• LePoisson@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        I fondly remember watching that movie on TV with my grandparents at their place one summer.

        I mean, it was terrifying and might have given me some nightmares since I was pretty young but still, fond memories nonetheless. The movie is just very unsettling, like the horror lies in how alien the whole experience is for the protagonists and it does a great job of encapsulating the weirdness they’re going through.

        Been many years since I watched it though so it might be actual trash for all I know.

        • TheEighthDoctor@lemmy.zip
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          8 days ago

          I started it like you as a child but never finished (don’t know if my parents had something to do with it) and then recently finished it.

        • LePoisson@lemmy.world
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          8 days ago

          It’s from Langoliers.

          To find that answer I took a screen cap of the pic and used Google image search. Edit: or if you’re on an android (I’m sure iPhone has something similar) mine has an option where I can press and hold the little bar on the bottom then do a circle of my screen and it’ll search that.

          • Wyb@lemmy.world
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            8 days ago

            Aight, i do not use google apps in my Android phone so that does not work, but thanks for the recommendation!

  • 🍉 DrRedOctopus 🐙🍉@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    don’t worry guys, I just came back from the past, I killed baby Hess Von Macher. the whole German fascism that invaded Poland and killed a hundred thousand people in concentration camps has never happened. y’all welcome.

  • mr_account@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    I would have a Lovecraftian statue carved out of some sturdy, semi-rare material that can stand the test of time, and bury it in Antarctica tens of thousands of years before homosapiens evolved. Then in present day I would wait…

    • isleepinahammock@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      8 days ago

      We can do better than that if we want to abuse a time machine to forge Lovecraftian horror!

      I would use my time machine to steal Neil Armstrong’s corpse from his funeral and then dump it right at the landing site of Apollo 11. First thing Neil sees when he hops onto the lunar surface? His own aged corpse.

  • Jaycifer@piefed.social
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    8 days ago

    I’d go back and save Sergei Korolev from dying in 1966, leading Soviet cosmonauts to land on the moon first and keeping the space race kicking for far far longer.

    Yes, I just started watching For All Mankind, what tipped you off?

    • isleepinahammock@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      8 days ago

      One head canon I like:

      This actually is a good timeline. And our timeline actually has been heavily altered by time travelers! People have actually tried and succeeded at changing the past.

      But time travel isn’t like in movies. This isn’t one of those stories where you go back, change something, and then you come back and everything is a little different. No. In this version of time travel, we get maximum butterfly effect. Going years into the past doesn’t just alter history, it completely rewrites it. Go back a hundred years and hang out on a random spot in Antarctica for five minutes, never interacting with another living being? Your presence for that short time will be enough to subtly alter air flows, which will butterfly up to entirely different storms forming in different times and places. Which means that almost everyone born in the last 100 years simply never existed. An entirely new populace is born. No matter how trivial a change you make, any travel beyond a certain length of time into the past results in a complete historical reset.

      This is fundamentally not something you can fine-tune. It’s not physically possible to go into the past and make a tiny alteration. Every trip is an entirely new spin on the historical roulette wheel. Every trip completely remakes the world.

      As such, there’s only one practical application of time travel - preventing world-shattering disasters. For example, you could use it to undue a nuclear war. Going back to prevent this apocalypse will result in erasing everyone currently alive, but almost everyone is already dead, so little consequence. Same thing for species-destroying plagues, giant asteroid impacts, etc. Because every trip is a historical reset, it’s only useful for scenarios where you’re content on just wiping all current people from existence. Even the Holocaust doesn’t come remotely close to the level of calamity necessary to justify time travel.

      • mokus@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        8 days ago

        You don’t even need humans doing the travel. You just send a 10 kg rock on a one-way trip back and get all the same effects.

      • SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        No, I was implying that reality simply branched. Specifically when Bowie died, if you’re curious.

        But back to your hypothesis: if all of the future is rewritten by travel into the past, then the travel to the past shall not have happened. How do you reconcile this paradox?

        • Axolotl@feddit.it
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          8 days ago

          Another timeline is created, every timeline is their own universe and universes can interact between each others, universes are part of a “multi verse” which is basically a cluster of universes always expanding;

          The time traveler will travel back in time, do their change which create another universe, now they are in this new universe and they aren’t in the old one anymore, the time continue as if nothing happened, the universe will do EVERTHING possible but also impossible to mantain the order of the thing such as creating a new universe just because of you

  • TheLeadenSea@sh.itjust.works
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    8 days ago

    If I had time travel I would prevent the big bang - or, at least, prevent the universe settling down and becoming friendly to life.

  • bufalo1973@piefed.social
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    8 days ago

    Too close in time. I’d go back and make Abraham eat lithium… or kill him when he was a child.

    • birdwing@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      8 days ago

      Abraham was a fucking lunatic for hearing voices and acting on them, trying to murder his own son, and later killing an animal.

  • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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    8 days ago

    I’m still trying to find the asshole who prevented the 6th world[1] from happening


    1. Shadowrun reference. In that setting, magic comes back to Earth in 2011 ↩︎

  • BeMoreCareful@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    Time travelers are the OG BOFH.

    Running around fixing and improving things because: “have to.” Viciously cursing any person, place, or thing not apparently and actively helping. Diverting disaster after disaster that they may not may not be the origin of and spending a peculiar amount of time erasing evidence they exist.

  • dejected_warp_core@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    I really feel like a fungible timeline would land us in a similar spot as “you deserved everything that ever happened to you.” It would be a kind of hell or purgatory. Let me explain.

    To put this succinctly, imagine that our current timeline is “optimal.” That with a potentially unlimited number of meddling parties from other times, they have already done the very best they could to “fix” our current timeline. Maybe the job is done, maybe they destroyed their own ability to invent time-travel in the process. Either way, this is all we get. The optimal timeline means that every tragedy is a better outcome than would otherwise have been actively prevented, without causing even bigger tragedies later down the timeline, until more changes would only make things worse.

    At the same time, it raises all kinds of thorny questions around the idea of free-will. You might actually have free-will, but the mere existence of powerful beings with the ability to erase your mistakes from history, suggests otherwise.