The Talking Rings from the Time Machine (1960)

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  • Опубликовано: 6 янв 2013
  • From the George Pal movie of H G Well's The Time Machine. The "talking rings" are a fictional audio recording and archival technology and describe events from long ago.
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Комментарии • 694

  • @nightrunner1456
    @nightrunner1456 Год назад +126

    This movie is 63 years old and still great, better than most movies made today.

    • @dennisznaniecke490
      @dennisznaniecke490 Год назад +1

      Did this movie predict nuclear winter??

    • @luislaplume8261
      @luislaplume8261 Год назад

      ​@@dennisznaniecke490 In a way it did. The movie earlier referred to atomic satellites that could target cities of the enemy on Earth. Incredibly the original book was written by H.H. Welles in 1895 and predicted 3 World Wars to come after the turn of the century in 1900 and even to our 21st century. Atomic energy was just a theory in 1895 and not much was known nor even radiation from what will be created by atomic bombs by 1945.

    • @redbarchetta8782
      @redbarchetta8782 Год назад

      Nope, but it is a good movie, lame rant notwithstanding.

    • @redbarchetta8782
      @redbarchetta8782 Год назад

      @@dennisznaniecke490 No, it was a known thing.

    • @pens8766
      @pens8766 Год назад +1

      ​@@redbarchetta8782movies today suck dont be a simp and try to defend everything!

  • @tiffsaver
    @tiffsaver 9 лет назад +543

    The miracle of this motion picture is just how well it still holds up, in spite of its utter lack of the modern, digital technology we take for granted today. Made for a fraction of what the fancy remake cost, it blew away the CGI version, a testament to both the prodigious acting talents of the original cast, and the incredible efforts of George Pal. Rod Taylor just passed on the 7th of January. RIP.

    • @animal16365
      @animal16365 9 лет назад +29

      Yes. Some of the old movies are better than today's stuff

    • @SeanDeMarcoGarcia
      @SeanDeMarcoGarcia 9 лет назад +16

      tiffsaver Nailed it! One of my favorite flicks. Ever! (Along with the Twilight Zone)

    • @tiffsaver
      @tiffsaver 9 лет назад +11

      +Sean DeMarco Garcia
      I'm 66 and I've watched every TZ Marathon since they started. This isn't just great television, it's ART.

    • @SeanDeMarcoGarcia
      @SeanDeMarcoGarcia 9 лет назад +3

      +tiffsaver I HIGHLY recommend the boxed set on Blu Ray. You will not be disappointed. :)

    • @tiffsaver
      @tiffsaver 9 лет назад +3

      +Sean DeMarco Garcia
      Cool.

  • @TheSaneHatter
    @TheSaneHatter 6 лет назад +136

    “My name is of no consequence.....”
    I always respected that guy.

    • @davidpar2
      @davidpar2 3 года назад +11

      He didn’t have the luxury of ego, having gone through what he did

    • @tiffsaver
      @tiffsaver 3 года назад +5

      That line got to me, too!

    • @Kharkovkid
      @Kharkovkid 2 года назад +4

      I have written my future obituary with that line as my opener...

    • @urrrccckostan
      @urrrccckostan 2 года назад

      @@Kharkovkid nice!

    • @paulcoy9060
      @paulcoy9060 Год назад +6

      "... but some call me the Dread Pirate Roberts."

  • @spinningchrysalis4061
    @spinningchrysalis4061 6 лет назад +277

    When I first saw this movie, it creeped me out like few horror movies have ever done. Most of the movie wasn't creepy, but the wailing air-raid sirens, the Morlock sphinx, and the talking rings grimly but calmly describing humanity's demise and dropping in pitch at the end - all that gave me the shivers. Most people my age don't know what it was like to live under the threat of nuclear war, but because of this movie, I think I grasp it when I hear an air-raid siren. It's the sound of something far more frightening than mere death: everything you know and love will be annihilated.

    • @petergraves5649
      @petergraves5649 6 лет назад +20

      Hello! We still live under the threat of nuclear war, every siingle day. Nothing changed.

    • @Lugh444
      @Lugh444 5 лет назад +10

      I'm only 33 but I grew up terrified of those sirens. I knew what they meant, I heard the stories of my Grandmother hiding in the subways at night to escape the bombs, running when the rats started to run by.
      Strange but as a kid I was fully aware that the world might end at the push of a button, and the wail of those terrible sirens.
      Just like the blast scene from The Day After!!

    • @okamijubei
      @okamijubei 5 лет назад +8

      @@petergraves5649 Just with a slimmer chance compare to our parents; and grandparents' time.

    • @adambazso9207
      @adambazso9207 5 лет назад +2

      @@okamijubei Yes, they produce more and more weapons. Maybe they will be willing to use them one day..I hope I won't live to see that day...

    • @user-lq8fc3fg2s
      @user-lq8fc3fg2s 4 года назад

      Thank you trump!

  • @Nic01224
    @Nic01224 11 лет назад +218

    I love how The Time Travellers face turns from fascination to stern horror.

    • @deepfriedsammich
      @deepfriedsammich 3 года назад +26

      Rod Taylor and Yvette Mimieux were good actors. Also, while the Talking Rings were not a feature of the original H.G. Wells novel, they are faithful to his narrative. You can also see another such device, in the global holographic computer data base portrayed in the 2002 movie interpretation of the novel. Wells was a typical early twentieth century progressive, and wrong about a great many things, but when I look at this movie, in particular, and see this scene, in particular, I wonder if he may have been at least partially right in some of his pessimistic musings. Look at this scene with Weena and the Time Traveler. Weena and the other Eloi have access to a large database of incredible information about science and history that is beyond the imaginings of the Time Traveler, and yet she and the other Eloi lack the education and contextual knowledge that would allow them to understand what the Time Traveler has deduced and inferred from what he has learned. Look at this scene again, and ask yourself if you do not see a Boomer and a Millenial in the Time Traveler and Weena. Notice how the Time Traveler asks Weena to "Make it talk." SHE knows how, and she shows him "how to Google it," but she has no comprehension of the information that The Talking Rings impart, whereas the Time Traveler does. It makes me wonder if Wells was onto something.

