Thursday, October 28, 2010

"COSMIC" KIRBY AND THE GOD CONCEPT

Will Murray










"COSMIC" KIRBY AND THE GOD CONCEPT



I've been a fan of Jack Kirby for about 45 years, ever since I started

reading comics at the tail end of 1961. My timing was pretty good. I came in just

as the great Kirby Explosion of Cosmic Creativity was about to begin. It was,

let's face it, the Big Bang of Comics for my generation.

While I don't clearly recall my first introduction to Jack Kirby's work other

that it had to have been on one Marvel's many monster titles, I was able to

recreate it from memory and on-sale dates. It was "KRAGOOM! The Creature

Who Caught an Astronaut," in Journey into Mystery #78, March 1962.

It was a creepy crepuscular little 7- pager inked by Steve Ditko, Stan Lee's

favorite Kirby inker, and one of mine. "Kragoom" was one of the last of the "Big

Monster" tales Kirby did. Lee was phasing them out in favor of shorter,

spookier stories.

A second Kirby tale, "The Sorcerer," backed up the first. My other

favorite Kirby inker, Dick Ayers, embellished that one. It was a perfect example

of the type of fantasy tale Kirby had specialized in since the days he produced

Black Magic with Joe Simon.

Soon, I discovered the companion titles--Strange Tales, Tales to

Astonish and Tales of Suspense. Kirby led off every issue with haunting tales

like "The Two-Headed Thing", "The Martian Who Stole a City" and "The

Midnight Monster." New Kirby stories appeared virtually every week. It

was astounding.

Back then, he was simply J. Kirby, for that was all the signature Stan

Lee allowed him. Soon, Kirby had a first name and he started transitioning from

monsters and aliens to superheroes. I brought FF 4, then Incredible Hulk #1.

Soon there was Thor and an emerging legion of others.

I read other publishers of course. DC. Charlton. Radio Comics. But I never

suspected that DC’s Challengers of the Unknown had been created by Kirby,

who had abandoned it to other hands. Nor did I recognize that emblematic image

of the Fly that decorated his cover logo was a Kirby drawing.

Twenty years in the comics business, Jack Kirby had saturated the field.

He was about to reclaim and reenergize it.

The superheroes came tumbling out. Kirby was such a dominant figure

that even though he didn't originate Iron Man, everyone assumed he did. In a

way they were correct. His cover for Daredevil #1 smacked of being a concept

sketch, but how much of the character design was Kirby and how much Bill

Everett will probably never be known.

Even Spider-Man, the most un-Kirby hero in the growing Marvel

firmament, turned out to have Kirby roots in a thing called the Silver Spider.

But the true wonder was not simply the new superheroes. Kirby had

created a young army of them in the two decades before the 1960s--although

hardy any of them possessed true super powers. It was in the expanding

universe which these new Marvel heroes explored. Not just on Earth and near-

space, but in Atlantis and Asgard and across other dimensions. Not content with

fighting crime and supercriminals through his superheroes, Kirby pushed the

frontiers of comic book melodrama out beyond its farthest extensions.

Comic books would never be the same again. They couldn't, any more

than a supernova could return to being just an ordinary sun.

I read it all and loved them all. To this day, I still think the best era to

grow up reading comic books was in the 1960s. Jack Kirby was not the only

genius at work in that incandescent decade, but he was the greatest genius.

To this day, no other comic book talent created or co-created so many enduring

heroes.

Over time, my interest in Kirby the artist shifted to Kirby the man.

His creativity intrigued me. Who was this guy who executed pages and

pages of art at supernormal speeds? What made this creative dynamo tick?

From whence sprang his unique genius?

I don't know if the answer will ever be known. Jack Kirby as a human

volcano of inspiration. A prolific absorber and regurgitator of ideas. Give him a

weak concept--say Ant-Man--and Kirby would make it seem inspired, if not

brilliant.

Although I met him a few times and interviewed him twice, I never got

to know the man. But others who did know him described a fascinating figure.

Artist Chuck Cuidera first encountered him in 1940, when he applied

to Fox Comics for work and met the newly-minted team of Jack Kirby and partner

Joe Simon, who was art-directing at Fox.

"Joe Simon hired me right on the spot and he said, 'You're going to

be my assistant.' The guy that was sitting in back of him was Jack Kirby. He was

doing 'Cosmic Carson.' I still remember that. He used to talk to himself quite a bit.

Nice guy. Real nice guy. Of course, Jack Kirby and Joe were getting ready to do

Captain America."

DC editor Jack Schiff, who worked with the duo in the 40s and 50s, told

me the following:

"I would say that Jack was more creative, but wilder. Joe was the guy

who would pull it together. We once had a sort of race in the front office. We had

a big artist's room. Jack and Mort Meskin were sitting next to each other and

there was some copy we needed pretty quickly from both of them. Each of them

turned out five pages of pencils. Beautifully. It was really something. After a

while, people began to crowd around watching. And they would both go ahead

undisturbed. Meskin was a more careful artist than Kirby, and that's where Joe

Simon came in, in a sense taming or correcting some of Jack's stuff."

Five pages a day was and still is considered the maximum number of

comic book pages a professional artist can turn out without his work suffering.

It's believed to be the maximum limit of sustained human capacity. Few can do it.

Reportedly Kirby did it on a routine basis. For that reason, the five-page limit

is called the Kirby Barrier.

Larry Lieber, who with Stan Lee and Joe Simon racked up the

greatest number of Kirby collaborations during the days when he scripted Jack's

pre-hero Marvel monsters, recalled that Kirby drew so rapidly that Lieber was

always in a rush to produce new scripts to feed the relentless artistic machine

that was Jack Kirby.

Lieber recounted, "When I was starting to draw--this is before the

Rawhide Kid--Stan said, 'Jack, maybe you could help Larry to draw. Show him

something or other.' And he sat down and he took a page that I had drawn, and

he went over it to show me what he would have done it. I said, 'How do you

draw?' And he showed me how to construct in a very simple way. He took a

blank page and he made a sketch. He set the figure and he did this and he did

that. He was doing it for me. I noticed he paid no attention to the anatomy of the

figure at all. I said, 'Jack, what about anatomy?' He said to me, 'Larry, if I had to

worry about anatomy, I couldn't get my pages out." The page that I drew was a

guy in a coat walking someplace. And what he drew for me wasn't anything. It

was just like bending a figure. Like an anatomy lesson, except there was no

anatomy!"

Kirby friend Richard Kyle, who commissioned "Street Code" for

Argosy, told me that many many people described Jack's working method in

the identical way: "Jack would just stare and stare at a blank sheet of paper as if

projecting a mental image onto the paper. And then he would draw what he saw."

Inker Mike Thibbeadoux:

"...the layouts he did were so rough, you could hardly see the figures. And

then he'd start up in the left hand corner. I remember ....it was like the image was

already there and he was tracing it. It's quite amazing."

Stan Lee described it this way: "Most artists would draw a circle for the

head and a circle for the body and then start filling it in. But Jack would just start

with the head and he would draw it and every line was there right from the start.

He didn't make little rough drawings first...it was the most eerie feeling watching

him draw--you felt he was tracing what was already in his head."

Sometimes, Kirby would start in the corner of the page, beginning with a

foot and extrapolate from there, in flagrant violation of all the rules of

composition.

"When Jack had what he wanted in mind, he just drew it," said Mark

Evanier. "It was eerie."

"Mike is wrong," corrected Joe Simon. "The other guys are right. Jack

did not sketch out lines or circles. He just put down the drawings where he

wanted them. I have worked with Jack for over 25 years and never saw him

roughing out a figure before he drew it. I also worked with another genius, my

letterer Howard Ferguson who often did not do penciled lines as guides under his

lettering. That too was weird."

Larry Lieber thinks he understands how Jack Kirby worked.

"First, he did see it in his mind a lot. And the more you see it in your

mind, the easier it is, I think. The style in which he drew, it was easy to do it with

that. There was something very simple about his drawing. It wasn't very

illustrative, like John Buscema. And he didn't vary his emotions that much, for

instance. Or his expressions on the faces. He had been doing it for so many

years, and he just trained himself to do it. And he did it in a simple way.

"I thought he was wonderful as a comic artist," Lieber continues.

"The best. But one of the things I envied was that he had a style that almost no

inker could ruin. It was almost inker-proof. Not quite. Why? Because his work

was so simple, in a way. There was nothing subtle in his drawing for an inker to

go off. It was almost like doing an animated cartoon. Except he put millions of

figures in and he turned and twisted them. But once he put his basic drawing

down, you couldn't ruin it unless you just didn't want to follow the line. Yet the

beauty was in the power of it."

Stan Lee told me much the same thing: "Nobody could hurt Jack's stuff.

The strange thing about it, I cared much more about who inked Kirby than

Kirby did. We used to discuss in the office the fact that Kirby never seemed to

care who inked him. This is a guess on my part because I never asked him, but

I think Kirby felt his style was so strong that it just didn't matter who inked

him, that his own style would come through the way he wanted."

Still the questions linger. How did Kirby do it? At what point did he

shift from being merely a prolific comic book artist to "Cosmic" Kirby, Imagineer

of Universes?

Searching through the many interviews he gave, some clues

can be gleamed.

"I did a strip called 'Hurricane,' which was a forerunner of the Thor

mythology,” Kirby said 1976. “And 'Hurricane' became 'Mercury', and

'Mercury’ became something else. I began to combine mythology with

present-day action. And, bit by bit, the format for a lot of the stuff I do

today was born at that time. And I can tell you I had a healthy interest in

mythology…. A lot of the elements of my work today were present in the

strips then."

"My definition of the word 'cosmic' is 'everywhere,'" Kirby once said.

"Outside of Earth, we have everywhere. They say there's nothing out there. I

say there is everything out there. We haven't got the means or the money

to reach it, but it's out there!"

