Timecrimes (2007) — Review

Timecrimes (2007)
7 / 10

Timecrimes is one of the cleanest small-budget time travel films ever made. Seen once. The 7 rating is honest evaluation. Nacho Vigalondo writing, directing, and appearing in his own film. Karra Elejalde as Hector. Bárbara Goicoechea as his wife. Candela Fernández as the woman in the woods. Spanish production. Original title Los Cronocrímenes. A man becomes his own pursuer through three iterations of the same afternoon. The film fits its premise into 92 minutes without padding.

The Setup

Hector (Karra Elejalde) is a middle-aged man moving into a new house in the Spanish countryside with his wife Clara (Candela Fernández). He sits on his back patio with binoculars and notices a young woman undressing in the woods nearby. He walks into the woods to investigate. The woman is naked and unconscious on the forest floor. A man with a face wrapped in pink bandages attacks Hector with scissors.

Hector runs. He stumbles onto a research facility. The facility contains a single scientist (Nacho Vigalondo himself, playing El Joven). The scientist hides Hector in a large white pod to protect him from the pursuer. The pod is a time machine. When Hector exits, he discovers he is now one hour in the past. He watches his earlier self through binoculars sitting on his own back patio.

The film documents what Hector does with his foreknowledge across three iterations. The first iteration is what we have already seen. The second iteration is Hector trying to manage the consequences of having been in the past. The third iteration is Hector trying to fix the problems the second iteration created. Each iteration requires him to be in a different place at the same moment. He becomes his own pursuer through choices made in each iteration.

The Closed-Loop Premise

Most time travel films use the technology to change the past. Timecrimes uses it to confirm the past. Every event Hector tries to alter is the event he was always going to cause. He becomes the pink-bandaged pursuer because the time machine sent him back to the moment when the pursuer needed to exist. He attacks the naked woman in the woods because the woman in the woods needed to be attacked for the events of the first iteration to happen.

The closed-loop structure is the film’s central craft achievement. The audience does not learn the structure is closed until well into the runtime. The first iteration plays as a conventional mystery. The second iteration introduces the time travel. The third iteration reveals that Hector has been creating the events he has been trying to escape. The structure folds in on itself with no loose ends and no paradoxes that the film does not address.

Vigalondo wrote the script to be airtight. Every event in the first iteration has a cause in a later iteration. Every choice Hector makes in a later iteration produces an event in an earlier iteration. The audience can map the entire structure on paper and verify it works. Few time travel films manage this kind of structural rigor. Timecrimes earns its small-film status by being mechanically perfect within the resources it had.

For Writers

Timecrimes shows how to build a closed time loop without paradox. The discipline required is enormous. Every event has to have a cause that exists somewhere in the structure. Every choice has to produce a consequence that the structure requires. The writer cannot rely on the audience forgetting setups or accepting hand-waved resolutions. The audience can map the entire film on paper and check the math. The lesson for writers is that structural rigor in time travel writing is harder than it looks. Most films cheat. Timecrimes does not. If you want to write closed-loop time travel, you have to plot the entire structure before you write a scene. You have to know what each iteration produces and what each iteration requires. The math has to work or the film does not.

The Three-Iteration Structure

The first iteration runs approximately thirty minutes. Hector explores the woman in the woods, encounters the pursuer, and reaches the research facility. The pacing is patient. The audience does not yet know the film is about time travel. The atmosphere is closer to suspense thriller than to science fiction.

The second iteration runs approximately thirty minutes. Hector exits the time machine and discovers he is one hour in the past. The scientist instructs him to avoid contact with his earlier self at all costs. Hector ignores the instruction. He attempts to manage the situation by becoming the pursuer who chased his earlier self into the woods. The scenes where Hector wraps his own face in pink bandages and stalks his earlier self through the woods are the film’s clearest demonstration of the closed-loop premise.

The third iteration runs approximately twenty minutes. Hector has caused additional problems through his second-iteration choices. His wife is now in the woods because of what he has done. The pursuer in this iteration is yet another version of him. He has to navigate the consequences of his own previous time-travel choices while preventing his wife from dying. The third iteration’s resolution requires accepting that some events cannot be prevented because they have already happened.

The Karra Elejalde Performance

Karra Elejalde plays Hector across all three iterations. The performance is the film’s anchor. Hector is not a hero. He is a middle-aged man who reacts to extraordinary circumstances by making the worst possible choices and then trying to fix the consequences. Elejalde plays the increasing desperation across the iterations without losing the character’s basic recognizability.

