The Time Tunnel: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Time Travel]]
* [[Time Travel]]
* [[Twenty Minutes Into the Future]]: You all remember that manned mission to Mars in 1978, right?
* [[Twenty Minutes Into the Future]]: You all remember that manned mission to Mars in 1978, right?
* [[World War Two]]: In both the original series and the [[Revival]].
* [[World War II]]: In both the original series and the [[Revival]].{{context|reason=Is this a trope?}}
* [[You Can't Fight Fate]]
* [[You Can't Fight Fate]]
* [[You Have to Believe Me]]
* [[You Have to Believe Me]]

Latest revision as of 18:11, 30 July 2022

"Two American scientists are lost in the swirling maze of past and future ages during the first experiments on America's greatest and most secret project, the Time Tunnel. Tony Newman and Doug Phillips now tumble helplessly toward a new fantastic adventure somewhere along the infinite corridors of time."

Irwin Allen, the man behind Lost in Space and Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, also gave us this Sci-Fi series. The premise? Two Sixties guys who don't care beans about temporal causality travel through time, encountering a lot of Stock Footage and never quite grasping that You Can't Fight Fate. Meanwhile in the Future, their contemporaries watch and try to decide when things are going badly enough for our heroes that it wouldn't hurt to just send them off to yet another random date.


Tropes used in The Time Tunnel include: