1159, Groundhog’s Day are probably the shortest loop movies (just a day).
Personally I want to add, if you have 70 minutes to kill, The History of Time Travel (Amazon exclusive) is a surreal ride. It’s San Dimas (Bill & Ted) from a fixed point (you) as you see the affects of time travelers unravel before you (but not the travelers themselves). Like Everything Everywhere All At Once, you’ll see an American classroom suddenly change costumes and speech as they are in mid-lecture to Russian and have to remember “oh, someone from Russia must have snuck into the time travel program” (and get confirmation when the following historian talking-head portion talks about ‘when’ Russia discovered time-travel). For 70 minutes, it’s a relatively quick mockumentary, but it does lack the visual flair of guns or explosions.
I am going to cast my vote for 41.
No BTTF Trilogy?
@werehatrack Big Taco Tuesday Feast?
@yakkoTDI Back To The Future
@werehatrack @yakkoTDI
That was a few days ago, on MorningSideFoodTruckDeal.com
Did you miss it?
@werehatrack
Is that the one with the kid that played Scott in Midnight Madness?
@yakkoTDI And Paul Reubens as the pinball proprietor, yep.
Edge of Tomorrow
lost highway? maybe not a loop but man i was confused after watching that
Looper with Bruce Willis, then Ground Hog Day!
Tenet! But it’s probably closer to a bowl of spaghetti than a loop.
@gsrivast I’m a fan of Christopher Nolan (Memento is one of my favorites) and time travel movies in general, but I found Tenet confusing/inconsistent.
Donnie Darko
Has anybody seen palm spring? It looks pretty funny.
@Star2236, I’ve seen it. It’s funny. But it’s still not better than Groundhog Day.
Triangle
Dark, German series on Netflix.
Watched with subtitles but so engrossing did not even recall that later.
Would be glad for folks’ thoughts.
Source Code!
i can never remember the name of the movie, but i enjoy it
Primer
Time travel movies are all loops in a way.
1159, Groundhog’s Day are probably the shortest loop movies (just a day).
Personally I want to add, if you have 70 minutes to kill, The History of Time Travel (Amazon exclusive) is a surreal ride. It’s San Dimas (Bill & Ted) from a fixed point (you) as you see the affects of time travelers unravel before you (but not the travelers themselves). Like Everything Everywhere All At Once, you’ll see an American classroom suddenly change costumes and speech as they are in mid-lecture to Russian and have to remember “oh, someone from Russia must have snuck into the time travel program” (and get confirmation when the following historian talking-head portion talks about ‘when’ Russia discovered time-travel). For 70 minutes, it’s a relatively quick mockumentary, but it does lack the visual flair of guns or explosions.