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IMDbPro

Time Flies

  • 1944
  • 1 h 28 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,5/10
170
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Time Flies (1944)
ComédiaFicção científica

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA minor music hall star uses a professor's time machine to travel back to the Elizabethan era.A minor music hall star uses a professor's time machine to travel back to the Elizabethan era.A minor music hall star uses a professor's time machine to travel back to the Elizabethan era.

  • Direção
    • Walter Forde
  • Roteiristas
    • Ted Kavanagh
    • J.O.C. Orton
    • Howard Irving Young
  • Artistas
    • Tommy Handley
    • Evelyn Dall
    • George Moon
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    5,5/10
    170
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Walter Forde
    • Roteiristas
      • Ted Kavanagh
      • J.O.C. Orton
      • Howard Irving Young
    • Artistas
      • Tommy Handley
      • Evelyn Dall
      • George Moon
    • 12Avaliações de usuários
    • 3Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Fotos1

    Ver pôster

    Elenco principal25

    Editar
    Tommy Handley
    • Tommy
    Evelyn Dall
    Evelyn Dall
    • Susie Barton
    George Moon
    • Bill Barton
    Felix Aylmer
    Felix Aylmer
    • The Professor
    Moore Marriott
    Moore Marriott
    • A Soothsayer
    Graham Moffatt
    • His Nephew
    John Salew
    John Salew
    • William Shakespeare
    Leslie Bradley
    Leslie Bradley
    • Capt. Walter Raleigh
    Olga Lindo
    Olga Lindo
    • Queen Elizabeth
    Roy Emerton
    • Capt. John Smith
    Iris Lang
    • Princess Pocohontas
    Stéphane Grappelli
    • A Troubadour
    • (as Stephane Grappelly)
    Wallace Bosco
      Noel Dainton
        Tommy Duggan
          Arthur Hambling
          Arthur Hambling
          • Captain Of The Guard
          • (não creditado)
          Vincent Holman
          • Burleigh
          • (não creditado)
          Paul Morton
            • Direção
              • Walter Forde
            • Roteiristas
              • Ted Kavanagh
              • J.O.C. Orton
              • Howard Irving Young
            • Elenco e equipe completos
            • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

            Avaliações de usuários12

            5,5170
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            10

            Avaliações em destaque

            8Spondonman

            "Dear Old Pals"

            I've always enjoyed this Tommy Handley outing, in the year of grace 1943 he was at the height of his ITMA popularity. It remains a rather bizarre film to have been made during WW2, but of course would have served a purpose as a morale booster as well as being simply simple fun.

            In modern Manhattan Tommy sponsors Professor Felix Aylmer's Time Ball, a huge silver ball/ space-time -ship, and eventually they, Evelyn Dall and George Moon end up in Elizabethan England - to absolutely everyone's consternation. They have some hilarious escapades, heavy with deliberate anachronisms, but it's Tommy's film - without his incessant witticisms it would have been a pretty poor show. Sometimes it falls flat, other times it's pure genius at work - at a tense life or death fraught moment he suddenly worries about having left the rice pudding "on". The scene where the four of them escape from prison from under Really Raleigh's nose - and how! - is breathtaking stuff for 1943.

            To most people it's probably dated badly, but to me the salvageable bits are a treasure, and the hokey bits bearable.
            7richardchatten

            MacAndrew's Machine

            A quirky attempt at science fiction by Gainsborough Pictures. The mind boggles at what Goebbels must have made of this piece of fanciful wartime escapism if he ever saw it!

            A zany time travel comedy that begins and ends in New York (hence the 'topical' jokes about Roosevelt and Walter Winchell) concerning a time machine that takes Tommy Handley back to the court of Queen Elizabeth; like a 'Dr Who' adventure played for laughs.

            Referred to by it's inventor Felix Aylmer as 'The Time Ball', the time machine itself - with the possible exception of marking Graham Moffatt & Moore Marriott's final screen appearance together - is the most memorable aspect of the film (presumably the work of veteran art director John Bryan), whose equivalent it functions as of the Tardis. Resembling a flying bathysphere; the few effects shots of it in flight being obviously cheap but nevertheless satisfying.
            7bluesboy-1

            Good feeling movie. Good character actors.

            I liked it. It's a cute little movie. Miss Dall was the spark in it that kept it going. The ending could have been better, maybe left open the possibility of other adventures (a sequel or two). Would be nice to make a modern version. Maybe going back or forward to a few different places in time with some chase scenes and twists and turns, like losing one of the characters in an era and then returning to rescue them before an unfortunate event. I'm tired of all the special effect movies now-a-days with no real plot and aren't funny, that are violent and very forgetful. The effects used in the movie were nice considering they were from the forties.
            8calvertfan

            So stupid it's actually funny

            Time travel comes about unexpectedly for Tommy, Susie, Bill and the Professor. The Prof. has invented this "timeball" which is like an earlier model of the car from Back To The Future. He's showing Susie the ins and outs of it, not worrying about hitting all the buttons because it won't work unless the trapdoor is shut. Thing is, Bill and Tommy, on the run from some cops, have climbed into the giant sphere to hide, and shut the door after them! So they go whizzing up a million miles, Susie slams a lever accidentally, they all get knocked out due to lack of oxygen, and when they awake, it's in 16th century England.

