6.8
A group of teens discover secret plans of a time machine, and construct one. However, things start to get out of control.
Jonny Weston
David Raskin
Sofia Black-D'Elia
Jessie Pierce
Sam Lerner
Quinn Goldberg
Allen Evangelista
Adam Le
Virginia Gardner
Christina Raskin
Amy Landecker
Kathy Raskin
Gary Weeks
Ben Raskin
Macsen Lintz
David, Age 7
Gary Grubbs
Dr. Lou
Michelle DeFraites
Sarah Nathan
Jamila Thompson
Marina
Katie Garfield
Liv
Hillary Harley
Blonde
Courtney Bowers
Jessie's Girlfriend
Patrick Johnson
Todd
Joshua Brady
Break Up Guy
Danielle Rizzo
Break Up Girl
Mychael Bates
Car Salesman
Onira Tarés
Lotto Woman
Mani Yarosh
Ingrid
Andrew Benator
Ace Hardward Employee
Aaron Marcus
History Teacher
André Nemec
Newscaster
Anthony Reynolds
Policeman
Ben McKee
Imagine Dragons
Daniel Platzman
Imagine Dragons
Dan Reynolds
Imagine Dragons
Wayne Sermon
Imagine Dragons
Agnes Mayasari
Bikini Girl (uncredited)
Fred Galle
Music Industry Mogul (uncredited)
Johnny Otto
Newscaster (uncredited)
Cameron Fuller
Justin's Best Friend (uncredited)
Director
Dean Israelite
Writer
Jason Pagan
Writer
Andrew Deutschman
October 11, 2015
Look…one can never have enough time travel movies for our escapist needs, correct? After all, the possibilities are endless in terms of how filmmakers could explore the surreal dynamics of different dimensions thus allowing audiences to suspend their disbelief and engage in the wonderment of SF exuberance. So the question remains: can first-time director Dan Israelite instill some fresh distinction into the ubiquitous genre with the teen-oriented time travel vehicle ‘Project Almanac’? Well, let’s just say that superior spectacles such as ‘Looper’ and this year’s engaging ‘Predestination’ have nothing to worry about in terms of giving way to Israelite’s featherweight found footage fantasy. In fact, ‘Bill And Ted’s Excellent Adventure’ looks appetizing and inspired in comparison. Relentlessly sketchy and as exhilarating as a PBS-televised high school science project during summer vacation, ‘Project Almanac’ fails to bounce sufficiently with its erratic presentation of cockeyed camerawork and crew of stock character whiz kids along for the surreal joyride.
Israelite and screenwriters Jason Harry Pagan and Andrew Deutschman concoct a breezy kiddie escapist flick where the scientific impishness feels somewhat upbeat and the young cast seem to be engaged in the time-traveling adventure that giddily plays out. However, whatever spry momentum that ‘Project Almanac’ manages to achieve is undermined by the distracting shaky hand-held camera movements and choppy jump cuts that turn this sci-fi caper into a disjointed B-movie bubble. Furthermore, the inclusive found footage material is overblown and exhausting. The gimmick, when used sparingly, was a treasured touch to heighten the anticipated tension. But ‘Project Almanac’ is not the only guilty party to spoil the essence of such a ‘trick of the trade’. The reality is that contemporary cinema–especially in horror and sci-fi–resort to these technical tactics to the point of no return.
It is no surprise that the arbitrary jittery cosmetics behind ‘Project Almanac’ is under the producing credit of Michael Bay whose reputation for exorbitant twitchy filmmaking has been documented in previous pulsating actioners. Brilliant high school science mastermind David Raskin (Jonny Weston) has ambitions for attending prestigious MIT and needs the appropriate experimental project to be conducted in his attic for acceptance to his choice of prestigious schooling. The finances are tight and David is chasing after a scholarship that should ease the economic burden on his widowed mother (David’s scientific father had recently died).
So David is a chip off the old block like his late father. Daddy Dearest, however, did provide some incentive for his son to to realise his MIT dreams. David had discovered an unfinished experiment of his dad’s – a mysterious machine that has the capability of relocating individuals through time. This discovery is in the company of his ‘herd of nerd’ friends plus his younger sister Christina (Ginny Gardner) along to record the curious contraption that will eventually take them all on a back-and-forth odyssey where they can pop into time traveling moments that range from dealing with school bullies to being placed in front of chemistry class testing sheets.
Interestingly, ‘Project Almanac’ never seizes the opportunity to think big in its time-traveling exploration. Instead, the movie mopes around with trivial tidbits such as petty scholarly set-ups and never really delves into grand confrontational entanglements that one would expect young impressionable brainiacs to face while awkwardly placing them in sensitive settings that all the book learning in the classroom cannot solve. The concept of this so-called time machine that David found in the basement by the skilled hands of his deceased old man should have predictably brought both father and son briefly together immediately in the name of their beloved interest in science, an irony nearly overlooked that could have been both poignant and profound. The nonsense of the kids cheating through invading the lottery result and retaking tests is a mere slap-on-the-hand cautionary tale that comes off somewhat corny and predictable.
Sadly, ‘Project Almanac’ morphs into teen soap opera territory and sinks the minimal sci-fi flavoring it had for a nonsensical diversion punctuated by the aforementioned shoddy camera fluctuation and lack of time-traveling zest beyond small-time incidental dilemmas. Weston’s David Raskin had the potential to be the second coming of ‘Back To The Future’s Marty McFly but the lame plot and punchless exploits handcuffs him from answering the call.
Project Almanac (2015)
Paramount Pictures
1 hr. 46 mins.
Starring: Jonny Weston, Allen Evangelista, Sam Lerner, Ginny Gardner and Sofia Black-D’Elia
Directed by: Dean Israelite
Rated: PG-13
Genre: Science Fiction/Teen Time Travel Adventurer/Sci-Fi and Fantasy
Critic’s rating: ** stars (out of four stars)