Time loop

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A time loop is a fictional situation in which time runs normally for a set period (usually a day or a few hours) but then skips back like a broken record. When the time loop "resets", the memories of most characters are reset (i.e. they forget all that happened). This situation resembles the mythological punishment of Sisyphus, condemned to repeatedly push a stone uphill only to have it roll back down once he reached the top, and Prometheus, condemned to have his liver torn out and eaten by an eagle each morning. The plot is advanced, however, by having one or more central characters retain their memory or become aware of the loop through déjà vu.

The best-known example of this is in the 1993 film Groundhog Day, although time loops had appeared in many fictional works prior to that. Stories with time loops commonly center on correcting past mistakes or on getting a character to recognize some key truth; escape from the loop may then follow (this can be seen as a metaphor for reincarnation).

Time loops are a common plot device in science fiction, especially in universes where time travel is commonplace.

Contents

The following series featured time loops as a main theme or at least fairly frequently:

  • Code Lyoko - Time is reset at the end of each episode in the first season, but seldom in the second and third; called a "return to the past" or "return trip".
  • Day Break - A cop relives the same day over and over, and has to figure out how to save himself and those close to him from a host of threats.
  • Several episodes of The Dead Zone have a virtual time loop by virtue of Johnny Smith living out several versions of the same future scenario through his psychic foresight.
  • Doctor Who is all about time travel. Three episodes with time loops: "The Armageddon Factor", "The Claws of Axos" and "Meglos". "The Armageddon Factor" may be the first instance of the term "time loop" being used to describe the phenomenon. It also appears in the radio play "No More Lies", starring the eighth doctor, Paul McGann.
  • Seven Days - Alien technology allows one person to go back in time seven days to prevent whatever catastrophe is typically shown in the show opening.
  • Card Captors - The Time card manipulates time meaning Sakura and Syaoran Li must repeat the same day over and over again until the card is sealed. Both of the characters keep their memories while everyone else loses theirs at the end of the daily cycle; both characters use this situation to their advantage.
  • Tru Calling - A woman named Tru Davies works at a morgue, where dead bodies make requests for help. This sends her back to the beginning of the day so that she can attempt to save the person's life.
  • Higurashi - A young girl named Rika Furude has repeated her twelve year life thousands of times in a seemingly endless (though diminishing) loops, each time loop slightly different. Her time loop is intentional, in an attempt to save her own life and her friend's from an eventual death brought upon by an unseen force.

Time loops have been featured in individual episodes of many TV series, including:

TV Show Episode Comments
Andromeda "When Goes Around..." It's also hinted that Trance Gemini has experienced the show's time-line several times.
Angel "Time Bomb"
The Angry Beavers "Same Time Last Week"
Buffy the Vampire Slayer "Life Serial"
Charmed "Deja Vu All Over Again"

"The Good, the Bad, and the Cursed"

"Show Ghouls"

Crime Traveller "Final Episode"
Early Edition "Run, Gary, Run"
Fairly Oddparents "Christmas Every Day!"
Farscape "Back and Back and Back to the Future"
First Wave "Gulag"
Justice League Unlimited "The Once and Future Thing: Time Warped"
Lois and Clark "'Twas the Night Before Mxymas"
Pepper Ann "'T.G.I.F"
"Power Rangers: Lightspeed Rescue" "Yesterday Again"
The Outer Limits "Deja Vu"
Totally Spies! "Deja Cruise"
Red Dwarf "White Hole"

"Ouroboros"

Red vs. Blue "Have We Met?"
Smallville "Reckoning"
South Park "Cancelled"
Stargate SG-1 "Window of Opportunity" The episodes "The Gamekeeper" and "Avatar" also feature time repeatedly "reseting" itself, but they both take place virtual reality universes, whereas "Window of Opportunity" takes place in the real world and is the only instance of the term "time loop" being used in the series.
Star Trek: The Next Generation "Cause and Effect"

"Time Squared"

Star Trek: Enterprise "Future Tense"
Star Trek: Voyager "Coda"
The Twilight Zone "Shadow Play"
The X-Files "Monday"
Xena: Warrior Princess "Been there, Done that"
Weird Science "Universal Remote"