The performance has to operate at different registers in each iteration. First-iteration Hector is curious, then panicked. Second-iteration Hector is calculating, then desperate. Third-iteration Hector is exhausted and morally compromised. Elejalde handles all three without overplaying any of them. The character ages visibly across the runtime even though only a few hours pass within the film’s chronology.

Elejalde was 47 during filming. The middle-aged-everyman quality is essential to the film. A younger actor would have produced a different film. Elejalde brings the lived-in weariness of someone who has already accepted certain things about his life. The time travel does not turn him into an action hero. The time travel turns him into a worse version of the man he already was.

The Nacho Vigalondo Direction

Nacho Vigalondo wrote, directed, and acted in his own debut feature. The film cost approximately €2.6 million, which was substantial for Spanish independent production but tiny by international standards. Vigalondo shot in a single Spanish forest location with one house, one research facility set, and the surrounding woods. The production discipline is part of why the film works. Limited locations forced the script to be airtight.

Vigalondo plays El Joven, the young scientist running the research facility. The casting choice is also a structural choice. The film’s writer-director is on screen explaining the time travel rules. The choice reads as authorial intervention. Vigalondo is telling the audience he wrote the rules and he is enforcing them. The role is small but specific.

His subsequent career has been varied. Extraterrestrial (2011) was a smaller-scale alien invasion comedy. Open Windows (2014) was a webcam-perspective thriller. Colossal (2016) was a Hollywood production with Anne Hathaway about a woman who controls a kaiju attacking Seoul. Vigalondo has not returned to the structural rigor of Timecrimes, but he has continued working in high-concept material. Timecrimes remains his cleanest single film.

The Pink-Bandaged Pursuer

The visual choice to wrap the pursuer’s face in pink bandages is the film’s most distinctive image. The bandages obscure the pursuer’s identity while leaving the face partially visible. The audience knows the pursuer is hiding something. The audience does not yet know what. The image becomes uncanny on second viewing because the audience knows the pursuer is Hector himself.

The bandage choice also produces practical advantages. Karra Elejalde could play the pursuer without prosthetic makeup. The bandages provided the visual disguise. Vigalondo could shoot multiple actors as the same character across the iterations without expensive doubling work. The low budget required creative solutions. The bandages are the solution that became the film’s signature image.

The visual choice has influenced subsequent horror and thriller filmmaking. Various productions have used bandage-masking to suggest identity concealment with implied violence. Timecrimes is one of the earlier films to use the device for time-travel-related identity confusion specifically. The contribution is small but real.

For Writers

Timecrimes shows what a tightly constrained budget can do for a script. Vigalondo had one house, one forest, one research facility, and approximately four actors. The constraints forced the script to deliver everything through location, choreography, and character work rather than through spectacle. The film is small because it had to be small. The film is also airtight because the small scale prevented loose ends. The lesson for writers is that constraints are useful. If you have unlimited resources, you can hide weak writing behind production scale. If you have limited resources, the writing has to do the work. Vigalondo could not afford to be careless with his structure. The result is one of the cleanest small-budget time travel films ever made. The discipline shows.

The Tonal Register

The film operates closer to suspense thriller than to science fiction. The time travel is present but is not the source of the film’s tension. The tension comes from Hector’s increasingly bad choices and from the audience’s gradual recognition that those choices are the cause of the events the film opened with. The horror element is real but is grounded in Hector’s responsibility for what he has done.

The tonal choice is what distinguishes Timecrimes from most time travel films. Most time travel films use the premise for adventure, romance, or spectacle. Timecrimes uses the premise for moral horror. Hector becomes a worse person across the iterations because the time travel gives him the opportunity to be worse. The film argues that the technology does not corrupt him. The technology reveals what he already was.

The ending lands the argument. Hector returns home and finds his wife in the kitchen. She is fine. The events of the day have produced a survivable outcome through Hector’s accumulated choices, including the killing of an innocent woman whose death was required for the loop to close. The film does not punish him for this. The film just shows the kitchen and lets the audience absorb what Hector has done. The quiet ending is the film’s clearest moral statement.

For Writers

Timecrimes uses time travel for moral horror rather than for adventure. Hector does not become a hero through the time travel. Hector becomes a murderer through the time travel. The technology gives him the opportunity to make worse choices, and he takes the opportunity each time. The lesson for writers is that high-concept premises can be used to expose character rather than to elevate it. If your time travel makes your protagonist better, you have written a power fantasy. If your time travel makes your protagonist worse, you have written something more difficult and more interesting. Hector is not a villain. Hector is an ordinary man who makes the choices an ordinary man would make if he had access to time travel. The horror is that the choices are recognizable.

