Project Almanac parents guide

Project Almanac Parent Guide

This is one of those plots where the outcome is so predictable that you sit and wait (hopefully with a big bag of popcorn) for the protagonist to fall into the hole he has unwittingly dug for himself.

Overall C+

A group of teens find plans to make an experimental time machine. However, they soon discover changing the past also changes the future -- and not necessarily in favorable ways.

Release date January 30, 2015

Violence B
Sexual Content C+
Profanity D+
Substance Use C+

Why is Project Almanac rated PG-13? The MPAA rated Project Almanac PG-13 for some language and sexual content.

Run Time: 138 minutes

Official Movie Site

Parent Movie Review

Think of Project Almanac as a hybrid of Back to the Future and The Blair Witch Project. It is one of those plots where the outcome is so predictable you can only sit and wait (hopefully with a big bag of popcorn) for the protagonist to fall into the hole he has unwittingly dug for himself. But take your motion sickness pills if you are prone to a queasy stomach after watching an hour and a half of jerky handheld camera work.

Chris (Virginia Gardner) is the girl behind the camera. Her brother David (Jonny Weston) has been accepted into MIT but sans scholarship. She finds him rummaging through some of their deceased father’s old scientific papers and projects, looking for something to help him earn some much-needed funds for school. What he and his friends (Quinn Goldberr, Adam Le) eventually stumble upon are plans for a time machine.

Luckily for them, these high school students—the boys at least—are smart enough to figure out the diagrams, formulas and scientific jargon needed to build the project. Chris and David’s friend Jessica (Sofia Black-D’Elia) on the other hand repeatedly have to ask the boys to explain what they are doing in simplified language. The setup comes across as demeaning to girls and re-enforces the fallacies that pretty girls don’t come with brains.

Unfortunately, while these teenage boys have the smarts to build the time machine, they don’t have the sense to consider what the consequences may be for using it. To be fair, they are young. And even most responsible adults would likely be lured into the chance to go back in time and have a do-over in at least one situation.

Not surprisingly most of their time travel trips involve retaking tests or picking the winning numbers for a lottery. But David wants a chance to repair one mistake on his own. So he breaks the group’s cardinal rule and does a solo leap. That’s when the impact of the teens’ trips to the past begins to show up in ever increasing ripples. And every time David tries to go back and fix the results on his own, things only get worse.

Despite the fact that the characters build a time machine, this lightweight and predictable storyline, that contains plenty of references to other time travel movies like Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure, Time Cop and Groundhog Day, isn’t rocket science. The script also contains excessive uses of scatological slang, a couple of strong sexual expletives and plenty of other profanities. And it’s no surprise that one teen boy wants to go back in time with hopes of scoring some sexual favors from a girl.

The film does attempt to depict some consequences for breaking the rule of jumping alone. And it reinforces the idea that our choices and actions can have an impact on others in ways we can’t always control. But both of those messages aren’t readily evident and need a fair amount of coaxing out to be noticed. However, the chance to spot these cautions is short. By the time the last scene plays, it is apparent that even the teens in this movie didn’t grasp the lessons. They’ve just decided there is another way to manipulate the past.

Directed by Dean Israelite. Starring Sam Lerner, Sofia Black-D'Elia, Allen Evangelista, Patrick Johnson, Michelle DeFraites. Running time: 138 minutes. Theatrical release January 30, 2015. Updated

Project Almanac
Rating & Content Info

Why is Project Almanac rated PG-13? Project Almanac is rated PG-13 by the MPAA for some language and sexual content.

Violence: Characters break into a building and steal items. A boy’s hand is cut and begins to bleed when he breaks a window. A teen is accused of kidnapping. News coverage of a plane crash, fires and other disasters are shown.

Sexual Content: Several crude sexual comments are made. A teen couple is shown in bed together and it is insinuated that she often sleeps over at the boy’s house. A girl is seen wrapped in a towel. She opens the towel to expose her body to the boy. (No nudity is shown on screen.) Some kissing and embracing involving teens is shown.

Language: The script contains approximately 70 instances of coarse and sexual language including frequent scatological slang, two strong sexual expletives, profanities, vulgar expressions and some crude sexual references.

Alcohol / Drug Use: Teens drink alcohol in social situations.

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Project Almanac Parents' Guide

Previously known as: Welcome to Yesterday

Why are the teens hesitant when David suggests they go back and destroy the time machine? What things don’t they want to give up? Why does one character refer to what they are doing as “playing God?”

How does David justify his decision to jump alone? How does that affect the trust between the group members? What, if anything, would you go back and change if you could? What might be some of the possible repercussions?

What product placements do you see in this film? Are the items that are used aimed at a teenage audience? How might the intended movie audience affect what companies will want to include their products in a film?

Home Video

The most recent home video release of Project Almanac movie is June 9, 2015. Here are some details…

Home Video Notes: Project Almanac
Release Date:  9 June 2015
Project Almanac  releases to home video with the following special features:
- Deleted Scenes
- Alternate Opening/Endings

Related home video titles:

The movies The Time Machine (1960) and the remake The Time Machine (2002) also depict experiments with this kind of traveling. A son tinkers with his missing father’s experiment and enters another dimension in Tron: Legacy. And altering the past changes the future for a father and son in Frequency. The script of this movie makes mention of Groundhog Day, a film about a man who keeps reliving the same day.

Related news about Project Almanac

Home Video Releases for June 9

Home Video Releases for June 9

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