    • @deepfriedsammich
      @deepfriedsammich 3 года назад +18

      Also, it is not JUST "stern horror;" the Time Traveler is contemptuous of the Eloi and what it is into which they have descended. Remember the scene where the Time Traveler is shown the moldering books? Remember the scene of his "rant" in the domed cafeteria? It is not just horror over realizing the plight of Weena and the Eloi, he also experiences contempt and disgust at the complacency of the Eloi and with their apparent loss of respect for learning and knowledge, and human life and dignity.

    • @robertr9188
      @robertr9188 Год назад +6

      @@deepfriedsammich astute observation and I concur wholeheartedly

    • @charlie-obrien
      @charlie-obrien Год назад +2

      @Phillip Kruger
      Right away. They are unmistakable.

    • @woodrobin
      @woodrobin Год назад +7

      It illustrates a basic axiom of the search for knowledge: Be careful of the questions you ask, in case you learn the answers.

  • @ulphil08
    @ulphil08 Год назад +28

    How beautiful Yvette Mimieux was. RIP

    • @richardmoloney689
      @richardmoloney689 5 месяцев назад

      Didn't know she died. Thanks for that. I adored her.

    • @neo3779
      @neo3779 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@richardmoloney689she was adorable in this movie

  • @Sameoldfitup
    @Sameoldfitup 3 года назад +67

    “Has it ever struck you that life is all memory, except for the one present moment that goes by you so quick you hardly catch it going?”― Tennessee Williams

    • @montecristo1845
      @montecristo1845 2 года назад +7

      Yes! Right up there with comedian Mitch H’s joke: a friend of mine showed me a picture of himself and said “this is one of me when I was younger.” I said, “EVERY PICTURE OF YOU IS WHEN YOU WERE YOUNGER! THINK ABOUT IT!”

    • @DennisMoore664
      @DennisMoore664 Год назад +3

      Life...there it goes.

    • @richardyoung9024
      @richardyoung9024 Год назад +1

      Everything from 1 minute ago to a mere 1 second ago is all in the past. Think about it even as I type this.

  • @SlaaneshiChaplain
    @SlaaneshiChaplain 7 месяцев назад +13

    The brilliance of using a rotating ring that one could describe as a spinning metallic disk to playback recorded sound in 1960...

    • @petervitti9
      @petervitti9 5 месяцев назад +3

      Its a 💿 CD.

    • @InvisibleHotdog
      @InvisibleHotdog 5 месяцев назад

      You mean like a record player?

    • @tiffsaver
      @tiffsaver 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@InvisibleHotdog
      Record player, or CD, or DVD, this movie got it right a long time ago.

    • @InvisibleHotdog
      @InvisibleHotdog 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@tiffsaver the phonograph came out like 80 years before this movie

    • @rollomaughfling380
      @rollomaughfling380 Месяц назад

      @@InvisibleHotdog The Edison *_wax cylinder_* phonograph, not a flat turntable with a disc.

  • @prometheanevent
    @prometheanevent Год назад +12

    Anyone interested in history, politics, and philosophy can’t help but love this movie. When I was a kid, George was my hero. That debate about the fourth dimension at the beginning is priceless.

  • @jackmunch6978
    @jackmunch6978 2 года назад +12

    Yvette was fine. RIP Weena!

  • @roberttelarket4934
    @roberttelarket4934 4 месяца назад +2

    One of the five greatest sci-fi movies of all times! The beautiful Time Machine, the talking rings and the Elois.
    The talking rings and the light on it was an ingenious idea!

  • @CarlMakesItEasy
    @CarlMakesItEasy 8 лет назад +26

    "And when they are gone, WE MUST DIE..."

  • @peterfranks6243
    @peterfranks6243 Год назад +17

    Fan of Rod Taylor ever since watching this as a kid, classic

    • @puppiesarepower3682
      @puppiesarepower3682 Год назад +2

      Love the guy. I wish more actors were as respectful as he was.

  • @arthouston7361
    @arthouston7361 Год назад +32

    I knew I was destined to be a voice actor when I first heard the voice of Paul Frees, who you hear in this clip as the talking rings. I think I first heard his voice in the trailer for a sci-fi classic called “Atlantis, the lost continent.” I was nine years old, and didn’t get to see “the Time Machine” until four or five years later when it popped up on TV. I found it very interesting to see Alan Young in a dramatic role, because I only knew him as Wilbur Post from the Mr. Ed TV show. People often ask why we don’t see the same quality of film projects today as we did 60 or 70 years ago, and the reason is they drew a larger portion of society as viewers… whereas today we have so many choices that almost no films get to be legendary like Star Wars or Avatar or other top box office hits.

    • @daveconleyportfolio5192
      @daveconleyportfolio5192 11 месяцев назад +1

      Many more movies were made in the days of the studio system, plus there was radio. Actors like Paul Frees could earn a nice living working six days a week on multiple radio shows, and they were usually live. So you learned to be a pro, play to the listener's imagination, and sound like different people so you got more work.

  • @Eric_Malbos
    @Eric_Malbos Год назад +28

    These talking rings are an excellent idea to represent what could be perceived as a very advanced media format instead of cassette, tape or CD which became banal or obsolete with the passage of time.

    • @okamijubei
      @okamijubei 11 месяцев назад

      But still cannot beat the quartz discs. Which it wasn't thought of during the film.

    • @benjaminschiel3339
      @benjaminschiel3339 5 месяцев назад +1

      technical almost all form of media have the same problem the are digital and demand a complex technology with manny diffrent parts and compoment. Even if you save all english writhen books inside one singel 5 cm diamond.
      it became worthless if you have no technology to read it.
      A book can be used to get the information out of it aslong people can read this english and aslong it don't rotten.
      a microfilm can store a picture and all you need was light and some lenses. and an LP can by played and the recording hear aslong you have a fine nedal. a slow spining mechanic and a mechical amplifier( what could be a papiercup)

  • @walterfechter8395
    @walterfechter8395 10 лет назад +107

    Thank you, George Pal, Rod Taylor and the rest of the cast and crew who put this wondrous film together. Russell Garcia composed a wondrous score to this great film.