In his work, Jack Kirby first started searching "out there" after World War

II. The initial vehicle was the horror comic, Black Magic.

“The war was still fresh in my mind,” he told Ray Wyman. ”I couldn’t

draw rotting corpses and limbs like that. I used the stories my mother told me,

the ones her mother passed on to her. They were the same ones that inspired

Frankenstein and Dracula in the movies. They were just old legends and stories

about the supernatural, and they were very effective.”

Soon, the Space Age dawned. Challengers of the Unknown and Sky

Masters were Kirby’s first probes into the new frontiers of the newest comic book

field.

"Challengers of the Unknown came from their own particular

time," Kirby once explained. "They were post-war characters. What the

Challengers of the Unknown were saying is, Where are we going now?

And that is a question I asked in all those stories. In the Challengers, I

put in new gimmicks and the machines that we already had. I took them

two-three stages ahead as to what we might have. I would take them five

years ahead. If we had certain generators, I would make a supergenerator

of some kind, and have my story revolve around that. What would it do

to human beings? Perhaps it would summon aliens from some foreign

planet. It gives us the power to do that."

Eventually, Challengers and Sky Masters gave rise to the Fantastic

Four, out of which the Marvel Universe would evolve.

Elsewhere, Kirby observed, "Challengers was like a movie to

me. The science fiction pictures were beginning to break, and I felt the

Challengers were a part of that genre. I began to think about three words

which have always puzzled me: What's out there? I thought, what's really

out there? Then I began to draw characters from outer space, characters

from beneath the earth, characters from anywhere that we couldn't think

of. The Challengers were us contending with these very strange people.

Yes, they were always precursors to the Fantastic Four--except

the Fantastic Four were mutations."

It's always been clear to me that if Kirby hadn't have left DC,

Challengers of the Unknown would have been the vehicle for his mature

period. Instead, it was Fantastic Four.

Could an answer be found in Kirby's combat experiences in Europe?

Cryptically, Kirby once said that he thought he saw God after he hit Normandy

Beach. What did he mean by that? He didn't say, and the interviewer didn't probe

the subject, alas.

In an obscure interview Jack Kirby gave to Warren Reece for Overstreet

Comic Book Quarterly in 1994, he told the following life-changing tale:

"I had a guy die on me once, during the war, and he looked up at me and

he said, 'What the hell happened? What happened?' And here I was, just a

schmoe from the East Side from New York City, y'know, and what do you answer

the guy? I told him, 'You happened.' See? And that was real.

" It got me to think how valuable human beings are; and at that moment

I discovered my own humanity, In that moment, I discovered everybody else's'.

And when the man was hit and he asked me ,'What happened', I could only

answer him---here was a man who was slipping away--and I said, 'You

happened.' I tried to tell this man what I really felt; and that's what I felt.

"I felt that he had happened, and that was the most important event

in the world; and it set me to thinking. I said, 'What the hell really happened?" I

mean, they feed us a bunch of bull in a lot of various books. What the hell do

these facts mean? See? And I sit down and it's a privilege to have the time

sometime, to sit down and just say, 'What the hell really happened?' Did Joshua

really knock down the damned walls with 60 trumpets? That's bull. Did our

Creator send out angels all over the universe carrying his messages? What were

they? Guys with feathered wings and night gowns? Horsefeathers! What

happened? Of course, my designs probably don't fit the real thing, but they're

a step on my part to find out what the real thing was. To me, story-telling is

very real."

Kirby touched on this search for spiritual truth when he talked about

his painting, "Angel", in Ray Wyman's Art of Jack Kirby.

"I did 'Angel' because I wanted to portray my version of what an angel

might have really looked like. All we have to go by is what somebody painted of

what somebody else thought they saw. To the primitive people who might have

witnessed an angel, the idea of flight without wings--feathered wings--was

incomprehensible. So a Godly creature, even if it did have wings, would be

interpreted very differently."

In the final analysis, the forces that produced the cosmic-powered

Jack Kirby of the 60s was a combination of human and creative experience, a

natural maturation of a man and his chosen field, and finally, the indefinable.

Of them all, it's the indefinable that most intrigues me.

"I don't know what my senses are comprised of," Kirby once

admitted. "I only know that I have senses; I have whatever senses that I have.

And I bring them all into play. I don't know what my senses are...I can't define

them. All my senses are hidden from me. But they move me...I know our own

place the universe. I can feel the vastness of it inside myself. I began to realize

with each passing fact what a wonderful and awesome place the universe is,

and that helped me in comics because I was looking for the awesome. I found

it in Thor. I found it in Galactus.... I felt that somewhere around the cosmos

are powerful things that we know nothing about, and from that came

Galactus. He was almost like a god, and that's where I came up with the

god concepts. There might be things out there that are ultimates compared

to us."

Elsewhere, Kirby claimed that Galactus was his take on the Almighty.

"Galactus was God, and I was looking for God," he once admitted.

"When I first came up with Galactus, I was very awed by him. I didn't know what

to do with the character. Everybody talks about God, but what the heck does he

look like? Well, he's supposed to be awesome, and Galactus is awesome to me.

I drew him large and awesome. No one ever knew the extent of his powers or

anything, and I think symbolically that's our relationship [with God]."

This quest inevitably led to Kirby's New Gods, which he considered his

ultimate exploration of what he called the "God Concept."

“And, of course, from characters like Galactus and the Watcher, I evolved

the Fourth World out of it, which was entirely Biblical, with New Genesis and

Apokolips and the gods of New Genesis and Apokolips, the evil gods, the good

gods, and gods that were trapped between good and evil, and. of course.

frustrated…. And now I’m working on The Eternals, which attacks the same

theme from a different direction. The god theme is coming in from another

another direction. This is a takeoff on von Dankien’s theory about space

gods being here in the past, and naturally I’m making a variation of that and

elaborating on it. In other words, the intriguing question is, suppose they come

back? What happens?”

Kirby didn’t literally believe in these theories, any more than he

worshipped Thor. He was a devout Jew, with the traditional beliefs of a

person of that ancient faith. But the God concept was something that fed and

fired his imagination.

“To put it short,” he once observed, “the gods are giant reflections of

ourselves. They are ourselves as we think we should be or we might be. They

are idealistic and dramatic versions. They make a lot more noise than we do and

therefore attract a lot more attention that we do. We feel that we’ve been fulfilled

in some way if our own images act out fantasies that we entertain.”

It all seems to go back to that question posed by that nameless dying

soldier on an unknown European battlefield. True meaning lies in the questions—

because the ultimate answers may be unknowable.

"I didn't mean to lead anybody onto any sort of religious path," Kirby

told FOOM in 1975. "I have no message myself. I feel that life is a series of very

interesting questions, and very poor answers. But I am willing to settle for the

questions. If the questions are interesting. I feel I evoke them in what I do. I feel

that should be good enough for everyone else. I know it sounds pontifical just

saying it, but I usually don't see anything but a really interesting series of good

questions to keep everybody busy for the rest of their lives and then let it go at

that. So I think the God Concept has these types of elements in it. In other

words--what happened; what was happening; what's going to happen. Those are

the essential questions for anybody, and that's why we create gods, create

myths. Because we say 'These people know what's happening.' In other words,

we need to justify ourselves , so we create gods. We say, 'These people are

responsible for what's happening. These people are responsible for what going

to happen.' Of course, when we say things like that, we create a mystic element

in our own thinking. And I think that's what we see in it. We see some sort of

mysticism to explain the reason for our own environment, for our own psyche.

There are reasons for many of the things we fail to understand, but just aren't

qualified to see them. I believe that's why the God Concept is powerful--it

involves us. It involves us inside. It involves us outside. And that's the God

Concept. So everybody thinks in that direction. I think everybody thinks about

destiny. The forces that rule destiny. And, of course. those forces that we call

God. That's a powerful concept that rules us entirely."

In the four-color universe that he created, Jack Kirby was nothing

less than a Creator God.

"In the last analysis you face the universe by yourself," Kirby observed.

"You can't face it for anybody else; you can't face it in anybody else. The final

analysis is what counts. That's you. The 'you' business is involved in the God

Concept, and that's very strong. You'll find out in the end, when everything gets

wiped away and you stand in your underwear, all that's left is you. And you find

in that moment your feelings are very strong. And you're all there is. So when we

yearn for gods, we're merely expressing that kind of feeling..... 'I'm all there

is; you're all there is....I believe Marvel's treatment of Thor is valid because it

projects Thor as we'd like to see him. Thor is us...as a personal superhero. And

I think it's true. I think that all of us see ourselves as superheroes, and we try to

justify it with mysticism. And it's true because it works."



ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: Some uncredited quotes first appeared COMIC SCENE,
THE COMICS JOURNAL, COMIC BOOK MARKEPLACE and THE JACK KIRBY
COLLECTOR.

####

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Franklin, master of the universe

Franklin, master of the universe

"I heard a theory that explains why characters never age. Franklin Richards is using his powers to slow time down, and no one notices. The kid created a universe, this wouldn't be too hard.  I like the idea, as it allows the stories to happen in the period they were written stay that way, but allows the characters to stay young."    

Franklin's conscious and unconscious powers

Franklin's simplest power is to create a dream version of himself (as seen in Power Pack). His greatest (usually unconscious) power is to create a kind of dream version of all reality, as we saw in Heroes Reborn.

Franklin does not need to be conscious to exert this power, as we saw when he defeated Ultron in FF 150. His brain had been shut down months before, and he was still in a coma, but this did not stop him defeating Ultron. And in the famous case of Heroes Reborn, Franklin was only dimly aware that he had created an entire pocket universe, moved the heroes into it, and retconned their entire lives.

