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Project Almanac
All was but well until David and his friends uses a time machine to achieve and fulfill their personal interests which came with strong consequences. Each of them disappear little by little, so they must travel back in time to make sure they never built the time machine or witness destruction of humanity
14 November 1949, Amory, Mississippi, USA
4 June 1972, Wiesbaden, Hesse, Germany
June 16, 2015
Yet another chance to berate the found-footage genre, and I'm going to take it.
April 05, 2015
Aside from the last 20 minutes or so, this is a film with zero tension.
May 25, 2015
This MTV Films-backed teen-romance for the GoPro-in-ADHD generation actually makes a music-fest a (creaky) plot-hinge. It's part wanna-be Primer, part energy-drink-hangover-experience.
April 25, 2017
Project Almanac is a good entertainment, suitable for a teen movie or another proposal that uses the found footage format. [Full review in Spanish]
May 30, 2015
Let's be honest -- no gimmick in cinema past, present or future could make this tripe palatable.
January 31, 2015
The premise, which initially has a certain interior logic, grows implausible and then nonsensical.
November 05, 2015
Maybe every time-travel movie can't use a souped-up DeLorean, but Project Almanac may leave you wanting to pull out your old copy of Back to the Future instead.
January 21, 2016
The genre dramatizes the identity formation that goes on during the digital technology-glutted adolescent years, which are filled with screens and captured images, whether from smartphones, cameras, vlogging, or pictures on social media.
January 30, 2015
Maybe it will work better on home video where unrestrained camera movement is less likely to provoke nausea but it certainly doesn't work on a big screen.
January 30, 2015
On the whole, this is a good B-movie that hits it modest marks.
February 02, 2015
Ugly, unfocused photography makes it impossible to enjoy the film beyond its theoretical novelty.
February 05, 2015
The premise has been done to death, but screenwriters Andrew Stark and Jason Pagan give it a fresh and pleasant spin by using it as a vehicle for adolescent wish fulfillment