    • @olvinyldude
      @olvinyldude 9 лет назад +8

      I have placed that original score album, (both sides) on my page...By Russell
      Garcia...You may want to check out sometime ! His work was brilliant..
      This was just a total achievement all around..

    • @pablotheamericano2431
      @pablotheamericano2431 6 лет назад +7

      Walter Fechter this film made my childhood

  • @jamesdrynan
    @jamesdrynan Год назад +12

    Seeing this as a ten year old in 1960, the Morlocks terrified me and every other kid in the theater. I had a crush on Yvette after seeing the film, too. I had seen Rod Taylor in a Twilight Zone episode in 1959. I later learned they finished filming in June, four months before his TZ appearance. It was his first starring role in a movie and he was great.

    • @alexmuenster2102
      @alexmuenster2102 Год назад +1

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/And_When_the_Sky_Was_Opened

    • @dragonmeddler2152
      @dragonmeddler2152 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, and the ominous sound of dreaded machines that came out of the holes in the ground gave me chills for years after.

  • @phoenixman8569
    @phoenixman8569 8 лет назад +54

    One of my favorite classic syfi films R.I.P. Rod Taylor 1930 - 2015

    • @garethspotfur1
      @garethspotfur1 3 года назад +3

      this was his first starring role too. he did an amazing job.

  • @linokleinmeuleman3348
    @linokleinmeuleman3348 8 лет назад +33

    the best version ever !

  • @nozzer2002
    @nozzer2002 Год назад +12

    Best film version of the time machine !

  • @user-dg7fn3ih1s
    @user-dg7fn3ih1s Год назад +16

    Yvette Mimieux was actually underage when shooting began (she turned 18 during the shoot) and was not legally supposed to work a full shooting schedule, but did. She was inexperienced, but as she worked on this film she kept getting better and better, so that by the end of the shoot the producers went back and re-shot some of her earliest scenes.

    • @Puzzoozoo
      @Puzzoozoo Год назад +8

      She sadly left us last year aged 80. RIP Yvette Mimieux. 😢

    • @garypautard1069
      @garypautard1069 Год назад +8

      Yvette was perfect as the naive child like Eloi girl .

  • @crossedWires8814
    @crossedWires8814 5 месяцев назад +1

    I was born in 1988, and was introduced to this movie by my father when I was about ten years old.
    This fantastic piece of cinema has been an indelible piece of my imagination from my first seeing it.
    Thank you HG Wells for weaving rhis incredible story, and thank you to my father for first showing it to me

  • @64curarine
    @64curarine 9 лет назад +70

    The talking rings are voiced by the late great Paul Frees.

    • @doughelms558
      @doughelms558 5 лет назад +3

      Doing his Orsen Wells impression.

    • @doughelms558
      @doughelms558 5 лет назад +3

      @David Roberts Right, Some of them were voiced by Ringo.

    • @thrashpondopons2776
      @thrashpondopons2776 5 лет назад +3

      @@doughelms558 Indeed! & here's where the Synchronicity kicks in... He did the same vocal style in ANOTHER George Pal Sci/Fi Classic 'War of the Worlds'! Of course... made famous (or, infamous) in the US by Orsen Wells!

    • @petercolpack573
      @petercolpack573 3 года назад +2

      I recognized it from Earth Vs. The Flying Saucers

    • @bhodili-3396
      @bhodili-3396 2 года назад +3

      People of Earth, Attention. This Is Your Final Warning.

  • @acmarston
    @acmarston 2 года назад +6

    Rest In Peace, Weena.

  • @aryaprincess2479
    @aryaprincess2479 Год назад +6

    Yvette died in 2022, such an effortless beauty.

  • @joesmoe71
    @joesmoe71 Год назад +6

    I miss Mr. Taylor, he was soooo awesome in this movie and The Birds

  • @scottwalker2980
    @scottwalker2980 7 лет назад +32

    love the idea of talking rings....brilliant movie

    • @Sparcky1234
      @Sparcky1234 7 лет назад +6

      scott walker film truly withstands the rest of time

    • @ufoengines
      @ufoengines 5 лет назад +2

      Saw this as kid in 1962 and the "rings" blew my mind. TO INFINITY AND BEYOUND ! Patent 672245, 3190554, 3013505 .

    • @jsat5609
      @jsat5609 4 года назад +7

      The talking rings are a simple, low budget prop, that is elegant, engaging, and memorable. Anyone who has ever seen the movie remembers the rings. All done with no CGI, no elaborate sets, no explosions.

    • @KneelB4Bacon
      @KneelB4Bacon 4 года назад +3

      Same here. One thing I didn't like about the remake is that we're supposed to believe that a 21st century computer could last 800,000 years. But these rings are based on an unknown technology that they don't bother to explain. So who's to say how long they would last?

    • @johneyon5257
      @johneyon5257 Год назад +2

      @@jsat5609 - i didn't remember the rings - i remembered pretty much everything else tho

  • @cbgowan516
    @cbgowan516 Год назад +3

    I've always thought that the producers of the movies got the talking rings wrong, they were really spun flat and were actually CD's!

  • @thomassmith6232
    @thomassmith6232 Год назад +8

    George Pal produced some of my favorite movies. The Time Machine, When Worlds Collide, and Destination Moon among them. He had hoped to make a sequel to The Time Machine, but unfortunately was never able to do so.

  • @RoselandPSI7
    @RoselandPSI7 4 года назад +49

    "From the talking rings, I learned how the human race divided itself and how the world of the Eloi and the Morlocks began. By some awful quirk of fate, the Morlocks had become the masters and the Eloi their servants. The Morlocks maintain them and bred them like cattle only to take them below when they reached maturity, which explained why there were no older people among them. Now I knew I must go below. It was the only means of finding a way up into the sphinx, to reach my machine and to find out what happened to the little people when they did go below."

    • @thetwogardens6048
      @thetwogardens6048 Год назад +1

      Exactly what goes on today . You are chattel property of the Government ! And they Dumb down each generation with their crappy School System .