  • 12 Days of Christmas Eve - a mix of time loop and "A Christmas Carol". A cold-hearted executive is given the chance to replay a Christmas Eve twelve times, with a horrible fate in store if he does not change things for the better by the twelfth replay.
  • 12:01 PM and 12:01 - two films (a 1990 short and a 1993 full-length), based upon Richard A. Lupoff's short story of the same name.
  • Christmas Do-Over - a bitter divorced man finds himself reliving the same Christmas Day and trying to use it to reconcile with his ex-wife and son.
  • Christmas Every Day - A 13-year-old boy relives Christmas day again and again.
  • Groundhog Day
  • The Lake House - this film has time-loop like features: throughout the film, events in the future affect the past, and the denoument rests on a causality paradox.
  • Mickey's Once Upon a Christmas - retells Christmas Every Day with Huey, Dewey and Louie.
  • Nirvana - time loop happens to a fictional person in a virtual reality game.
  • Primer - A "reverse time loop": You go to the immediate future and wait for yourself to arrive.
  • Retroactive - A psychiatrist returns repeatedly to the same point in time to prevent a murder.
  • Run Lola Run - not quite a time loop, but three versions of the same twenty minutes in Lola's life, if she makes different decisions.
  • Taan ("Turn" in English) - Japanese romance film; a character continually relives one day.
  • Zerkalo dlya Geroya( Mirror for a hero)- Russian perestroika-time film where the guy from 1987 falls 40 years back in time to Stalin era and lives there the same day over and over
  • The Jacket - Gulf war veteran experiences time travel when he is subjected to radical psychotherapy.
  • The Butterfly Effect - Protagonist uses his diary to travel time and revisit childhood episodes.
  • Donnie Darko - A high school teenager becomes trapped in a time loop leading to a doomed universe unless he goes back in time and dies in an accident that should have killed.

  • The Father Time Loop The mythology created by Joe Korsmo and Dylan Reiff centering around the time loop integrated robocalypse and its ultimate cessation by the work of human savior Velocity Gnome.

  • Breakdown - In one section of the game the main character experiences an illusion that causes him to repeat the last few seconds of what just happened.
  • Dragon Warrior VII - One town in this game is placed under a curse so that the same day is repeated, with only the heroes, not native to the town being cursed, knowing that there is a time loop.
  • Ephemeral Fantasia - The game centers around a five-day time loop, about which only the hero is aware.
  • Fate/hollow ataraxia - The main characters Shiro and Bazett is trapped in a four-day time loop.
  • Final Fantasy - Garland, once loyal knight of the Kingdom Coneria(Cornelia), is sent back 2000 years into the past. There he became Chaos, the Master of Evil, and sent the Four Fiends of the Elements ahead 2000 years into the future, where they would send him back in time. Garland/Chaos theorized that in 2000 years the time loop would close and he would cease to exist, which he thought would make him immortal.
  • Final Fantasy VIII - The first sorceress you fight in the game, Edea, is actually possessed when the player fights her, and after losing her powers, she eventually tells Squall, the protagonist, about how she gained her powers. She gained her powers by accepting them from a fallen sorceress, in order to protect the children at the orphanage from coming in contact with the sorceress. At the end of the game, it is revealed that a sorceress from the future was sent into the past after being defeated by Squall. This happens due to "Time Compression", which resulted in past, present, and future being combined. The sorceress then passes her powers on to Edea, enabling her to posses Edea before her death.
  • gRimgRiMoiRe - The main character is stuck in a time loop and has 5 days to try to stop a disaster.
  • Higurashi no Naku Koro Ni - Each chapter is a different iteration of the same month, with only one character being aware that she is living in a time loop.
  • The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask - The entire game is set around a three-day time loop, which the player can reset at any time they please.
  • Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time - The player is given the "Dagger of Time," allowing them to continuously relive the previous ten seconds of game-play for a set amount of times, or until the player is satisfied with the way he or she played those ten seconds.
  • Shadow of Memories aka Shadow of Destiny - The game begins with the death of the player, which the player then needs to prevent.
  • TimeSplitters: Future Perfect - The antagonist, Crowe. Goes around time, and the protaganist, Cortez runs into him. At one point the older version of Crowe gives all of his research to the younger version of himself, and they both leave to continue this. There are also several loops in the game, as you are helped out by a future version of Cortez, and then you eventually play the part and help the past version of a Cortez.

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