He did the same trick again when faced with Abraxas. Only this time he saw that his Mommy was seriously scared, so he acted consciously. For those who missed the stories, Abraxas had enough power to end all existence, He had already killed Galactus on numerous different realities, just to show what he could do. In Fantastic Four volume 3 number 49 he is defeated by Franklin Richards. Franklin sees that his Mom is scared, so he decides to fix the situation. He turns back time. Technically he fixed the broken nullifier and then got hs Dad to use it, but it was Franklin who sets the events in motion (see the scan below).

Franklin did it again with Doom's world (see Doom: The Emperor Returns, issue 1 of 3). Franklin was unconsciously controlling an entire world, via a ghostly avatar, while he (physical Franklin) was back at home being a kid as usual.

Franklin unconsciously creates worlds, and unconsciously controls existing worlds. It's what he does. There seems to be no practical limit to his power.
Franklin Richards-the eternal idiot
"We're like ants... just ants..."

When discussing humans and higher powers, humans are most often compared to ants. The classic example is of course Galactus, in FF 50. Galactus comments on destroying the world: "would you hesitate to step on an ant hill?" And after seeing the cosmos, Johnny Storm is overwhelmed. He can only gasp "We're like ants... Just Ants... Ants!!"

The first we see of Franklin as a young child is when he plays on a farm (in FF 135). What does he naturally do when left alone? He watches ants. And "they keep marching round in circles, like they were following orders."  From the look on his face, and the comments of his minder, he is just watching them.

To cosmic beings, humans are ants. Franklin is a cosmic-level being. He unconsciously makes ants walk in circles. This is not deliberate, and is certainly not malicious. It is simply how he wants things to be and it is so. As we saw with Heroes Reborn.

Critics sometimes observe that Marvel comics can be repetitive, superficial, and lack any real danger. This is exactly what a young child wants from his stories.


Franklin's life in Real Time


Franklin Richards was born in 1968. The great events of his life take place in 1973 (when he would be five and would normally start school), 1982 (when he would hit puberty),  and the late 1980s (when he would normally become an adult and father his own children). It seems that his unconscious mind is growing up normally, and at crucial times in his life the underlying reality breaks through.

The best known event in Franklin's early life was in 1973 when Reed had to shut down Franklin's conscious mind. We are told that his conscious mind was becoming aware of the universe beyond his immediate experience. This was 1973, when he would be aged 5, the age when children usually start school and become aware of the wider world. Coincidence? Perhaps. But his whole life is built of such coincidences.

(Critics could point out that the immediate cause of the danger was Annihilus, but why did Annihilus become aware of Franklin's power at that point and not sooner? Annihilus was searching with his long range probes, so obviously Franklin was giving a stronger signal at this point than before. This was when Franklin was with Agatha Harkness, his teacher - again, a parallel with school).

People change when they reach puberty. In 1982, when Franklin would have been 14, he temporarily lost the ability to hold back time. He suddenly aged to be an adult (FF 245). Reed and Sue managed to turn the mental dampers back on, and he de-aged again.

It appears that Franklin, and by implication the Marvel Universe, exist and age and develop in real time, but Franklin's unconscious mind keeps them held back to an age where he feels safe, where nothing truly dangerous or unknown can happen

Interestingly this moment when Franklin lost control was also the time when Marvel's stories started going somewhere, with real changes to characters. In the Fantastic Four, Johnny fell for Alicia, Ben left the team, the Baxter Building was destroyed, etc. Marvels' sales began to increase, and it was a second golden age. But with Franklin again in control, the other major changes are gradually retconned over the next few years. Everything is safe again.

The next major event is when Sue is expecting another baby. Note that the cosmic control rod loses its power when near the distortion area of the Negative Zone (see the climax of FF annual 6). Presumably Franklin is the same. Sue could not conceive another child until years she and Reed spent an extended time was in the Negative Zone, where Franklin's unconscious power is weakest.

A young child will naturally feel threatened by a new baby. So what happens? Franklin unconsciously transports the unborn child to a distant part of the universe (causing Sue to believe she has miscarried). The child, Valeria, grows up far away where Franklin does not feel threatened by her. He allows her to return when she is a teenager, and old enough to be a protective older sister and not a threat. None of this is malicious, it is all done on an unconscious level, reflecting a young child's hidden fears.




Franklin and Marvel Time

Franklin should embody real change in comics: he was born at the height of Marvel's silver age, in 1967. For the first time ever, two superheroes married and had a child! And yet, since his birth in 1967, Franklin has become the poster child for the opposite of real change. He grew up more and more slowly. He spent over fourteen years as a five year old!

By a strange coincidence, what we call Marvel Time also began around 1967. When we look closer at Franklin's powers, there is one inescapable conclusion:

Franklin Richards created Marvel Time!

Just look at what we know about Franklin, and everything falls into place:
Franklin controls everything

So we see that Franklin has virtually unlimited power to control the universe to protect his family when they are in danger, and he often does this unconsciously.

Now the sixty four thousand dollar question: how often are his family in danger? Answer: ALL THE TIME! They are superheroes, they put their lives on the line every day!

Then how often would Franklin feel an unconscious worry about his family? ALL THE TIME!

Then how often would Franklin be subtly fixing things by putting things back how he thinks they should be? ALL THE TIME!

As a young child, whose parents face death every day, what would be Franklin's greatest unconscious fear? The future. Like any young child he would dislike too much change.

Would he simply remove all the bad guys? No. Young children like stories about bad guys being defeated. It makes them feel safe. Franklin would ensure his favorite bad guys keep coming back in order to be defeated again. Young children like their stories to be repetitive.

If all this is true, what would we expect to see in the Marvel Universe? Time slowing down, heroes surviving against the odds, and sometimes even coming back from the dead. The same villains coming back again and again. Occasional moves back in time when things go wrong. In other words, we should expect Franklin to unconsciously create Marvel Time.

This is pretty much confirmed in FF 284. We learn that Franklin's  role (in this case in his PsiLord persona) is to prevent bad futures from happening.
The origin of Franklin's powers

Before Franklin was born, there was no Marvel Time. In the early and mid 1960s, Marvel Comics operated in Real Time. Marvel Time began when Franklin was born. Coincidence? Let us see.

Question: why is Franklin so powerful? Because his mother can make force fields and his father can stretch? So what? That has nothing to do with omega class time-space abilities. It makes no sense. So what is the real origin of his powers?

For the answer we must go back to FF Annual 6, the birth of Franklin Richards. We see right at the start that Reed and Sue do not give their son superpowers: they give him a deadly radiation cancer that threatens to kill both mother and baby! And they need a particular element from the Negative Zone to save them.

Reed used Annihilus' Cosmic Control Rod to save his wife and baby, allowing Franklin to be born. The Cosmic Control Rod has vast power that can be shaped by the user's mind. And it specifically gives immortality, as Annihilus reminds us on many occasions.

What do we know about the Negative Zone? It first appeared in FF51, described as a dimension that connects all parts of our universe, allowing Galactus and the Silver Surfer to travel faster than light. (It is no coincidence that Franklin has a special connection with Lockjaw and Puppy, the dimensional travelers.)

It was explained in FF annual 6 that combining even a tiny amount of the positive and negative universes would release vast amounts of energy. In other words, this is Einstein territory. E=mc2 Anyone who truly masters the negative zone can master time, space, and energy. But not even Annihilus never mastered this - this is why he wanted Franklin. Let us look at why is Franklin is special:
Franklin Richards, Zero Man

For final proof that Franklin's power is from the Negative Zone, see the 1998 Fantastic Four annual. It shows us the Real Time Fantastic Four, in a reality where Marvel Time never existed. Everyone is their true chronological age and Franklin has grown up normally. Instead of powers that are unlimited and unconscious, his powers are more controlled (though only barely) and are far easier to understand: Franklin's natural state is as the Zero Man, "a living conduit to the Negative Zone." Zero probably refers to Zero Point energy, the infinite source from which universes spring.

Annihilus realized Franklin's potential in FF 138-141, and tried to siphon off that power. In doing so we learn that Franklin's mind can reach across the entire universe, and galaxies are like toys to him.

From his birth we see that Franklin has the power to stretch time for himself and those around him. As we follow his life we will see that power in action. We will also see that Franklin Richards is the key to the history and future of the Marvel Universe. Look at the picture of Franklin, the Zero Man. Remind you of anyone? Yes, it's eternity, the embodiment of our regular universe. This is no coincidence! Franklin embodies the Marvel Universe. Everything depends on him, as we shall see.
Franklin Richards as repressed adult

What about when Franklin would have become an adult? In the late 1980s he should have reached the age of 20 and reached full maturity. At that point, the age-suppressed Franklin again experiences a loss of control. This loss of control threatens the very fabric of the Marvel Universe. The only way to solve the problem is for Nathaniel (his grandfather) to take him completely out of this time stream and let him grow up normally, coming back as a teenager for a short time. (It's all there in FF 376).

So it seems that Franklin could not completely miss out his teenage years, and so he had to spend some time as the teenage Psi-Lord before going back to the safety of young childhood again. Psi-Lord grew up in the near-real-time MC2 universe.

Here we have another mystery solved. It is well established that Franklin has Celestial-level unconscious powers, so why is his teenage version relatively powerless? Surely by that time he would have more access to his abilities? Mutants usually unlock their full powers at puberty, so why not Franklin? Clearly he is still operating on two levels: conscious and unconscious. Clearly, Psi-Lord is only the surface. The real power is still operating on a deeper level, unnoticed as always.

His Zero-Man persona (FF annual 1998) indicates access to greater power, but still he fears that he might destroy the universe by accident (by sucking it all into himself - how appropriate is he already controls the Marvel Universe!) So he plans to move to Wakanda to be near the source of energy dampening Vibranium.