    • @Muninman
      @Muninman Год назад +4

      This is a deliberate distortion of Wells' Marxist theme: the Morlocks were brutalised factory workers (prols) and the Eloi the effete bourgeoisie who had become dependent on the workers...

    • @okamijubei
      @okamijubei 11 месяцев назад

      Well... Then, they believe there's only two... But now these days... Likely humans can evolve into 4 or more species.

    • @rollomaughfling380
      @rollomaughfling380 Месяц назад

      @@okamijubei Stop talking out of your ass.

  • @TheMelarose
    @TheMelarose 10 лет назад +21

    Still my fav movie (since i was at least 10/11 yrs old). hah feel like compulsively downloading this. hg wells never fails. good night time machine. xo

    • @johnmerritt2047
      @johnmerritt2047 6 лет назад +1

      Melanie, I couldn't agree with you more.

  • @stever.8648
    @stever.8648 9 лет назад +22

    This was such a clever bit.

  • @davidpar2
    @davidpar2 11 лет назад +24

    these rings scared the heck out of me when I first watched this movie as a little kid. especially the things that were being said during the spin of the first one

    • @cindydott452
      @cindydott452 Год назад

      If they keep spinning, doesn't that mean you're still in a dream?

  • @PhilbyFavourites
    @PhilbyFavourites Год назад +2

    It was the old man calling “the mushrooms are coming” that scared me witless as a kid. I saw it on TV in the very early Seventies when I as about 12. Old enough to know that Armageddon was in the air and we lived next to a major military “target” in UK so we would have been frazzled in an instant.
    Incredible film that has always stood the test of time. And the bonus is, humanity hasn’t destroyed itself - yet……

  • @acer3573
    @acer3573 Год назад +4

    Paul Frees, who voiced "my name is of no consequence", also did the Ghost Host for Disney's Haunted Mansion. Whenever I watch this video I always think of "There's no turning back now! (sinister laugh)"

  • @tomcass2.030
    @tomcass2.030 6 лет назад +17

    we are looking down the barrel at this now, one days in the distant future, when there are no books or actual pictures or recorded record of the generations after computers. What happens if the plug on the interwebs is pulled? and all you are gonna have left is stuff before the computer age .
    HG Wells was on to something!

    • @okamijubei
      @okamijubei 3 года назад +1

      Unless we surpass ourselves as just one planet civilization. Once we travel to other star systems or part of a galactic organization... Likely our civilizations may live longer... Probably last long like the Galactic Republic Civilization from the Star Wars Universe.

    • @55Quirll
      @55Quirll 3 года назад

      There are two books that you can get to help rebuild civilization.
      1. The Knowledge: How to rebuild our Civilization from scratch by Lewis Dartlnell
      2. How to Invent Everything by Ryan North
      They show what you need to do to reboot or start civilization. You can download them free from the internet or purchase them from Amazon.
      Read and become prepared. Take care and have a Happy New Year.

  • @chefuemaricon
    @chefuemaricon 10 лет назад +18

    This is still one of my favorite time travel movies, and the first one l ever saw.

    • @pablotheamericano2431
      @pablotheamericano2431 6 лет назад +2

      F22Raptor5000 me too.

    • @jsat5609
      @jsat5609 4 года назад +1

      I saw it in 1960 when it first came out. I was 8 at the time, and it totally blew me away.

  • @stebaer
    @stebaer 6 лет назад +6

    Those talking rings are in a neat scene in The Time Machine.

  • @allenlj5165
    @allenlj5165 11 месяцев назад +2

    "My name is of no consequence"- The Ghost Host
    Yeah but in all seriousness that's the voice of Paul Frees, the narrator for three attractions at Disneyland, The Haunted Mansion, Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln, and the extinct ride Adventures Thru Inner Space; and he provides many voices for Pirates of The Caribbean. When I first heard his voice I automatically said to myself that this was perfect casting, who else could provide the voice for the last remaining remnants of human society in the future, just so fitting and chilling. Its also interesting because Paul Frees appears again in the 1960s version of the war of the worlds for a scene, another HG Wells novel of course. Disney must have viewed these movies and decided he was their pick, makes sense since this movie predates all those attractions. I wish he had recorded audiobooks because his voice was just incredible.

  • @efrem1
    @efrem1 9 лет назад +13

    RIP Mr. Taylor

  • @darrellpidgeon6440
    @darrellpidgeon6440 Год назад +6

    A great classic. Just as great as the book, even.

  • @robertphillips2769
    @robertphillips2769 4 года назад +11

    This is a great film that stands the test of time.

    • @bradwilliams1691
      @bradwilliams1691 Год назад

      Especially when you see the flat screen television in Filbys department store in 1966.

  • @royouyong2131
    @royouyong2131 4 года назад +76

    According to the draft script of the film by David Duncan, dated 1959 (which is available online), the 326th year of the final war was 4829, hence this war began in 4503.
    This raises even more questions regarding the changing landscape prior to 802701, after the volcanic rock around George and the time machine erodes away. Who built those white buildings around the English countryside (prior to the construction of the Sphinx) and later the Eloi hall, which once had an adjoining tower? Why have the seasons vanished (as noted by George: "There was no winter...")?
    From the time dial footage at the end of the movie (when George returns to 1900), it is shown that the outside world of the future was only visible after AD 500,000 or so (note the sunlight shining on the dials). This means that the white buildings, Sphinx and Eloi hall were all built during the last 300,000 years prior to 802701. But by whom? The Eloi are too weak and dumb to have built such structures, while the Morlocks certainly could not have built them under the Sun...