            Tommy is throwing jokes over his shoulder at every opportunity, this starts off as funny but soon wears very thin. He's up to his neck in trouble, teaching the Queen how to gamble and then pretending he owns America and selling off blocks of land to the townsfolk and noblemen. The Prof is all very serious and ends up being arrested when he comments on how "Queen Bess" died - of course, this is the time when she is still holding court. Bill bumbles around a lot. It's Susie who has the most fun. She's got a voice like Ginger Rogers, and twice as much energy as Betty Hutton, and is hilarious to watch, whether trying to hail a cab (in 16th century London!), or prompting Shakespeare with lines from Romeo & Juliet, dressing up as a man, and singing any number of lively songs to buy a little time before they are all drawn and quartered.

            Very, very weird. But still quite enjoyable. 8/10.
            7Bunuel1976

            TIME FLIES (Walter Forde, 1944) ***

            Director Forde was a leading figure in British film-making of the 1930s and 1940s, helming two classic and influential 'engine' thrillers i.e. THE GHOST TRAIN (1931; which is now apparently lost but which he remade 10 years later!) and ROME EXPRESS (1932), as well as star vehicles for many a comedian (such as Jack Hulbert, The Crazy Gang and Arthur Askey). This, then, is the fourth film of his I have checked out (besides owning 15{!} more that are still unwatched) and it follows in the latter vein i.e. starring now-forgotten radio comic Tommy Handley.

            The film is chiefly valuable for its deft mish-mash of several genres: for instance, the titular epithet (which turns up so often and so casually in our daily conversation) is approached here on a literal plane by having our four protagonists dodging pursuit by literally taking flight in both space and time via a ball-shaped metal craft! The time machine (invented by distinguished character actor Felix Aylmer) – perhaps the very first of its kind to be seen in movies! – strands its occupants in 16th century England (despite its pedigree, the present-day scenes are supposedly set in New York!) and, as was the case with the same year's similarly-themed FIDDLERS THREE, the heroes try to use the stuff they learned from history-books to their advantage: however, the locals do not take kindly to their prophesying The Great London Fire of 1666 and, even less appreciated are their foretelling of Queen Elizabeth I's perennial spinsterhood and the fact that her family's hated relatives, the Stuarts, will thus succeed her!; incidentally, apart from her, we also get to meet Walter Raleigh (not yet knighted, he is surprised when addressed as such!), William Shakespeare (having trouble writing the love scenes in "Romeo & Juliet", the spirited heroine – who, early on, is surprisingly shown in her underwear – 'suggests' a few of the play's most-quoted lines!) and the famous duo of John Smith (played by the odd-looking Roy Emerton from the same year's Shakespearean adaptation of HENRY V!) and Pocahontas.

            However, the film is obviously also a musical comedy (this being still wartime): while the former is first presented conventionally via an on-stage revue number, it is eventually incorporated into the narrative when the protagonists are about to be executed and they buy some time for themselves by bursting into an impromptu performance! As for the comedy, the nominal star is a scoundrel in the Will Hay mould (incidentally, his two frequent sparring partners Moore Marriott and Graham Moffatt also turn up here!); he is best-known for IT'S THAT MAN AGAIN (1942), from the same director, and which was essentially a transcript of his popular radio show – and, even if nowhere near as endearing as Hay, he still manages a reasonable amount of funny quips and, memorably, instigates a scene in which America is claimed in the name of Britain and in the presence of the Queen three times in a row!

            When finally going back to the present, the time machine misses the mark by a few hours so that the characters vanish immediately after landing since these were not supposed to be anywhere near the contraption at the appointed time! By the way, another novelty they adopt to astound the people of this by-gone era is a camera which allows their escape from jail by projecting footage of themselves on the walls, and which then has the suspicious guards befuddled by chasing what appears to be mere shadows! Incidentally, though I watched the film as part of my ongoing Easter epic marathon, this aspect comes through mainly in the period evocation rather than with any overt spectacle (even if the whole concept is decidedly elaborate at that)...

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            Enredo

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            Você sabia?

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            • Curiosidades
              This is probably the second (available) film that involves a time machine, the first being the little-known Hungarian film Szíriusz (1942). It was released the same year as Fiddlers Three (1944), another small British comedy about time travel.
            • Erros de gravação
              When the time ball first goes into space we see a clear view of the altimeter, labeled 'Height in ten thousand miles' and numbered from 1 to 10. Under the number 10 is written '1 million' (which the professor quotes) instead of the correct 100,000 miles (10x10,000).
            • Citações

              Tommy: That's the Professor's timeball, Susie. We can make it fly Back to Methuselah, or forward to the space of Things to Come.

            • Conexões
              References Daqui a Cem Anos (1936)
            • Trilhas sonoras
              I'm on a Cloud That's Silver Lined
              Written by Noel Gay and Ralph T. Butler (uncredited)

              Sung by Evelyn Dall

            Principais escolhas

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            Detalhes

            Editar
            • Data de lançamento
              • 8 de maio de 1944 (Reino Unido)
            • País de origem
              • Reino Unido
            • Idioma
              • Inglês
            • Também conhecido como
              • El tiempo vuela
            • Locações de filme
              • Gainsborough Studios, Islington, Londres, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(studios)
            • Empresa de produção
              • Gainsborough Pictures
            • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

            Especificações técnicas

            Editar
            • Tempo de duração
              • 1 h 28 min(88 min)
            • Cor
              • Black and White
            • Proporção
              • 1.37 : 1

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