:04will destroy the other cropped hand-arm laser.
00:46:07Stand by for discharge.
00:46:14It worked.
00:46:16The discharge acted like an invisible barrier.
00:46:22It didn't work.
00:46:24Think I'm going to crash.
00:46:26Kill us all.
00:46:27I've got to stop.
00:46:30Stand to wake, you fool.
00:46:31You'll be murdering,
00:46:32destroying everybody who's out there.
00:46:37Laser power surge from the lab.
00:46:39It's too much.
00:46:40Lock-in is impossible.
00:46:41They're going too fast.
00:46:42Release time locks.
00:46:47They're gone.
00:46:49What happened?
00:46:50Where did they go?
00:46:52Monitoring is still tracking the lab.
00:46:54They haven't stopped yet.
00:46:56Monitoring?
00:46:56This is central control.
00:46:58We made visual contact with the lab
00:47:00as it passed through our time.
00:47:02Our time selector indicates
00:47:03they are traveling along
00:47:04the space-time continuum into the past.
00:47:06We're standing by to reestablish visual contact.
00:47:09Please verify closest possible date.
00:47:13They must be completely out of control.
00:47:16No change in speed.
00:47:17They're still traveling.
00:47:20They're still traveling.
00:47:41They must be coming.
00:47:42Go.
00:47:42Go.
00:47:43Go.
00:47:43Go.
00:47:44Go.
00:47:44Go.
00:47:45Let ya go.
00:47:52Go.
00:47:53Go.
00:47:54Go.
00:47:585.
00:47:59That's the ware from the fire.
00:48:00Go.
00:48:01Go.
00:48:10Oh, my God.
00:48:58Oh, my God.
00:49:16Oh, my God.
00:49:33Oh, my God.
00:49:51Oh, my God.
00:50:11Oh, my God.
00:50:36Oh, my God.
00:50:39Oh, my God.
00:50:40Oh, my God.
00:50:47Oh, my God.
00:50:51Oh, my God.
00:51:31Oh, my God.
00:51:45Oh, my God.
00:52:25Oh, my God.
00:52:37Oh, my God.
00:52:57Oh, my God.
00:53:23Oh, my God.
00:53:43Oh, my God.
00:54:04Oh, my God.
00:54:44Oh, my God.
00:55:00Oh, my God.
00:55:23Oh, my God.
00:55:40Oh, my God.
00:55:47Oh, my God.
00:55:47Oh, my God.
00:55:48Oh, my God.
00:55:48Oh, my God.
00:55:49Oh, my God.
00:55:50Oh, my God.
00:55:50Oh, my God.
00:55:50Oh, my God.
00:56:39Oh, my God.
00:57:10Oh, my God.
00:57:12Oh, my God.
00:57:43Oh, my God.
00:57:47Oh, my God.
00:58:21Oh, my God.
00:58:26Oh, my God.
00:58:57Oh, my God.
00:59:47Oh, my God.
01:00:01Oh, my God.
01:00:22Oh, my God.
01:00:28Oh, my God.
01:00:48Oh, my God.
01:01:43Oh, my God.
01:01:59Oh, my God.
01:02:17Oh, my God.
01:02:21Oh, my God.
01:02:38Oh, my God.
01:02:38Oh, my God.
01:02:39Oh, my God.
01:02:39Oh, my God.
01:03:14Oh, my God.
01:03:48Oh, my God.
01:03:51Oh, my God.
01:04:35Oh, my God.
01:04:43Oh, my God.
01:05:27Oh, my God.
01:05:47Oh, my God.
01:05:59Oh, my God.
01:06:34Oh, my God.
01:06:47Oh, my God.
01:07:24Oh, my God.
01:07:38Oh, my God.
01:07:54Oh, my God.
01:08:33Oh, my God.
01:08:45Oh, my God.
01:09:22Oh, my God.
01:09:36Oh, my God.
01:10:03Oh, my God.
01:10:48Oh, my God.
01:11:02Oh, my God.
01:11:27Oh, my God.
01:12:10Oh, my God.
01:12:23Oh, my God.
01:13:05Oh, my God.
01:13:31Oh, my God.
01:13:39Oh, my God.
01:13:40Oh, my God.
01:14:06Oh, my God.
01:14:34Oh, my God.
01:15:19Oh, my God.
01:15:30Oh, my God.
01:15:59Oh, my God.
01:16:27Oh, my God.
01:17:11Oh, my God.
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