    • @evertonporter7887
      @evertonporter7887 4 года назад +24

      I've wondered about that myself. The time traveller witnessed three world wars in the 20th century, the last being the most destructive and devastating, triggering off widespread volcanic activity. Were the bombs detonated along the tectonic plates and faults in the earth's crust, causing massive earthquakes? The time traveler's machine was engulfed in by the rising magma, but was not destroyed due to his travelling through time. The molten rock then cooled and rapidly solidified (from the time traveler's viewpoint). At this point, we do not know what humanity's fate is. He wonders if humanity survived and whether the war is still going on. We then see two readings on the machine's dial. It rapidly approaches the year 10,000 on the first reading. When we see the display again, it is approaching the year 100,000. Shortly after that, again from the time traveler's viewpoint, the rock finally erodes away and he look upon the scene of a recovering, verdant Earth. Behind him, a wall goes up, then structures appear in the landscape, then fade away. He states that, "Thousands of centuries have passed, and the earth has stayed green. There's no winter, no wars...and man has finally learned to tame both the earth and himself. I have to find out." But he stops too quick, and ends up in the year 802,701. The talking rings state that a long war (4503-4829) is at an end and describes the beginning of the divergence of humans into two distinct species. Those who chose a life underground became the troglodyte Morlocks, while those who chose to remain on the surface became the Eloi. Now, since the end of WWIII, civilisation recovered until the next global conflict of 4503. At the end of that war, both groups of survivors went their separate ways, with the cave dwellers having access to machines which were part of a network of underground settlements built during the conflict. Those on the surface, however, had to start all over again from scratch, eventually rebuilding what seemed to be a very advanced civilisation. Now, in keeping with the anti war theme of the movie, did humanity go through cycles of war and peace, with civilisations rising and falling after the 4503 war? And did this last trace of civilisation on Earth advance to the point where their technology created a stagnating society where no further progress was possible? The novel alludes to this, that a state of absolute permanency had been reached, which ironically lead to the demise of that civilisation. Meanwhile, the underground dwellers gradually devolved into a primal form, and their food sources began to run out. Over time, their need to survive took priority over technology, and they turned to the only source of food available to them, which was on the surface.

    • @XxDyneXxFreeEnergyx
      @XxDyneXxFreeEnergyx 3 года назад +3

      The war began in the 45th century and ended in the 48th century.

    • @NashSpaceRocket
      @NashSpaceRocket Год назад +16

      You're assuming the eloi were always like that. They would have evolved over the millennia just like the Morlocks, both were the same race around 4829. Maybe around 500000 when the buildings were being built they weren't so passive and more able to look after themselves, but 300000 years of Morlock dominance had made them weak and feeble by the time the traveler arrives.

    • @chrisc6857
      @chrisc6857 Год назад +13

      Stephen Baxter's sequel 'The Time Ships,' (authorized by Well's estate) speculates that there may have been a third race during the hundreds of thousands of years the time traveler skips over, who were extremely advanced technologically and abandoned the planet at some point. (This is used to explain why the time traveler sees the sun dying less than thirty million years in the future when it should last another five billion years; They tinkered with the sun in some way and messed up.) Maybe they're the ones that built the things neither Eloi or Morlock could have.

    • @Mindsi
      @Mindsi Год назад +4

      I feel a script for ‘ Time Machine 2’ coming on. Maybe tie in or y mash up with its Logan’s run? Gimme ideas and I’ll put ‘em through Infranodus, we can write the script or maybe turn it into a short story!🎉🎉🎉$$$$

  • @kidsplaying6510
    @kidsplaying6510 6 лет назад +6

    I recently watched this movie..I love it

  • @troyh3628
    @troyh3628 Год назад +4

    This scene is a perfect metaphor for the adage ignorance is bliss, and the intelligent are doomed to a life of sorrow. Weena and her people don't understand what the rings talk about, and she continues to smile as the rings play, but George understands perfectly, and as he listens the smile of fascination fades from his face as he learns we damaged the earth to the point we became shadows of ourselves.

    • @greypilgrim228
      @greypilgrim228 Год назад

      "I applied my heart to know wisdom, and to know madness and folly. I perceive that this also was a chasing at the wind. For in much wisdom, is much grief. And he that increaseth knowledge, increaseth sorrow."
      I've always remembered that line, ever since Al Mualim said it in Assassins Creed, quoting Ecclesiastes 1:17. Ignorance it seems truly is bliss.

  • @rizon72
    @rizon72 3 года назад +6

    I like this scene of the talking rings better than the library one in the newer film.

    • @patrickradcliffe3837
      @patrickradcliffe3837 Год назад

      Yeah, but no. That was the ONE thing about the 2002 movie that was better than the original. The holo-Liberian was able to interact to fill in some of the gaps. The rings are just a monologue, but it never occurred to the scriptwriter to have some sort of interaction in the original.

    • @rizon72
      @rizon72 Год назад +2

      @@patrickradcliffe3837 The holo-liberian was the best part of the new movie, but I'll agree to disagree that its better than the talking rings.

  • @Davewise1965
    @Davewise1965 6 лет назад +10

    Brilliant film.

  • @delavalmilker
    @delavalmilker 5 лет назад +5

    There's a scene in 1966 where a store window displays "the new tubeless TV set". Which is exactly like a modern-day LCD screen.

  • @rbl4641
    @rbl4641 Год назад +5

    This amazing, imaginative, really stunning movie in its sweeping story. A masterpiece. Plus, unlike the remake a dozen years ago, its not about us- our time. In this movie our time, us, are utterly forgotten, which is likely how it will be in 800,000 years...

  • @DangerousDickShow
    @DangerousDickShow 6 лет назад +77

    Boy they really picked the right rings to play.

    • @dirkdiggler2430
      @dirkdiggler2430 Год назад

      Lmfao 🤣 for real!!

    • @benjaminschiel3339
      @benjaminschiel3339 5 месяцев назад +1

      perhaps he grab the once that look the lesser used.
      as she say it. they speak about things nobody understand.
      perhaps one outer ring contain a song one artist want preserved this way. and this ring was played way way more offent as all outhers and look over fingerprints and lesser dust way more used...

    • @MrGrorg
      @MrGrorg 2 месяца назад

      I'm sure 800,000 years had plenty to tell

  • @MrTomengle
    @MrTomengle Год назад +4

    I had the great honor of holding the Oscar that my boss at the time, Tim Baar, received for the Special Effects on this movie. Along with Gene Warren I believe.

