Directed by: Robert Schwentke
Premise: A woman (Rachel McAdams) falls in love
with a man whose body randomly travels through time (Eric Bana).
What Works: Eric Bana and Rachel McAdams are very
good actors and they do the best they can with the material in the film.
What Doesn’t: The Time Traveler’s Wife is very stupid. Eric Bana’s character randomly shifts to new places in time
but he almost always seems to end up within a hundred miles of his wife. But
what’s worse is that the film does not use his condition to add any insight
into their relationship or about the nature of love. Instead his time traveling
is just a random act; Bana’s character appears at different ages, sometimes
within the same scene, but he is fundamentally the same character through the
whole film and apparently hasn’t learned anything about life from his
experiences. Rachel McAdams’s character is equally flat, starting the film in
love with Bana’s character for no particular reason. The Time Traveler’s
Wife is full of vomit-worthy romantic clichés, from the couple running
toward each other in a field to the requisite wedding scenes. The resolution of
the story is the worst of this mess. The film isn’t driving toward any
conclusion and doesn’t reveal anything to the characters or to the audience.
Bottom Line: The Time Traveler’s Wife is a lousy film. It makes absolutely no use of its premise and has nothing to say about love or relationships.