Back to Franklin in this universe. When he reached his early 20s (Real Time early 1990s) his biological clock seems to have taken over. He needed to father his own children. He produced an offspring, Hyperstorm, who represents Franklin's deepest fears of growing up. Hyperstorm has Franklin's reality changing ability, but without his sense of duty to care for the world, and without his deep repressive tendencies. So in Franklin's regular universe, Hyperstorm is a danger to all that exists. In the grown-up dimension Franklin is then killed by mutant hunting sentinels. This is all very Freudian, as noted below.

Franklin's deep family insecurities are also revealed in the Zombie universe, where he is killed by a bite from She-Hulk, who replaced his uncle Ben in the FF.

In another universe, Earth-9997, the Earth X reality, Franklin became Galactus. After saving the world told his father, Reed, and said that he will be Galactus as long as no one tells him that he isn't and that he will never come back. And then he leaves. All he wants is for his Father to tell him to stop, but Reed won't do that.

Everyone loves young Franklin, but nobody wants him if he grows up. Except his grandfather, Nathaniel. The rest of the family don't trust either of them.
Meanwhile, back in this timestream...

The battle with Hyperstorm seemed to distract Franklin, weakening his control over the Marvel Universe. So in the early 1990s stories in all the comics become more adolescent and obsessed with image. This culminates in a being called Onslaught who kidnaps Franklin and poses a real threat to Franklin's safe universe. Franklin's Marvel Time powers go into overdrive, creating another new, safe universe where everything can go back to how Franklin subconsciously thinks it should be.




Freudian Franklin

The Fantastic Force series took place during the time when Franklin was teenage Psi-Lord (starting in FF 376, then in the Fantastic Force series). This shows that Franklin is a Freudian analyst's dream.

Franklin has multiple personalities: the kid has dream adventures (Tattletale), the confused repressed guilty teenager (PsiLord), the good adult (avatar), and the bad adult (Ego-spawn). Egospawn was created by Franklin in FF328 because Franklin saw his mother get angry at his uncle Johnny, and Franklin feared that the family would break up. So Franklin unconsciously possesses the mind of a local thug in an effort to remove this threat to his mother.

All of these personas come back together in Fantastic Force 17. Fantastic Force was a big Freudian message of guilt about Franklin trying to usurp his father and save, then unwillingly destroy, his mother.
Since that time, the pressures of maintaining a fundamentally paradoxical universe have created more and more parallel realities, most notably the Ultimate series, bust also numerous alternate Marvel Universes expressed in various limited series. This seems to be causing a great deal of cognitive stress to Franklin: First, his hidden sister Valeria reappeared, at her correct Real Time age (born in the mid 1980s, she reappeared in the late 1990s as a teenager). And the only way to fix this was to use the Ultimate Nullifier to reboot her back into Sue's womb. Second, and soon after this event, Franklin found himself in Hell, and even when he got out he thought he was still there. Franklin's subconscious control of Marvel Time is causing him real problems.
"I heard a theory that explains why characters never age. Franklin Richards is using his powers to slow time down, and no one notices. The kid created a universe, this wouldn't be too hard.  I like the idea, as it allows the stories to happen in the period they were written stay that way, but allows the characters to stay young."     --Caesar Godzillatron
Franklin Richards, son of Mr Fantastic and the Invisible Woman, is like Peter Pan: he is famous as the boy who never grows up. He is also famous as the boy who can create and control universes in his spare time.

The two facts may be closely related...
So Franklin is perfectly placed to control space and time in a way that nobody else can. But this was too much for a young child to control, so it was pushed into his unconscious.
1.The energy of the cosmic control rod is not just something he holds in his hand, it is part of him.
2.His father is the smartest guy on Earth.
3.His mother controls an exotic form of energy that can even penetrate and defeat a celestial (see FF 400). In the future she may be able to refine this power to be at the Molecule Man level (see FF 553 or nearby).
4.Both of his parents have powers based on warping and stretching.
Franklin appeared as a teenager because his father (Reed Richards) was about to disappear in a cataclysm. In FF 375-380 there are various references to this future dystopia. In 380-383 we see that the teenage Franklin has a terrible relationship with his parents. He loves them, especially his mother, but she rejects him. Then Reed is (apparently) killed in front of them both.

Meanwhile In an alternate future, Franklin consummates a relationship, becoming a sexual adult. The result is Hyperstorm, an evil being who threatens to destroy the universe. That future Franklin is then punished by the authorities (the sentinels, the police arm of the anti-mutant state). All very Freudian!

Back in this reality, the central conflict is over destroying and trying to save his family. In issue 1 he explains, "I renounced everything I believed in to come back to this time and save my family from the dark raider." But his grandfather warned it would mean the end of the Fantastic Four. And it turned out the Dark Raider was an alternative reality version of his father (Reed Richards), and the team DID break up!
All this time Franklin is trying to hide. His battle suit completely hides him. He telepathically hides his appearance from everyone (as explained in issue 4). He's doing a job he hates, usually failing, making things worse when he does succeed, and just wants to curl up and hide somewhere, and get back to being a child when his mother loved him.

Franklin tries to replace the Fantastic Four by creating Fantastic Force, with Franklin at its head. He generally feels a failure. Later Reed Richards comes back and resumed his rightful place, and Franklin has to leave. Having failed as a teenager he regresses to being a child once more. He is safe and loved as a child, and apparently intends to keep everything that way forever.

The kid is never happy. He's in a Freudian nightmare.

Teenage Franklin was raised in another dimension to be a "guardian of the sacred timelines." His  face develops scars when he's in imminent danger. They seem to reflect his psychological scars.
Franklin: Son of a Genius
A comics fan recently asked, why are there no good Franklin stories? The answer is simply because Franklin, unleashed, can do anything. He is the ultimate deus ex machina. So it is hard to think up any story where he can play a role without solving the problems all at once.

The best Franklin stories would have to revolve around his dangerous mental state, his unconscious power, and his complex relationships. But that would require a writer of exceptional genius.

Meanwhile, there are some very good Franklin stories where he is treated as just a kid. Many of the Power Pack stories are good. And "Franklin: Son of a Genius" (where Franklin looks and acts like Calvin, from Calvin and Hobbes) is excellent. Purists may argue that Son of a Genius is not canonical,. I disagree. It is perfectly consistent with the other stories, when seen from a six year old's point of view. And thanks to Marvel Time, none of the other stories are canonical either, so what's the problem?

Apart from the "Franklin as kid" stories, writers don't know what to do with him.  So come on Marvel, bite the bullet!
Let Franklin grow up, and let comics grow up with him. Explore what he has really been doing for the past forty one years.  (Or since any story planned now would not be published until 2009, that would make Franklin forty two, the answer to the great question of Marvel Life, the Marvel Universe, and Everything Marvel .)

Come on Marvel, publish that story. You know it makes sense.
And finally...
How old is Franklin Richards?
Maybe this chart will help.
Fantastic Four issue 270, 1984:
Franklin is five years old
Fantastic Four issues 300 and 303, just before Englehart begins: his height, proportions and behavior suggests four years old or younger.
Mid 2000s: he looks four or five. At this period, "Son of a Genius" has him wearing a T-Shirt that says 4 1/2

This image is at the birth of Valeria. Five year later Valeria looks to be four years old, but Franklin is only one year older.

On the FF Comicboards FF message board, "Torch" wrote, "during Claremont's run, or maybe even before, it was explicitly stated that  Franklin was 10 y/o. I recall this because it was a matter of much discussion at  the time since the issue of Time in the MU is much contended."
Volume 3 issue 51: aged 7.
The same issue, he looks and acts older than seven.

"I'm going to make you wish you had never been born" says Sue to Franklin.
Look at his face.
He's way past that stage.No more Unca Benji shit I guess here.
According to Wikipedia, issue 564 says Franklin is eight. According to Allexperts.com, Marvel Knights 4 states that he is nine. (There is some disagreement over whether Knights is considered canon, but the consensus is that it is is.). I don't own those issues, so I cannot comment.

In 574 we apparently see Franklin de-age before our eyes. The family arranges a surprise birthday party. For a split second we see the cake before he does. It has six candles. In the next picture we see the number has gone down to five.


Englehart started with issue 304, and true to his reputation he began time moving again: Franklin starts getting bigger in his first issue. But not all at once, so Englehart accepts the starting age of four.
Franklin's name and heritage

At this point I should probably mention where Franklin got his name: he's named after his maternal grandfather. The original Franklin was unable to prevent the death of his wife, and blamed himself. He became an alcoholic, would not defend himself in court, and spent the rest of his life in jail, hating himself, while his children (Sue and Johnny) had to fend for themselves.

Finally he was hated when he seemed to try and kill his family (it was an impostor), then he died trying to protect them.

That's Franklin's name and heritage. It's all there in Fantastic Four 31-32.

Oh, and his middle name? From Benjamin Grimm. The guy who often hates himself after Reed created him, the one Reed can never help.


For Franklin, the pain never stops

The entire thirty year run of the Marvel Universe Fantastic Four can be seen as a morality play where Reed must choose to put his son first. The stories that take place after that (from 1991 to the present) are where we see what happens when the Reed makes the wrong decision. Whenever Franklin grows up, his parents reject him, as we see once again in Fantastic Four 574. They don't know it's him, but even when they do know (as when he was PsiLord) his mother won't believe him.

So his only choice is to stay young forever.
don't me wrong.I have nothing against kids in stories.I loved Will Robinson,as a kid.But being an actor portraying a kid in space,as Lost in Space,one could hope if that show lasted beyond three seasons,Will would been allowed to grow up.Franklin Richards isn't.Ok,he allowed that once in awhile growth spurt,so the Fantastic Four and such can intereact with adult Franklin Richards,but mostly he is always eternally a child.And thats just plain stupid on Marvels part.
The birthday party is significant because the Power children are there. In the original Power Pack, Alex, the oldest, was  12 to 13 and Franklin was four or older. Johnathan Hickman, the writer of FF 574, stated that Alex is now aged 19. Which would make Franklin aged 11.And the Real Franklin Richards more closer to Riff Robertsons age in the movie Charlie and his mental age,still being that of a child,making a retard,who make his pants.Reading Marvel ?You should.