  • @DarrylRajamae-tx3fk
    @DarrylRajamae-tx3fk 4 месяца назад +3

    The costumes in the movie are stunning I like rod Tyler's Shaw collar jacket

  • @glyph2011
    @glyph2011 9 месяцев назад +2

    Paul Frees. What an amazing voice he had. 👍

  • @csi1392
    @csi1392 Год назад +2

    I WOULD GATHER EVERY RING THERE AND LISTEN TO THEM ALL

  • @allanegleston4931
    @allanegleston4931 Год назад +2

    1960, and it still holds up even today.

  • @HOTRAILProductions
    @HOTRAILProductions 8 лет назад +36

    "My name is Paul Frees and I approve of these rings. "

    • @jsat5609
      @jsat5609 4 года назад +1

      My name is John Satterfield and I approve of Paul Frees
      : ).

    • @romanumeralz
      @romanumeralz 4 года назад +1

      The Man, The Myth, The Legend.🎙

  • @musicfreak1086
    @musicfreak1086 11 лет назад +21

    love this movie :) so much better then the remake

  • @douglashogg4848
    @douglashogg4848 Год назад +8

    Rod Taylor tried to play down this movie but it really is quite good. Better than the remake. Definitely a sci-fi classic.

    • @kerenhumphreys43
      @kerenhumphreys43 Год назад +1

      Yes so much better than the awful remake.

    • @glpilpi6209
      @glpilpi6209 Год назад +1

      I saw it when on the television in the 1960s. This is still one of my favourite films.

  • @panowa8319
    @panowa8319 2 года назад +2

    RIP 🙏 Yvette. (1942-2022)

  • @bixster2260
    @bixster2260 Год назад +1

    Love this movie from the first time I saw it in the 60’s. The voice of the talking rings sounds like Paul Frees of Disney voice over fame, and Rankin-Bass programs.

  • @tomoconnor4984
    @tomoconnor4984 9 лет назад +10

    I miss Rod already RIP George-

    • @traceytaggart1740
      @traceytaggart1740 6 лет назад +3

      Tom O'Connor yeah but it was happy surprise seeing him hunched over as Churchill in Inglorious Bastards for his final role. First close up they gave him just clicked when he said, “brief him”. I was like, “No way, Rod Taylor!”

  • @nosoyspock
    @nosoyspock 11 лет назад +8

    epic scene from epic movie!

  • @jeffstone2136
    @jeffstone2136 Год назад +1

    The single coolest thing in this underrated movie.

  • @catsupchutney
    @catsupchutney 4 месяца назад +1

    The idea of talking rings was never surpassed.

  • @nigelcarren
    @nigelcarren 5 лет назад +4

    A Talking Fidget-Spinner.... that all we need! 😂

  • @BillLykken
    @BillLykken 10 лет назад +15

    It is a powerfull moive, a powerful scean.

  • @puddintame6310
    @puddintame6310 11 лет назад +3

    My favorite iteration of this story.

  • @mcd3379
    @mcd3379 Год назад +7

    A "timeless movie".........and it still remains the best adaptation of the classic HG Wells novel. It's a wonder there haven't been more attempts, as there hasn't been a movie yet which has really brought the full potential of the novel alive - but George Pal's 1960 attempt was certainly a great try.

  • @oldbaldfatman2766
    @oldbaldfatman2766 5 лет назад +2

    Jan. 31, 2019----Man of man....Yvette Mimeaux was so god damned hot in this and her other movies. Especially liked Jackson County Jail movie. And have this movie as VHS and dvd, along with the remake they did as a dvd. Both great classics. Thanks for the video clip.

    • @bhodili-3396
      @bhodili-3396 2 года назад +2

      I also remember her in the Black Hole.

  • @joecardone1682
    @joecardone1682 Год назад +2

    You will never see any more Great Movies.

  • @JP-re3bc
    @JP-re3bc Год назад +3

    A wonderful and unforgettable movie. Rod Taylor with the beautiful and sweet Yvette Mimieux made a perfect couple. So way much better than the marvel trash we have today.

  • @BlackAce-zr2ms
    @BlackAce-zr2ms 9 лет назад +30

    ''The war between the East and West which is in its 326th year, has at last come to an end''.
    ''The atmosphere has become so polluted with deadly germs, that it can no longer be breathed.''
    I can never get out of my mind of what and how a war could last for 3 centuries! I look back at the beginning of WWIII in 1966 and I cannot see how it could have continued THAT long! I mean the Atomic Satellites virtually did over 95% of the death and destruction in the first attacks. And with the geological structure ruptured because of the blasts and molten rock rising to the surface to finish the job certainly was the 5%.
    World War III: 1966 - 2289.

    • @lizardboy2566
      @lizardboy2566 9 лет назад +7

      I'm pretty sure that nuclear weapons weren't the only things to make the war last that long. The governments at the time would've also used conventional warfare as well for territorial expansionism too.

    • @BlackAce-zr2ms
      @BlackAce-zr2ms 9 лет назад +4

      Well Tyler you did see the power of the atomic satellites. I mean they were strong enough to cause a geological surge, but then again that was probably in a specific place. However seeing as they were satellites that the possibility of the atmosphere being evaporated was more than likely. Still god knows what tech was available at the time of the start of WWIII, however the possiblity of chemical weapons being used as well are very great.

    • @BlackAce-zr2ms
      @BlackAce-zr2ms 9 лет назад +4

      Gaylord Cohen Hey there! I like that rendition of the build up, I have my own take on the story. Mine was based on how the nuclear weapons test program practiced with orbital camera platforms that were intended for a peaceful purpose and how the Russians believed its capability of carrying Thermonuclear or Hydrogen warheads were too great (Atomic Satellites) and used it against the western democracies. I think I will use this Fanfiction site and type it all out for you to have a look at. I think you will find it as interesting as the one I read from your link.
      :3

    • @WarringPacifist
      @WarringPacifist 9 лет назад +3

      Falkor The Luck Dragon™ Thanks 4 the reply! Can't wait to see what "theory" YOU might have to offer to this FASCINATING discussion on how the "strange new world" of 802,701 AD REALLY came into being! Okay...take care! ;-)

    • @animal16365
      @animal16365 9 лет назад +1

      Gaylord Cohen I'd like to read what you have writen. But the story in the link is no longer available

  • @DMONEY7720
    @DMONEY7720 Год назад +1

    One of the best versions

  • @judistench2167
    @judistench2167 Год назад +1

    My Mom used to joke that the only reason she married my dear Dad was because he looked just like Rod Taylor.
    RIP Mom & Dad - I will always love and never forget you ❤🙏😇

  • @andrewmcnamara6305
    @andrewmcnamara6305 8 месяцев назад +3

    According to TV Tropes this would be an example of an "Apocalyptic Log."

