Film Review: Timecrimes (Los cronocrimenes, 2007)

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Time travel remains one of the most perennially fascinating concepts in speculative fiction, and a staple theme within the science‑fiction genre. Its cinematic potential is vast, offering narratives that can thrill, puzzle, and philosophise in equal measure. Yet, for all its popularity, the silver screen has a curious habit of sidestepping one of the concept’s most ‘inconvenient’ implications: the paradox. All too often, films employ time travel as a mere plot device, glossing over the logical snarls and causal loops it inherently creates. It is a rare filmmaker who not only acknowledges these paradoxes but constructs an entire film around their relentless, inescapable mechanics. With his 2007 feature debut Timecrimes, Spanish director Nacho Vigalondo did precisely that, crafting a taut, ingenious thriller that treats the time paradox not as a bug to be solved, but as the very premise of its horror.

Vigalondo, who also wrote the script, sets his deceptively simple tale in the anonymous Spanish countryside. The protagonist, Héctor (Karra Elejalde), is a middle‑aged man enjoying a quiet afternoon at his newly purchased vacation home with his wife, Clara (Candela Fernández). The pastoral calm is broken when, idly surveying the surrounding woods with binoculars, he spies a young woman (Bárbara Goenaga) undressing. Later, spotting her discarded clothing, his curiosity gets the better of him and he ventures into the forest to investigate. This mundane act of voyeuristic impulse triggers the film’s inexorable nightmare. Héctor is suddenly attacked by a mysterious, frightening figure with a heavily bandaged face. Wounded and fleeing in panic, he stumbles upon an isolated building which turns out to be a research laboratory. There, a cryptic scientist (played by Vigalondo) offers him sanctuary inside a strange, tank‑like apparatus. Desperate, Héctor enters.

When he emerges, he discovers the scientist’s machine was not a refuge but a time‑travel device. He has been thrown back several hours. The scientist coolly explains the new reality: there are now two Héctors coexisting, and a paradox must be avoided at all costs. This Héctor—dubbed ‘Héctor 2’—leaves the lab, but his every subsequent action, intended to merely observe and stay out of sight, inadvertently sets in motion the very chain of violence he experienced. After suffering an injury, he bandages his own head, and in a moment of horrifying clarity, realises he has become the grotesque attacker he originally fled from. The film’s central, brilliant conceit locks into place: Héctor 2 is now forced to meticulously re‑enact the terrifying events he witnessed from the other side, becoming the author of his own trauma. A further tragedy unfolds, propelling a desperate Héctor 2 back to the lab to demand another jump, creating a ‘Héctor 3’ in a final, doomed attempt to untangle the knot.

Timecrimes is a science‑fiction film that epitomises the principle ‘less is more’ with remarkable success. Its premise—a man trapped in a short, tight causal loop—is incredibly simple, almost elegant in its purity. It is the kind of high‑concept idea that could have sustained a Twilight Zone episode, but Vigalondo stretches it to feature length with clinical, clockwork precision. This simplicity is its greatest asset, allowing a very limited budget to become a virtue rather than a constraint. The story unfolds over a handful of hours, involves only four key characters, and is largely confined to a few wooded locations and the starkly utilitarian lab. There are no grand special effects or sprawling vistas; the tension derives entirely from the relentless, unfolding logic of the paradox.

While the concept of a man meeting his future self is not particularly original, the execution here is masterful. This is due in large part to the cast. Karra Elejalde delivers a superb performance as the everyman protagonist. He perfectly captures the gradual transformation from bored, slightly peevish husband to a man first bewildered, then horrified, and finally grimly determined as he is forced to commit increasingly extreme acts in a futile bid to restore a normalcy that is forever lost. His portrayal grounds the outlandish premise in a relatable, sweating panic.

Vigalondo’s directorial skill is equally evident. He deftly dresses the film in the trappings of a slasher horror for its first act, complete with a mysterious, stalking antagonist. The revelation that this monster is, in fact, the protagonist himself is a profoundly effective twist. For audiences well‑versed in time‑travel tropes, this reveal may come early, and the ultimate resolution might feel somewhat predictable. Yet Timecrimes succeeds through grim inevitability. The pleasure lies in watching the gears of the plot click perfectly into place, in seeing each piece of the puzzle—the binoculars, the scissors, the phone call—assume its dreadful, pre‑ordained role. It is a very good science‑fiction thriller precisely because it respects its own internal logic so completely.

Some critics have attempted to paint the film with deeper allegorical strokes, interpreting it as a commentary on mid‑life crisis or the consequences of the wandering male gaze. While these readings are not invalid, Timecrimes’ power arguably stems from its lack of overt psychological or thematic depth. It is a clean, mean narrative machine. Its refusal to moralise or philosophise beyond the immediate cause‑and‑effect of its plot makes it easily digestible and, ironically, more memorable. It is a perfect puzzle box of a film.

The success of Timecrimes inevitably led to whispers of a Hollywood remake, a fate that befalls many stylish European genre films. In this case, perhaps it is for the best that nothing materialised. Knowing Hollywood’s tendency to over‑explain, to add unnecessary backstory, romantic sub‑plots, and bombastic set‑pieces, the best an audience could have hoped for would have been a dispiriting sense of déjà vu—a pale imitation of a film whose brilliance lies in its stark, unforgiving originality.

RATING: 7/10 (+++)

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