Franklin Benjamin Richards is the boy who can never grow up.


don't me wrong.I have nothing against kids in stories.I loved Will Robinson,as a kid.But being an actor portraying a kid in space,as Lost in Space,one could hope if that show lasted beyond three seasons,Will would been allowed to grow up.Franklin Richards isn't.Ok,he allowed that once in awhile growth spurt,so the Fantastic Four and such can intereact with adult Franklin Richards,but mostly he is always eternally a child.And thats just plain stupid on Marvels part.

The Time Core Corporation

The Time Core Corporation is a fictional organization, a group of timeline monitors in the Maveric Universe. The Time Core Corporation,is secret organization,that sponsors many time travel operations.The Time Core Corporations claims responsibility for monitoring the multiverse and  timelines for any threat they're deemed too dangerous to exist or allow to continue.It is an immense bureaucracy dedicated to overseeing, adjusting, and ultimately balancing the myriad timelines of an infinitely variable multiverse.

Department of Temporal Investigations, whose mission would be to repair the damaged realities, and hopefully, to return them toward the correct or as near as possible timeline home safely .They often sponsor or support team of men and women ,such as Project;Time Stalkers,who police time and work to resolve time paradoxes.Using interdimensional viewing station the Time Core Corporation,through their meddling, accidentally altered the realities of the multiverse

the four heroic adventurers travel anywhere and everywhere,
guided by Magnus 5000-a huge artificial intelligent computer-built by the hidden cities original builders.
Using the SS Time-Stalker One, the four heroes. travel to distant lands, visit strange new civilizations
and... strange new worlds, other alternate temporal worldliness helping all who need assistance, exploring
otherworldly technology and protecting launch point Earth against all external and internal threats.Mainly from the Tykhon and Tauron Empires,that wish many of the Alternate Earth world-lines another foothold across the star in theie Temporal Cold War.

Chronology protection conjecture

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The chronology protection conjecture is a conjecture by the physicist Professor Stephen Hawking that the laws of physics are such as to prevent time travel on all but sub-microscopic scales. Mathematically, the permissibility of time travel is represented by the existence of closed timelike curves. The chronology protection conjecture should be distinguished from chronological censorship under which every closed timelike curve passes through an event horizon, which might prevent an observer from detecting the causal violation.[1]