  • @greggstankowski5073
    @greggstankowski5073 Год назад +1

    Really, 1960! They just might of nailed it ,,whenever this movie comes on,I watch it!!

  • @olvinyldude
    @olvinyldude 9 лет назад +16

    One of the wonderous moments, of this splendid film... Thanx for this...! ! !
    I have placed the original complete soundtrack of this film on my page..you may enjoy.

  • @josejr.7191
    @josejr.7191 Год назад +1

    Great Film!! Wish we could have a return of these cinematic films

  • @lynnpoint6395
    @lynnpoint6395 Год назад +2

    "My name is of no consequence...but we have 999 ghosts to haunt you."

    • @alexmuenster2102
      @alexmuenster2102 9 часов назад

      Oh, right: Because the anonymous voices were actually by the famed voice actor Paul Frees, who also did the "Haunted House" ride in Disneyland!

    • @lynnpoint6395
      @lynnpoint6395 9 часов назад

      @@alexmuenster2102 When the crypt doors creak and the tombstones quake....

  • @Kikilang60
    @Kikilang60 Год назад +3

    No one has done the movie as the book was written. Some movies are close, but not there. There were Morlocks and Eloi. The Eloi looked and acted like children. Would it have been so hard to hire children to play Eloi?

  • @ddmck1972
    @ddmck1972 2 года назад +5

    To me, it seems inconceivable that any war like this would last 326 years. If those orbital satelites in 1966 had the strength to cause the catastrophic damage seen to London, then how would other countries of the world continue to maintain a population large enough to continue the fighting at a later time?

  • @SuperGreatSphinx
    @SuperGreatSphinx 6 лет назад +5

    Sound recording and reproduction is an electrical, mechanical, electronic, or digital inscription and re-creation of sound waves, such as spoken voice, singing, instrumental music, or sound effects.
    The two main classes of sound recording technology are analog recording and digital recording.
    Prior to the development of sound recording, there were mechanical systems for encoding and reproducing instrumental music, such as wind-up music boxes and, later, player pianos.
    Acoustic analog recording is achieved by a microphone diaphragm that can detect and sense the changes in atmospheric pressure caused by acoustic sound waves and record them as a mechanical representation of the sound waves on a medium such as a phonograph record (in which a stylus cuts grooves on a record).
    In magnetic tape recording, the sound waves vibrate the microphone diaphragm and are converted into a varying electric current, which is then converted to a varying magnetic field by an electromagnet, which makes a representation of the sound as magnetized areas on a plastic tape with a magnetic coating on it.
    Analog sound reproduction is the reverse process, with a bigger loudspeaker diaphragm causing changes to atmospheric pressure to form acoustic sound waves.
    Oscillations may also be recorded directly from devices such as an electric guitar pickup or a synthesizer, without the use of acoustics in the recording process, other than the need for musicians to hear how well they are playing during recording sessions via headphones.
    Digital recording and reproduction converts the analog sound signal picked up by the microphone to a digital form by the process of digitization.
    This lets the audio data be stored and transmitted by a wider variety of media.
    Digital recording stores audio as a series of binary numbers (zeros and ones) representing samples of the amplitude of the audio signal at equal time intervals, at a sample rate high enough to convey all sounds capable of being heard.
    Digital recordings are considered higher quality than analog recordings not necessarily because they have higher fidelity (wider frequency response or dynamic range), but because the digital format can prevent much loss of quality found in analog recording due to noise and electromagnetic interference in playback and mechanical deterioration or damage to the storage medium.
    Whereas successive copies of an analog recording tend to degrade in quality, as more noise is added, a digital audio recording can be reproduced endlessly with no degradation in sound quality.
    A digital audio signal must be reconverted to analog form during playback before it is amplified and connected to a loudspeaker to produce sound.

    • @gallifreyantauri
      @gallifreyantauri Год назад +1

      Thank you for that explanation.
      The movie came out in 1959, yet by 1957, "Max Mathews of Bell Labs recorded the first computer-generated music, a 17-second piece called "The Silver Scale" composed by his co-worker Newman Guttman" (From Wikipedia). Optical video recording technology, using a transparent disc, (laser disc) was invented by David Paul Gregg and James Russell in 1963 (and patented in 1970 and 1990). Compact discs are "an evolution of LaserDisc technology, where a focused laser beam is used that enables the high information density required for high-quality digital audio signals. Prototypes were developed by Philips and Sony independently in the late 1970s. In 1979, Sony and Philips set up a joint task force of engineers to design a new digital audio disc. After a year of experimentation and discussion, the Red Book CD-DA standard was published in 1980." (Wikipedia)
      I wonder if the "rings" were another sci-fi "invention" that later "birthed" compact discs, much like cell phones today were sci-fi "inventions" first seen in Star Trek. I remember reading somewhere that engineers thought Star Trek's communicators were so cool that they wanted to build a real one... and they did. 😺

  • @mgn5667
    @mgn5667 5 лет назад +2

    i loved this scene

  • @larrynile8770
    @larrynile8770 Год назад +3

    It's worth it just to hear those master voices of the past: Sir Laurence Olivier, and Paul Frees, in quick succession. This is exactly whom I would choose us to be represented to the Future World.

  • @melshorse
    @melshorse 4 года назад +3

    The voice over by Paul Frees makes this scene classic.

    • @wolf1728
      @wolf1728 3 года назад

      Absolutely!!! No one could play the "Voice of Authority" as well as Paul Frees!

