Time Chasers

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Time Chasers (aka Tangents) is a 1994 science fiction film that follows the adventures of an amateur inventor who goes through time with his female accomplice to stop an evil megacorporation intent on changing history for profit.

Physics teacher and amateur pilot Nick Miller has finally completed his quest of enabling time travel, via a Commodore 64 and his small airplane. With a teacher's salary, however, this has left him almost bankrupt, but an ominous television commercial for a company called GenCorp inspires him to seek funding from the private enterprise. Nick uses a ruse to bring both a GenCorp executive and a reporter from a local paper on a trip through time, but is pleasantly surprised to learn that his old high school flame, Lisa Hansen, is the reporter in question. One unimpressive trip to 2041 later and Gencorp's executive, the fashionable Matthew Paul, quickly arranges Nick a meeting with the company's transparently evil CEO, J.K. Robertson. Impressed by the potential of time travel, Roberston offers Nick a licensing agreement on the technology, over Lisa's misgivings.

Still, the reporter agrees to go on a date with Nick, and the couple enjoys a quick trip to a '50s malt shop before going back to 2041, which is suddenly a total dump. After a close encounter with two bands of wasteland survivors, Nick and Lisa confront Robertson, who stubbornly refuses to not destroy the future and tries to get them arrested. The heroes escape and attempt to go back in time to convince Nick's past self not to give GenCorp the time travel technology, and things become much more complicated.

Turns out Roberston and Paul have a second time transport, and attack Nick and Lisa's plane on arrival in the near-past. Lisa is killed and the plane brought down, so Future-Nick tries to get to Past-Nick before Future-Robertson can. Past-Lisa is diverted from Past-Nick's demonstration and ends up investigating Future-Lisa's death in a plane crash, then she and Past-Nick meet up and start time traveling to figure out what the hell is going on. Meanwhile, Future-Robertson and Future-Paul abduct Future-Nick (and a gormless mechanic) and inexplicably take them back to the Revolutionary War to kill them.

Luckily Past-Nick and Lisa show up with some minutemen to save the day, only for Future-Robertson to counter them with Redcoats, and things really go to hell. Future-Nick is killed thwarting Future-Robertson's escape attempt, leaving all the future duplicates dead, and creating enough of a time paradox to ensure that Past-Nick destroys his invention before it can do any damage, thus undoing the events of the film. On the upside, Nick and Lisa meet in a grocery store. On the downside, Nick and Lisa get an innocent man fired from his job, presumably ruining his life.

For the Mystery Science Theater 3000 version, please go to the episode recap page.

Tropes used in Time Chasers include:
  • Aliens in Cardiff: Vermont. Yes, Vermont. Of course, the film was produced by a video editing service based in Vermont, who decided to try their hands at filmmaking.
  • Bad Future: The villain uses his own time machine to cause this. Not so much bad as messy.
  • Connect Me To This!
  • Compound Interest Time Travel Gambit: Mentioned, but not actually performed, because that would render the movie's plot moot. Nick could have just used the compound interest to pay for his plane and never need to make a deal with an evil corporation or share it with anyone else.
    • When the corporate stooge comes up with the idea, Nick and Lisa have a bizarrely disgusted reaction, as if the guy had proposed something ghastly and evil.
  • Corrupt Corporate Executive: JK Robertson. In fact, his face, voice, posture, his entire demeanor, is so forthrightly villainous from the moment he first appears on screen, and it bears out when he discovers that he has destroyed the future, and refuses to not destroy the future.
    • Actually he simply believes he can avert a Bad Future since he has seen it. But his willingness to take the risk for a profit still puts him in this category.
      • His later rant against Nick where he says that the Bad Future would never have affected Nick since he could've escaped into the past indicates he was lying and never had any intention of averting the dystopia.
  • Did Not Do the Research: The police claim they identified Future!Lisa's body through dental records. However, as noted by the Agony Booth recap, there's no central database of dental records, such as with DNA and fingerprints. For the police to start looking into dental records would require that they already knew who the body belonged to - but as the Past!Lisa was interviewing them at the crash site, they would obviously not investigate a living person as the identity of a charred corpse.
  • Drives Like Crazy: Nick steals a car... and promptly crashes it.

Nick: I don't drive!