The Time Machine

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See this announcement for more information and other options for storing your content. the-time-machine Version 5 of 20, edit by SUPERMAN, Mar 30 2008 - Edit The Time Machine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia You have new messages (last change). Jump to: navigation, search For other uses, see Time Machine. The Time Machine First edition cover Author H. G. Wells Cover artist Ben Hardy Country England Language English Genre(s) Science fiction novel/Allegory Publisher William Heinemann Publication date 1895 Media type Print (Hardback and Paperback) ISBN NA The Time Machine is a novel by H. G. Wells, first published in 1895 and later directly adapted into at least two theatrical films of the same name as well as at least one television and a large number of comic book adaptations. It indirectly inspired many more works of fiction in all media. Considered by many to be one of the greatest science fiction novels of all time, this 38,000 word novella is generally credited with the popularization of the concept of time travel using a vehicle that allows an operator to travel purposefully and selectively. The term "time machine", coined by Wells, is now universally used to refer to such a vehicle. Contents [hide] * 1 History * 2 Plot summary o 2.1 Deleted text * 3 Film, TV, or theatrical adaptations * 4 Sequels by other authors * 5 See also * 6 Footnotes * 7 External links [edit] History Wells had considered the notion of time travel before, in an earlier (but less well-known) work entitled The Chronic Argonauts. He had thought of using some of this material in a series of articles in the Pall Mall Gazette, until the publisher asked him if he could instead write a serial novel on the same theme; Wells readily agreed, and was paid £100 on its publication by Heinemann in 1895. The story was first published in serial form in the New Review through 1894 and 1895. The book is based on the Block Theory of the Universe, which is a notion that time is a fourth space dimension. The story reflects Wells' own socialist political views and the contemporary angst about industrial relations. Other science fiction works of the period, including Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward and Thea von Harbou's Metropolis dealt with similar themes. The Time Machine is in the public domain in the United States, Canada, and Australia, but does not enter the public domain in the European Union until January 1, 2017 (1946 death of author + 70 years + end of calendar year). [edit] Plot summary The book's protagonist is an amateur inventor or scientist living in London who is never named; he is identified simply as The Time Traveller. Having demonstrated to friends using a miniature model that time is a fourth dimension, and that a suitable apparatus can move back and forth in this fourth dimension, he completes the building of a larger machine capable of carrying himself. He then immediately sets off on a journey into the future. The Time Traveller details the experience of time travel and the evolution of his surroundings as he moves through time. While travelling through time, his machine allows him to observe the changes of the outside world in fast motion. He observes the sun and moon traversing the sky and the changes to the buildings and landscape around him as he travels through time. His machine produces a sense of disorientation to its occupant, and a blurring or faintness of the surroundings outside the machine. His journey takes him to the year A.D. 802,701, where he finds an apparently peaceful, pastoral, communist,[1] future filled with happy, simple humans who call themselves the Eloi. The Eloi are about four feet tall (~122 cm), pink-skinned and frail-looking, with curly hair, small ears and mouths and large eyes. Males and females seem to be quite similar in build and appearance. They have high-pitched, soft voices and speak an unknown language. They appear to be quite unintelligent and child-like and live without quarrels or conflict. Soon after his arrival he rescues Weena, a female Eloi he finds drowning in a river. Much to his surprise she is grateful to him and insists on following him. The Eloi live in small communities within large and futuristic yet dilapidated buildings, doing no work and eating a frugivorous diet. The land around London has become a sort of untended garden filled with unusual fruiting and flowering plants, with futuristic, albeit broken down buildings and other structures dotted around, seemingly of no purpose and disused. There is no evidence of the implementation of agriculture or technology, of which the Eloi seem incapable. The Time Traveller is greeted with curiosity and without fear by the Eloi, who seem only vaguely surprised and curious by his appearance and lose interest rapidly. He disables the time machine and follows them to their commune and consumes a meal of fruit while trying to communicate with them. This proves somewhat ineffectual, as their unknown language and low intelligence hinders the Time Traveller from gaining any useful information. With a slight sense of disdain for his hosts' lack of curiosity and attention to him, the Time Traveller decides to explore the local area. As he explores this landscape, the Time Traveller comments on the factors that have resulted in the Eloi's physical condition and society. He supposes that the lack of intelligence and vitality of the Eloi are the logical result of humankind's past struggle to transform and subjugate nature through technology, politics, art and creativity. With the realisation of this goal, the Eloi had devolved. With no further need for technology and agriculture and innovations to improve life, they became unimaginative and incurious about the world. With no work to do, they became physically weak and small in stature. Males, generally being breadwinners and workers in former times, have particularly degenerated in physique, explaining the lack of dimorphism between the sexes. The Time Traveller supposes that preventive medicine has been achieved, as he saw no sign of disease amongst his hosts. With no work to do and no hardships to overcome, society became non-hierarchical and non-cooperative, with no defined leaders or social classes. The fact that there was no hardship or inequalities in societies meant there was no war and crime. Art and sophisticated culture, often driven by problems and aspirations or a catalyst for solutions and new developments, had waned, as no problems existed and there were no conceivable improvements for humanity. He accounted for their relatively small numbers as being due to the implementation of some form of birth control to eliminate the problems of overpopulation. The abandoned structures around him would suggest that prior to these achievements, the population had been larger and more productive, toiling to find the solution that would make the new utopia a reality. As the sun sets, the Time Traveller muses on where he will sleep. Retracing his steps back to the building where he had eaten with the Eloi, he suddenly realizes that the time machine is missing. He panics and desperately searches for the vehicle. At first, he suspects that the Eloi have moved it to their shelter. He doubts the Eloi would be capable or inclined to do this, but nonetheless rushes back to the shelter and demands to know where his machine is. The Eloi are confused and a little frightened by this. Realising the Eloi don't understand him and he is damaging his position with them, he continues his search in desperation during the night before relenting and falling into an uneasy sleep. The Utopian existence of the Eloi turns out to be deceptive. The Traveller soon discovers that the class structure of his own time has in fact persisted, and the human race has diverged into two branches. The wealthy, leisure classes appear to have devolved into the ineffectual, not very bright Eloi he has already seen; but the downtrodden working classes have evolved into the bestial Morlocks, cannibal hominids resembling human spiders, who toil underground maintaining the machinery that keep the Eloi — their flocks — docile and plentiful. Both species, having adapted to their routines, are of distinctly sub-human intelligence. After further adventures the Traveller manages to get to his machine, reactivate it as the Morlocks battle him for it, and escape them. He then travels into the far future, roughly 30 million years from his own time. There he sees the last few living things on a dying Earth, the rotation of which has ceased with the site of London viewing a baleful, red sun stuck at the setting position. In his trip forward, he had seen the red sun flare up brightly twice, as if Mercury and then Venus had fallen into it. Menacing reddish crab-like creatures slowly wander the blood-red beaches, and the world is covered in "intensely green vegetation." He continues to make short jumps through time, seeing the red giant of a sun grow redder and dimmer. Finally, the world begins to go dark as snowflakes begin to fall, and all silence falls upon Earth. In the very end of the Earth, all life has ceased, other than the lichens that still grow on rocks, and a kraken-like creature, roughly the size of a football, that slowly moves onto shore. Feeling giddy and nauseated about the return journey before him, he nevertheless boards his machine and puts it into reverse, arriving back in his laboratory just three hours after he originally left. Entering the dining room, he begins recounting what has just happened to his disbelieving friends and associates, bringing the story back full circle to his entrance in chapter 2. The following day, the unnamed narrator returns to the Time Traveller's house. There, he finds the Time Traveller ready to leave again, this time taking a small knapsack and a camera. Although he promises the narrator he will return in half an hour, three years pass and the Time Traveller still remains missing. What happened to him, and where he ultimately ventured, remains a mystery. [edit] Deleted text The Great Illustrated Classics version of The Time Machine includes a whole chapter not found in the original novel, in which the Time Traveller blunders into a highly advanced future society where time travel is illegal. The time machine is confiscated and the Traveller is arrested, but he eventually escapes after one of the future men attempts to steal the time machine. An extract from the 11th chapter of the serial published in New Review (May, 1895) was censored from the book, as it was thought too disturbing. This portion of the story was published elsewhere as The Grey Man. The censored text begins with the Traveller waking up in his Time Machine after escaping the Morlocks. He finds himself in the distant future of an Earth that is unrecognizable, seeing rabbit-like hopping herbivores near him. He stuns or kills one with a rock, and upon closer examination realizes they are probably the descendants of the Eloi. A gigantic, centipede-like arthropod approaches and the traveller advances ahead in time a day to flee, finding the creature to have apparently eaten the tiny humanoid. This dark ending of humanity was thought too shocking to be published. [edit] Film, TV, or theatrical adaptations The first visual adaptation of the book was a live teleplay broadcast on 25 January 1949 by the BBC, which starred Russell Napier as the Time Traveller and Mary Donn as Weena. Sadly, no recording of this live broadcast was made; the only record of the production is the script and a few black and white still photographs. A reading of the script, however, suggests that this teleplay remained fairly faithful to the book.[citation needed] Main article: The Time Machine (1960 film) George Pál (who also made a famous 1953 "modernized" version of Wells' The War of the Worlds) filmed The Time Machine in 1960. This is more of an adventure tale than the book was; The Time Traveller witnesses war's horrors first-hand in 1940 and 1966; also the division of mankind results from mutations induced by nuclear war during the twentieth century. In A.D. 802,701, the Eloi learn and speak broken English. Rod Taylor (The Birds) starred, along with Yvette Mimieux as Weena, Alan Young as his closest friend David Filby (and, in 1917 and 1966, his son James Filby), Sebastian Cabot as Dr Hillyer, Whit Bissell as Walter Kemp and Doris Lloyd as his housekeeper Mrs Watchett. The Time Traveller had the first name of George. Interestingly, the plate on the Time Machine is inscribed ' Manufactured by H. George Wells'. In the end, the Time Traveller leaves for a second journey, but Filby and Mrs Watchett note that he had taken three books from the shelves in his drawing room. "Which three books would you have taken?" Filby inquires to Mrs Watchett, adding " ... he has all the time in the world." The film is noted for its then-novel use of time lapse photographic effects to show the world around the Time Traveller changing at breakneck speed as he travels through time. (Pal's earliest films had been works of stop-motion animation.) Thirty-three years later, a combination sequel/documentary short, Time Machine: The Journey Back (1993 film), directed by Clyde Lucas, was produced. In the first part, Michael J. Fox (who had himself portrayed a time traveller in the Back to the Future trilogy) went behind the scenes of the movie and time travelling in general. In the second half, written by original screenwriter David Duncan, the movie's original actors Rod Taylor, Alan Young and Whit Bissell reprised their roles. The Time Traveller returns to his laboratory in 1916, finding Filby there, and encourages his friend to join him in the far future — but Filby has doubts. (Time Machine: The Journey Back is featured as an extra on the DVD release of the 1960 film). A low-quality TV version was made in 1978, with very unconvincing time-lapse images of building walls being de-constructed, and inexplicable geographic shifting from Los Angeles to Plymouth, Mass., and inland California. John Beck starred as Neil Perry, with Whit Bissell (from the original 1960 movie and also one of the stars of the 1966 television series The Time Tunnel) appearing as one of Perry's superiors. However, the race names Eloi and Morlocks, and the character Weena (played by Priscilla Barnes of Three's Company fame), were reused, though set only a few thousand years in the future. Main article: The Time Machine (2002 film) The 1960 film was remade in 2002, starring Guy Pearce as the Time Traveller, who is named as Alexander Hartdegen, Mark Addy as his friend David Philby, Sienna Guillory as Alex's ill-fated fiancée