  • @brett8402
    @brett8402 11 лет назад +17

    The Rings Were a Great Idea Very Advanced

  • @TheRealKaiProton
    @TheRealKaiProton Год назад +1

    when I saw this as a kid, the Morlocks scared the hell out of me, its a fantastic movie

    • @starrfaithfull6934
      @starrfaithfull6934 Год назад

      I hated those disgusting Morlocks. They didn't scare me as much as the sirens, but they were revolting on a deeper level.

  • @iamjackscompletelackofsurp9606
    @iamjackscompletelackofsurp9606 Год назад +1

    That’s Paul Frees, and that legendary voice!

  • @user-dg7fn3ih1s
    @user-dg7fn3ih1s 2 года назад +3

    1:19My name is of no consequence. The important thing you should know is that I am the last who remembers how each of us, man and woman, made his own decision. Some chose to take refuge in the great caverns and find a new way of life far below the earth's surface. The rest of us decided to take our chances in the sunlight, small as those chances might be.

  • @winsomehax
    @winsomehax Год назад

    Beautiful, eerie bit of film-making with simple practical effects.

  • @kellyfoster3521
    @kellyfoster3521 Год назад +1

    Even now this is still a Top 10 Sci Fi Movie of all time.

  • @bradwilliams1691
    @bradwilliams1691 Год назад +1

    I wonder why George didn't spin the other rings - imagine how much more he could've learned.

  • @darkzircon8165
    @darkzircon8165 3 года назад +3

    I like how the voice didn't mention any country involved in the war, just "east" and "west", the Cold War left so much inspiration to filmmakers.

    • @charlie-obrien
      @charlie-obrien Год назад +1

      Since Paul Frees was narrating, there is a chance that the war was between Pottsylvania and the good 'ol U.S. of A.
      Lol

  • @Petemonster62
    @Petemonster62 Год назад +1

    I did look over David Duncan's script & it appears to be an original rough draft. That script did mention a later war in 4053 A.D. in the Talking Ring scene but seems to be omitted in the final film. Duncan's script also mentions in the 1966 pre-attack scene an ambulance passing George, and the bomb blast rerouting the Thames River - I don't recall seeing those things in the film. (There was a TOHO movie from 1962 called "The Last War" that has a volcano form in H-Bomb devastated Tokyo.) The Soviets were found to have stashed away World War II fighter planes and military gear in caves, so it is plausible that the 1966 war continued with conventional weapons to some degree after the nuclear exchange. There may have been biological weapons that weren't destroyed in the nuclear exchange that were used later and "Filled the air with deadly germs". The British descendants of the 1966 war survivors probably noted that the Soviets were no longer attacking them 326 years later and declared that the war is over. During the Cold War, the Soviet Union and other communist nations were referred to as "The East" and the non-communist nations were referred to as "The West". I wonder if the monorail train in the 1966 scene was one that was sold in the Disneyland toy store? There could have been later wars, between "Tribes" of the British descendants that would account for the fallen tower and other destroyed buildings.

  • @ReaverLordTonus
    @ReaverLordTonus 9 лет назад +48

    I really wish they did more with this scene, I would like to have heard what some of the other rings had to say. There's a major information gap between humanity being a war weary but otherwise independent to a blissfully ignorant slave race. I also wonder if the Morlocks really were the people who took refuge beneath the surface. They weren't really that deep below and if they had technology on par with the talking rings, I'd imagine they'd be at least living in vaults like in fallout. For all we know, there's a technologically advanced human race loving a mile or so underground and no one would no it. Overall, it would have been interesting if H.G. Wells had expanded this story, shown how else the world could have changed. Only what was once London was shown here, the rest of the planet could have been entirely different.

    • @roberthaworth9097
      @roberthaworth9097 8 лет назад +21

      +aHaryBilYrdBall Welles's novel is a socialist dystopia that posits a class struggle that has effectively been extended by hundreds of thousands of years. The Morlocks are the brutalized remnants of the producer class (industrial workers), the Eloi the clueless, disorganized, and effete remnants of the aristocratic one. Both have devolved such that the original class conflict has been forgotten, but has long since been locked in place until the actions of the Time Traveler disrupt it -- at least locally.

    • @pennypizza238
      @pennypizza238 4 года назад +3

      Yeah so true I wish like I read in the other comments that they would include a deleted scene from the other talking rings to here what was recorded on the other rings to learn what was left out of our missing past for those people

    • @evertonporter7887
      @evertonporter7887 3 года назад +6

      My take on this is that several civilisations came and went during our time traveler's journey from the 1960s to the year 802701. Those talking rings could have been a product from that last civilisation he saw when the rock wore away around him....or an earlier era.

    • @Crrrow
      @Crrrow 3 года назад +5

      judging by the pipes and ladder remains I think the morlocks at one point WERE living in some state of the art underground complex, but much like Rome to US something happened in their subterranean fortress that resulted in it's collapse, my guess is they eventually mutated into what we saw from generations of breeding in a highly radioactive environment, perhaps the bunker wasn't completely airtight, maybe it was nuclear powered and it melted down at some point, maybe the giant underground world simply outbred it's capacity to sustain itself in a post nuclear enviornment.

    • @atticstattic
      @atticstattic Год назад

      @@roberthaworth9097
      that's your interpretation, you're welcome to it

  • @ronaldcash8492
    @ronaldcash8492 Год назад +2

    A GREAT MOVIE❤

  • @frankroberts9320
    @frankroberts9320 Год назад +2

    The late Paul Frees, what a voice!

  • @rlevitta
    @rlevitta Год назад +1

    I guess her hair-do was just one of those styles that keeps coming back every millennium or so.

  • @nassauguy48
    @nassauguy48 2 года назад +3

    So, the ancestors of the Eloi were the braver folks who chose to stay above ground after the nuclear holocaust. But, over the centuries, they became lazy and weak. By the way, I believe the voice of the first ring was that of the same actor who voiced the Kanemet in the Twilight Zone episode "To Serve Man".

  • @ewaf88
    @ewaf88 6 лет назад +10

    Has everything modern Sci Fi films often lack - invention - wit and charm.

    • @jsat5609
      @jsat5609 4 года назад

      It had to have these qualities because what it did NOT have was an unlimited mega-budget and an army of CGI artists. Writing, acting and directing had to sell the film.