  • Dropped a Bridge on Him: After crashing JK's plane and stranding them both in the past, Nick is shot dead by Robertson - who is then promptly killed by falling plane wreckage. All within the space of 10 seconds.
  • Fashion Dissonance: Lisa's business attire.
  • Follow the Leader: The film mimicks the "car in the tree" drama of Jurassic Park. The miracle? They pull it off.
  • Future Badass: First timeline Nick from second timeline Nick's perspective. Sort of.
  • Genius Bruiser: Subverted - Nick looks like a bodybuilding nerd, but gets beat up fairly easily and doesn't seem nearly as smart as inventing the time machine would imply.
  • Help Your Self in the Future: Thanks to Split Screen technology.
  • Hero Stole My Bike: Nick steals a car and immediately crashes it because he doesn't drive cars. He does better on the bicycle he steals next.
  • Homage: The scene in which Nick climbs down a tree away from a wrecked vehicle which threatens to fall on him is suspiciously similar to one from Jurassic Park, which came out a year before Time Chasers.
  • Honor Before Reason: Apparently the only reason the GenCorp Mooks abandon their truck to chase Nick on bicycle.
    • Actually a case of Fridge Brilliance: Their truck wouldn't have made it through the trees and chasing him on foot would have been too slow.
  • Is That a Threat?: Delivered by Robertson when Nick tells him he's going to pull his out of their deal.
  • Karma Houdini: J.K. Robertson of the movie's first timeline does actually get killed in the process of trying to screw over time, but the J.K. of the final timeline actually gets off scott-free while Nick gets Matt fired, despite Matt being a generally okay person that gets dragged into JK's evil in the film's first timeline, and a perfectly fine individual with the rotten luck of getting screwed by Nick in the final timeline.
    • Being fired is better than death, as Nick tells Matt, which must have sounded like a cryptic statement to Matt.
  • Lantern Jaw of Justice: Nick Miller. When he makes out with Lisa.
  • Magic Floppy Disk: Eight of them hold the key to time travel!
  • Obviously Evil: JK Robertson.
  • Offscreen Teleportation: Near the end of the movie, when Nick forces Robertson's plane to crash into a tree, we're treated to a two-minute scene of Nick slowly climbing down as the plane creaks and threatens to fall. As soon as he gets to the ground, Robertson comes out from around the tree like it was no big deal.
  • Our Hero Is Dead
  • Our Time Travel Is Different: It involves a lot of planes, for starters.
  • Pre-Mortem One-Liner: J.K. loves these.
    • Before shooting Matt: "Matt? You're fired." (Uzi!)
    • Before shooting Nick: "Connect me to this! (Glock!)"
      • ...sadly, he dies a few seconds later. And too suddenly to try and deliver one of these to himself.
  • Precision F-Strike: The film's only swear happens when J.K., trying to escape a small squad of minutemen Nick has tricked into believing he is a British spy, ends up running into the entire colonial army.

J.K.: Oh SHIT!

  • Protagonist-Centered Morality: It makes no sense for Nick to sabotage Matt's career and get him fired from GenCorp when he has a time machine. He could just go back in time and stop Matt from ever seeing it, thus allowing him to continue leading a good life.
    • It's implied that Matt's better off without a Bad Boss like JK Robertson.
  • Punch Clock Villain: When Lisa fakes an imminent plane crash, GenCorp mooks rush off to offer assistance, allowing Nick to sneak into the airport.
    • Actually, they were ordered to by airport security, and one of them remained to deal with Nick.
  • Reality Ensues: One of its saving graces. Nick is the film's action hero but he's just a physics professor who rides a bike everywhere and flies planes. So he can run around real good but isn't much good in a fight and crashes a car moments after stealing it during a chase.
  • Real Men Wear Pink: Matthew Paul, action executive and often seen wearing a bright pink suit.
    • Subverted in that he's mostly a wuss. Though our action hero wears a pink button down for part of the movie.
  • Reverse Polarity: How the plane travels back through time... apparently.
  • Set Right What Will Go Wrong Real Soon
  • Shout-Out: When Nick and Lisa are walking through the post-apocalyptic Vermont, a torn Back to The Future poster can clearly be seen on one of the walls.
  • Shut Up, Kirk: After Nick's big speech about how everyone is connected, JK shoots him dead.
  • Take Our Word for It: We only see a grainy, computer-screen image of future Vermont's magnificent skyline, while Lisa comments that "it looks like there was a war here" in the bad future, despite a conspicuous lack of rubble, craters, bullet holes, bodies, derelict tanks...clearly, the film didn't have the budget for anything else.
  • Technology Marches On: I miss my Commodore 64.
  • Temporal Paradox: Actively sought out by the protagonist to keep everything from going wrong, though he refers to them as "tangents."
  • Time Travel: Kinda the whole point, really.
  • Took a Level in Badass: Future-Nick, who loses his glasses and watches his girlfriend get shot and blown up, is considerably more hardened by the end of the movie than his past-self. Tragically, it's this version of him that dies.
  • Train Escape: done with a tractor and wagon.
  • You Have Failed Me...: When Matt won't commit murder for his boss, his boss commits murder on Matt.