Emma, Phyllida Law as Mrs. Watchit, and Jeremy Irons as the uber-Morlock. Playing a quick cameo as a shopkeeper was Alan Young, who featured in the 1960 film. (H.G. Wells himself can also be said to have a "cameo" appearance, in the form of a photograph on the wall of Alex's home, near the front door.) The film was directed by Wells' great-grandson Simon Wells, with an even more revised plot that incorporated the ideas of paradoxes and changing the past, before the Time Traveller moves on to 2030, 2037, 802,701 for the main plot, and (briefly) A.D. 635 million. It was met with generally mixed reviews and earned $56M before VHS/DVD sales. The Time Machine used a design that was very reminiscent of the one in the Pál film, but was larger and employed brass construction, along with quartz/glass (In Wells' original book, the Time Traveller mentioned his 'scientific papers on optics'). Weena makes no appearance; Hartdegen instead becomes involved with a female Eloi named Mara, played by Samantha Mumba. In this film, the Eloi have preserved a "stone language" identical to English with the help of a computerized librarian in the ruins of a library. The Morlocks are much more fierce and agile, and the Time Traveller has a direct impact on the plot. In 1994 an audio drama was published on CD by Alien Voices, starring Leonard Nimoy as the Time Traveller (named John) and John de Lancie as David Philby. John de Lancie's children, Owen de Lancie and Keegan de Lancie, played the parts of the Eloi. The drama is approximately two hours long. Interestingly, this version of the story is more faithful to Wells's novella than either the 1960 movie or the 2002 movie. [edit] Sequels by other authors Wells' novella has become one of the cornerstones of science-fiction literature. As a result, it has spawned many offspring. Works expanding on Wells' story include: * The Return of the Time Machine by Egon Friedell, printed in 1972, from the 1946 German version. The author portrays himself as a character searching for the Time Traveller in different eras. * The Hertford Manuscript by Richard Cowper, first published in 1976. It features a "manuscript" which reports the Time Traveller's activities after the end of the original story. According to this manuscript, the Time Traveller disappeared because his Time Machine had been damaged by the Morlocks without him knowing it. He only found out when it stopped operating during his next attempted time travel. He found himself on August 27, 1665, in London during the outbreak of the Great Plague of London. The rest of the novel is devoted to his efforts to repair the Time Machine and leave this time period before getting infected with the disease. He also has an encounter with Robert Hooke. He eventually dies of the disease on September 20, 1665. The story gives a list of subsequent owners of the manuscript until 1976. It also gives the name of the Time Traveller as Robert James Pensley, born to James and Martha Pensley in 1850 and disappearing without trace on June 18, 1894. * Morlock Night by K.W. Jeter, first published in 1979. A steampunk novel in which the Morlocks, having studied the Traveller's machine, duplicate it and invade Victorian London. * The Space Machine by Christopher Priest, first published in 1976. Because of the movement of planets, stars and galaxies, for a time machine to stay in one spot on Earth as it travels through time, it must also follow the Earth's trajectory through space. In Priest's book, the hero damages the Time Machine, and arrives on Mars, just before the start of the invasion described in The War of the Worlds. H.G. Wells himself appears as a minor character. * Time Machine II by George Pal and Joe Morhaim, published in 1981. The Time Traveller, named George, and the pregnant Weena try to return to his time, but instead land in the London Blitz, dying during a bombing raid. Their newborn son is rescued by an American ambulance driver, and grows up in the United States under the name Christopher Jones. Sought out by the lookalike son of James Filby, Jones goes to England to collect his inheritance, leading ultimately to George's journals, and the Time Machine's original plans. He builds his own machine with 1970s upgrades, and seeks his parents in the future. * The Time Ships, by Stephen Baxter, first published in 1995. This sequel was officially authorized by the Wells estate to mark the centenary of the original's publication. In its wide-ranging narrative, the Traveller's desire to return and rescue Weena is thwarted by the fact that he has changed history (by telling his tale to his friends, one of whom published the account). With a Morlock (in the new history, the Morlocks are intelligent and cultured) he travels through the multiverse as increasingly complicated timelines unravel around him, eventually meeting mankind's far future descendants, whose ambition is to travel into the multiverse of multiverses. Like much of Baxter's work, this is definitely hard science fiction; it also includes many nods to the prehistory of Wells's story in the names of characters and chapters. * The 2003 short story "On the Surface" by Robert J. Sawyer begins with this quote from the Wells original: "I have suspected since that the Morlocks had even partially taken it [the time machine] to pieces while trying in their dim way to grasp its purpose." In the Sawyer story, the Morlocks develop a fleet of time machines and use them to conquer the same far future Wells depicted at the end of the original, by which time, because the sun has grown red and dim and thus no longer blinds them, they can reclaim the surface of the world. * The Man Who Loved Morlocks and The Trouble With Weena (The Truth about Weena) are two different sequels, the former a novel and the latter a short story, by David J. Lake. Each of them concerns the Time Traveller's return to the future. In the former, he discovers that he cannot enter any period in time he has already visited, forcing him to travel in to the further future, where he finds love with a woman whose race evolved from Morlock stock. In the latter, he is accompanied by Wells, and succeeds in rescuing Weena and bringing her back to the 1890s, where her political ideas cause a peaceful revolution. * In Michael Moorcock's Dancers at the End of Time series, the Time Traveller is a very minor character, his role consists of being shocked by the decadence of the inhabitants of the End of Time. H.G. Wells also appears briefly in this series when the characters visit Bromley in 1896. * The Time Traveller makes a brief appearance in Allan and the Sundered Veil, a back-up story appearing in the first volume of Alan Moore and Kevin O'Neill's The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, where he saves Allan Quatermain, John Carter and Randolph Carter from a horde of Morlocks. * The time-traveling hero known as "The Rook" (who appeared in various comics from Warren Publishing) is the grandson of the original Time Traveller. In one story, he met the Time Traveller, and helps him stop the Morlocks from wiping out the Eloi. * Philip José Farmer speculated that the Time Traveller was a member of the Wold Newton family. He is said to have been the great-uncle of Doc Savage. * In the movie Gremlins, the Time Traveller's machine (the one from the 1960 movie) is briefly glimpsed at an inventor's convention. While a character has a phone conversation in the foreground, the time machine disappears in the background. * Burt Libe wrote two sequels: Beyond the Time Machine and Tangles in Time, telling of the Time Traveller finally settling down with Weena in the 33rd century. They have a few children, the youngest of whom is the main character in the second book. * In 2006, Monsterwax Trading Cards combined The Time Machine with two of Wells' other stories, The Island of Dr. Moreau and The War of the Worlds. The resulting 102 card trilogy, by Ricardo Garijo , was entitled The Art of H. G. Wells. [1] The continuing narrative links all three stories by way of an unnamed writer mentioned in Wells' first story, to the nephew of Ed Prendick (the narrator of Dr. Moreau), and another unnamed writer (narrator) in The War of the Worlds. Just to entangle reality and fiction further, H. G. Wells also appears as a character, aboard his own time machine, in the 1979 film Time After Time and the 1990s television series Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman. He also briefly travels in time with the Doctor in the Doctor Who serial Timelash, the events of which are said to inspire him to write The Time Machine. In the 1996 Doctor Who movie, the Seventh Doctor is seen reading The Time Machine in the TARDIS. In Ronald Wright's novel A Scientific Romance, a lonely museum curator on the eve of the millennium discovers a letter written by Wells shortly before his death, foretelling the imminent return of the Time Machine. The curator finds the machine, then uses it to travel into a post-apocalyptic future. Doctor Being one of the tv series who was influenced by the movie-The Time Mechine.Infact,Doctor Who can be said be the further adventures of the Time Traveller or Time Mechine-the series. The Time Machine (1960 film) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia THE TIME MACHINE ... THE SCI-FI REVIEW BACK * SCI-FI INDEX * MOVIE INDEX * LINKS * MAIN INDEX Promotional Lines: "You Will Orbit into the Fantastic Future!" "The Time Machine whirls you to a world of amazing adventure in the year 800,000!" "The Time Machine," based on the landmark H.G. Wells novel, tells the tale of an inventor, George, in Victorian 1890's England, who travels through time, by using a time machine that he invented and put together. He bravely embarks on a wild, far reaching adventure into the future, where he discovers that mankind has evolved into two races. One race, the Eli, is made up of young, very good looking, very gentle, trusting, ignorant people who have forgotten how to think for themselves, because all their needs are taken care of by the second race of monster-like people, the Morlocks, who periodically harvest them for food. He finds himself getting involved with these sheep-like people, with one in particular, a young woman called Weena. After meeting the people, he then discovers that he has another problem When the scientist had left his time machine momentarily to explore this strange, new future world, the Morlocks had taken his time machine inside their fortress. Then, because he cares for what is left of the human race, George tries to help them become free from the creatures, to learn to take care of themselves. When a mysterious horn goes off, Weena and others docily go inside the Morlock's fortress cave. To free Weena and others, and to get his machine back, so he could go back to his own time at some point, he must take his life in his hands and go inside the fortress cave as well. A favorite scene takes place in an ancient building in the future, which he comes across as he explores this new future world. He discovers how these people sunk to such a state of sheephood. Time traveler George is thrilled to find books in this ancient library of sorts. When he picks up one, it crumbles to dust. In his anger the traveler sweeps his arms across a shelf of books: they all disintegrate into dust. The scene accurately symbolizes the sad state of human knowledge in the far future. This classic science fiction adventure yarn, adapted from H.G. Wells novella by David Duncan, was directed by the multi-talented, Hungarian born George Pal, who besides being a director, was also a pioneer in the field of creating animation. Before WW2, Pal was head of the cartoon department, at UFA Studios, Berlin. After coming to America to escape Hitler, he created Puppetoons, and received a special academy award for his work in 1943. Around '48-'49, he expanded his interest in the animation field when he became involved with features that combined live action with special photo and sound effects, in such imaginative films as "Seven Faces of Dr. Low," "Tom Thumb," "The War of the Worlds," "The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm," and "Atlantis, the Lost Continent." So, not only did he direct these films, he also was involved with their special effects. In "The Time Machine," the audience is treated to the realistic physical changes that happen around the time machine, in the work room of George's house, and the neighborhood that can be seen from the large window in the workroom. The visual effects and animation were quite dazzling for 1960! Under the leadership of director Pal, Wah Chang and Gene Warren did the special photographic effects, and Don and David Salin, George and David Pal, Jim Danforth and Tim Barr all worked on the animation. These realistic live action sequences with convincing special photo and visual effects, for which the film won an Academy Award. A favorite sequence of scenes showing these innovative special effects can be seen when George travels forward in time, and we see history flow past his workshop window to the outside through seasonal changes, the chaniging mannequin in the window in the shop across from his workshop window, WW1, WW2, the bombing of London, etc, and other calamities, until he finally arrives far into the future. Rod Taylor was perfectly cast as the Victorian time traveler, scientist George, on an adventure in the future. With his rugged looks, and cultured voice, he becomes an elegant, believable representative of the cultured British world of a hundred years ago. Yvette Mimieux is beautiful and does a good job as Weena, a damsel in distress, who George falls for.Yvette went on to make a string of movies, of varying quality and success. She turned to producing in addition to acting. Besides being involved in the film business, she was trained as an anthropologist and became successful in business. Taylor and Mimieux's scenes together are pretty good. They meet each other, when Taylor jumps into the water to save her from drowning when she fell in. All of her kind, the Eli, just sat and watched her as she struggled in the water, not concerned at all. As their relationship develops, the audience wonders what this brave inventor is going to do concerning Weena, if he survives the battle with the Morlocks, and decides that it's time for him to travel back to his own time period. Alan Young offers great support as a friend of Taylor's from the past. Young is best known for starring in the classic TV series "Mr. Ed." Around the late 1970's, Alan found that his voice was in demand and he got a lot of work in various cartoon features. This film is rated G. The monster people, the Morlocks, may be a little scary for young children. Otherwise it is a great family film with a good moral message about the importance of education, knowing the truth, being self-reliant and standing up for what is right. If you liked THE TIME MACHINE, you may enjoy "Star Trek 4," "Back to the Future," "12 Monkeys," "Terminator 2," "Time After Time," "Dune," "Planet of the Apes" and/or "Peggy Sue Got Married." Sci-Fi*Great Action Movies*Great Comedies*Great Date Movies*Great Dramas*Great Musicals ChildDevelopment.com*GraphicDesigners.com*TruckRentals.com You have new messages (last change). Jump to: navigation, search The Time Machine Directed by George Pál Produced by George Pál Written by H. G. Wells (novel) David Duncan Starring Rod Taylor Alan Young Yvette Mimieux Sebastian Cabot Whit Bissell Music by Russell Garcia Editing by George Tomasini Release date(s) 17 August 1960 Running time 103 min Country Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom Language English Budget approx $850,000 Allmovie profile IMDb profile The Time Machine (sometimes known as H.G. Wells' The Time Machine) is a 1960 science fiction film based on The Time Machine, an 1895 novel by H. G. Wells about a man from Victorian England who travels far into the future. It was made by George Pál, who also filmed a famous 1953 version of Wells' The War of the Worlds. It starred Rod Taylor and Yvette Mimieux. The screenplay was written by Daniel Duncan and the musical score was composed by Russell Garcia. The film received a 1961 Oscar for its then-novel use of time lapse photographic effects to show the world around the Time Traveller changing at breakneck speed. Pal always wanted to make a sequel to the 1960 film. But it was only remade in 2002 with the same title directed by Wells' great-grandson Simon Wells. Contents [hide] * 1 Plot summary * 2 Cast * 3 Production * 4 1993 sequel/documentary * 5 Awards and nominations * 6 External links [edit] Plot summary In 1899 London, George (Rod Taylor) discusses the subject of time as the fourth dimension with some of his friends, among them David Filby (Alan Young) and Dr. Philip Hillyer (Sebastian Cabot). He then shows them a tiny machine that he claims can travel in time. When activated, the device first blurs, then disappears. The others are incredulous, but dismiss what they have witnessed as a parlour trick and leave. Before he departs, Filby warns George that it is not for them "to tempt the laws of providence." They agree to meet again next Friday. George sits in his time machine George sits in his time machine Unbeknownst to the others, George has constructed a full-scale model of his time machine, one capable of transporting a man. He sits in it, the dial reading "December 31, 1899", pushes the lever forward, and watches time pass at an accelerated rate around him. To his amusement, he sees the changing of women's fashion on a mannequin in the window of a dress shop across the street. Eventually, he stops the machine at September 13, 1917 to see what has become of the world. He meets a man in uniform whom he mistakes for his old friend, David Filby; it turns out to be his son James. He informs George that his father had died recently in the "Great War". George returns to the machine and travels to June 19, 1940. There are barrage balloons in the sky and sounds of bombing, leading him to believe, "It must be the new war." His next stop is August 18, 1966. He is puzzled to see several people hurrying past him into a fallout shelter amidst the blare of air raid sirens. An older, grey-haired James Filby tries to get him to enter the shelter as "the mushrooms will be sprouting" before fleeing. There is an explosion, the sky turns red, and hot lava begins to ooze down the street. George restarts the machine, just in time to avoid being incinerated. The lava covers the machine, cools and hardens, forcing George to travel far into the future before it erodes away. He stops the machine abruptly on October 12, in the year 802,701, next to a low building with a large, grotesque sphinx on top of it. George explores the idyllic pastoral paradise. He spots some young adults by a river. A young woman is drowning, but the others are strangely indifferent to her plight. George rescues her himself. She calls herself Weena (Yvette Mimieux) and her people the Eloi. She is very interested in him. George is outraged to find out that the Eloi have no government, no laws, and little curiosity. Their books lay mouldering on a few shelves. He shouts, "A million years of sensitive men dying for their dreams, for what? So you can... dance and play." He decides to return to his own time, but tracks indicate that the time machine has been dragged into the building, behind a pair of locked metal doors. Weena and George listen to the talking rings Weena and George listen to the talking rings Weena takes George to a small museum, where talking rings tell of a centuries-long East-West nuclear war. One group of survivors chose to remain in the shelters, while the rest decided to "take their chances in the sunlight, slim as those chances might be." Later, Weena tells George that the Morlocks live in the building. At night,Weena insists that George and her go back inside, for fear of the Morlocks. While they stay outside, he shows her a fire, and tells her a little about the past. As George tries to recover his machine, one of the Morlocks grabs Weena, but George saves her again. The next day, Weena shows George openings in the ground which look like air-shafts. George starts climbing down one of them, but then a siren sounds and he climbs back up. Weena and rest of the Eloi start walking towards the front of the building as if in a trance, seeking refuge from a non-existent attack. Before George can find her, the sirens stop and the doors close, trapping Weena and several others inside. The Morlocks. The Morlocks. George climbs down an air-shaft, reaching a big artificial cave. In one chamber he sees a number of human skeletons strewn carelessly about and learns the horrifying truth: the Morlocks eat the Eloi. The Morlocks are finally shown to be hideous hominid, ape-like creatures. George finds that they are sensitive to light; he uses matches to keep them at bay, before lighting an improvised torch. At one point, a Morlock knocks it away, but one of the male Eloi summons up enough courage to punch the Morlock. Weena pitches in as well. They set fire to the flammable material in the cave, driving off the Morlocks. Then the Eloi escape through the air-shafts. Under George's guidance, they drop tree branches into the shafts to feed the fire. There is an explosion, and the entire area caves in. Finding the metal doors now open, George goes in to get his machine, but the doors close behind him. A Morlock attacks, but George activates his machine and travels into the future, watching the Morlock die and turn to dust. Then George travels back to January 5th, 1900. He tells his story to his friends, but only Filby believes him. After George's friends leave, Filby returns, but by the time he reaches the laboratory, it is too late: George has left again. The housekeeper, Mrs. Watchett (Doris Lloyd) notes that he took three books with him. Filby asks her which three she would take with her to restart a civilization. She asks Filby if they will ever see George again; Filby replies, "One cannot choose but wonder, You see, he has all the time in the world." [edit] Cast * Rod Taylor .... H.George Wells (as said on his time machine) * Alan Young .... David Filby/James Filby * Yvette Mimieux .... Weena * Sebastian Cabot .... Dr. Philip Hillyer * Tom Helmore .... Anthony Bridewell * Whit Bissell .... Walter Kemp * Doris Lloyd .... Mrs. Watchett * Paul Frees* .... Voice of the Rings * Not credited on-screen. [edit] Production Pál was already famous for his pioneering work with animation. He was nominated for an Oscar almost yearly during the 1940s. Unable to sell Hollywood on the screenplay, he found the British MGM studio (where he had filmed Tom Thumb) much friendlier. MGM art director Bill Ferrari invented the Machine, combining a sled-like design with a big, radarlike wheel. The original Machine prop would later reappear in animator Mike Jittlov's short Time Tripper, and thus in his feature film version of The Wizard of Speed and Time which incorporated it. It is also seen in the film Gremlins along with Robby the Robot at the inventor's convention. [edit] 1993 sequel/documentary In 1993, a combination sequel/documentary short, Time Machine: The Journey Back, directed by Clyde Lucas, was produced. In the third part, Michael J. Fox talks about his experience with Time Machines from Back to The Future. In the last part, written by original screenwriter David Duncan, the film's original actors Rod Taylor, Alan Young and Whit Bissell reprised their roles. With Bissell's opening narration, the Time Traveler returns to his laboratory in 1916 and finds David Filby (dressed in a World War I army uniform) there. Knowing that Filby is destined to die during the Great War, George tries to prevent this by encouraging his friend to join him in the far future – but Filby has doubts. Eventually, George departs in the time machine alone – no doubt having learned that he cannot change the course of history... but will give it one more try. Filby dies May 16, 1916, so he'll go back to May 15... (Time Machine: The Journey Back is featured as an extra on the DVD release of the 1960 film.) [edit] Awards and nominations * Academy Award for Best Effects, Special Effects winner (1961) - Gene Warren and Tim Baar * Hugo Award nomination (1961) [edit] External links Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: The Time Machine (1960 film) * The Time Machine at the Internet Movie Database * The Time Machine at Allmovie * "Time Machine The Journey Back Official Website" * Colemanzone.com: A tribute to the classic 1960 MGM movie The Time Machine * The Time Machine - synopsis of film scenes * Turner Classic Movies description * Script (scifimoviepage.com) * Cinematographic analysis of The Time Machine Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Time_Machine_%281960_film%29" Categories: English-language films | 1960 films | The Time Machine | Doomsday films | Dystopian films | Films based on the works of H. G. Wells | Films directed by George Pal | Time travel films | Best Visual Effects Academy Award winners Views * Article * Discussion * Edit this page * History * Move * Watch Personal tools * Mavericstud1 * My talk * My preferences * My watchlist * My contributions * Log out Navigation * Main Page * Contents * Featured content * Current events * Random article Interaction * About Wikipedia * Community portal * Recent changes * Contact Wikipedia * Donate to Wikipedia * Help Search Toolbox * What links here * Related changes * Upload file * Special pages * Printable version * Permanent link * Cite this page Languages * Deutsch * Español * Français * Italiano * Polski * Русский Powered by MediaWiki Wikimedia Foundation * This page was last modified on 25 March 2008, at 05:50. * All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.) Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a U.S. registered 501(c)(3) tax-deductible nonprofit charity. * Privacy policy * About Wikipedia * Disclaimers [edit] See also * Posthuman (human evolution) * Human extinction * The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume Two, an anthology of the greatest science fiction novellas prior to 1965, as judged by the Science Fiction Writers of America [edit] Footnotes 1. ^ "'Communism,' said I to myself." (Chapter 4). [hide] v • d • e Works by H. G. Wells Non-fiction books: Floor Games · Little Wars · A Modern Utopia · The New World Order · The Open Conspiracy · The Outline of History · Russia in the Shadows · The Science of Life · The Shape of Things to Come · Travels of a Republican Radical in Search of Hot Water · World Brain · The Future in America: A Search After Realities · The Fate of Man H. G. Wells Novels: Ann Veronica · The First Men in the Moon · The Food of the Gods and How It Came to Earth · The History of Mr Polly · The Invisible Man · The Island of Dr Moreau · Kipps · Love and Mr Lewisham · Men Like Gods · The Sleeper Awakes · Star-Begotten · The Time Machine · Tono-Bungay · The War in the Air · The War of the Worlds · The Wheels of Chance · The World Set Free Short story collections: The Stolen Bacillus and Other Incidents · Tales of Space and Time · The Country of the Blind and Other Stories Short stories: "The Chronic Argonauts" · "The Country of the Blind" · "The Crystal Egg" · "Empire of the Ants" · "The Land Ironclads" · "The Man Who Could Work Miracles" · "Mr. Ledbetter's Vacation" · "The Red Room" · "The Stolen Body" · "A Story of the Days To Come" · "A Story of the Stone Age" · "A Vision of Judgment" Screenplays: Things to Come · The Man Who Could Work Miracles · The New Faust Film adaptations: The Man Who Could Work Miracles · Things to Come · The History of Mr. Polly · The War of the Worlds · The Time Machine · Island of Lost Souls · The Island of Dr. Moreau [edit] External links * H. G. Wells: The Time Machine on Wikisource * H. G. Wells: The Grey Man on Wikisource * Quotations at The Time Machine on Wikiquote. * Alan Young reads H.G. Wells "The Time Machine" * Full text of The Time Machine with annotation by Xah Lee * Time Machine - Full text with audio. * audiobook of the Time Machine * Time Machine The Journey Back Official Site Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Time_Machine" Categories: 1895 novels | Dystopian novels | Science fiction novels | The Time Machine | Time travel in fiction | Novels by H. G. Wells | Debut novels Hidden categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since March 2007 Views * Article * Discussion * Edit this page * History * Move * Watch Personal tools * Mavericstud1 * My talk * My preferences * My watchlist * My contributions * Log out Navigation * Main Page * Contents * Featured content * Current events * Random article Interaction * About Wikipedia * Community portal * Recent changes * Contact Wikipedia * Donate to Wikipedia * Help Search Toolbox * What links here * Related changes * Upload file * Special pages * Printable version * Permanent link * Cite this page Languages * العربية * Български * Deutsch * Español * Français * 한국어 * Italiano * Nederlands * 日本語 * Polski * Português * Русский * Suomi * Svenska * Українська * 中文 Powered by MediaWiki Wikimedia Foundation Version: Make this version the current version > Page editing not supported in your web browser. Download a new copy of Firefox or Internet Explorer to edit pages. Latest 3 messages about this page (6 total) - view full discussion Aug 21 2008 by bigleostud8