The Ending

The third iteration concludes with Hector killing the woman in the woods himself. The woman was a victim of one of his earlier-iteration choices. She has been wounded by the pink-bandaged pursuer who is also Hector. To close the loop, Hector has to kill her so that her body will be in position for the events of the first iteration to occur correctly. He does the killing. He returns home. He finds Clara in the kitchen alive.

The ending is morally exact. Hector has murdered an innocent woman to save his wife. The math required it. The closed loop demanded it. The film does not pretend the choice is acceptable. The film also does not punish Hector. The film simply ends. Clara is in the kitchen. Hector is home. Everything has resolved. A woman is dead in the woods because Hector chose to put her there.

The audience is left to do the moral accounting. Vigalondo refuses to do it for them. The film treats the ending as a question rather than as a resolution. The question is whether the survival of Hector’s wife is worth the death of the woman in the woods. The film has no opinion. The film just shows what happened.

Craft: A Cleanly Constructed Achievement

Craft Note

Timecrimes operates at peak within its constrained production scale. The Vigalondo writing-directing-acting triple credit produces a unified creative vision. The Karra Elejalde lead performance carries three iterations of the same character without losing recognizability. The closed-loop structure is mechanically rigorous in ways most time travel films do not attempt. The pink-bandage pursuer image is the film’s lasting visual signature.

The film established Vigalondo internationally. Subsequent productions in Spain and Hollywood built on the Timecrimes foundation. The film was nominated for multiple Goya Awards in Spain and won Best New Director at the Sitges Film Festival. The American remake rights were optioned but no remake has materialized. The original remains the definitive version.

The 7 rating reflects honest evaluation. The film does not reach 8 because the limited budget shows in some sequences and the moral implications of the ending are not fully developed. The structural achievement is undeniable. The film is essential viewing for anyone interested in time travel cinema or in what tightly constrained productions can accomplish.

The Verdict

A 7. Timecrimes is one of the cleanest small-budget time travel films ever made. Nacho Vigalondo writing, directing, and appearing. Karra Elejalde anchoring the three iterations. A closed-loop structure that holds together under scrutiny. The film belongs in any time travel cinema conversation.


FAQ

What is the original Spanish title?

Los Cronocrímenes. The literal translation is “The Time Crimes” in English. The film was released internationally under the Timecrimes title in English-speaking markets.

How does the closed-loop structure work?

Every event in the first iteration has a cause in a later iteration. Every choice Hector makes in a later iteration produces an event in an earlier iteration. The audience can map the entire structure on paper and verify it works. The discipline is rare in time travel filmmaking.

Who plays the scientist?

Nacho Vigalondo himself, in the role of El Joven. The casting choice is also a structural choice. The writer-director is on screen explaining the time travel rules. The choice reads as authorial intervention.

Why does Hector become the pursuer?

The closed-loop structure requires him to be the pursuer. The first iteration shows the pursuer attacking Hector in the woods. The second iteration reveals that Hector wraps his own face in pink bandages and stalks his earlier self through the woods. He becomes the pursuer because the pursuer needed to exist for the first iteration to occur.

What does the pink bandage choice do?

The bandages obscure the pursuer’s identity while leaving the face partially visible. The image becomes uncanny on second viewing because the audience knows the pursuer is Hector himself. The visual choice also produced practical advantages for the low-budget production. Karra Elejalde could play the pursuer without prosthetic makeup.

How does the film’s ending work morally?

Hector kills an innocent woman to save his wife. The math required it. The closed loop demanded it. The film does not pretend the choice is acceptable. The film also does not punish Hector. Clara is in the kitchen. Hector is home. The film treats the ending as a question rather than as a resolution.

How did this affect Vigalondo’s career?

Timecrimes established him internationally. Subsequent productions include Extraterrestrial (2011), Open Windows (2014), and Colossal (2016) with Anne Hathaway. He has continued working in high-concept material without returning to the structural rigor of Timecrimes specifically.

Is there an American remake?

The rights were optioned but no remake has materialized. The original remains the definitive version. American productions have considered the material multiple times. The constraints that made Timecrimes work in Spanish independent production would be hard to replicate in American studio production.

Should I watch this if I have not seen it?

Yes. Timecrimes is essential viewing for anyone interested in time travel cinema. The structural rigor is rare. The moral implications are honest. The small scale forces the film to do everything through writing and performance rather than through spectacle. The film rewards rewatching because the closed-loop structure becomes more impressive when the audience knows what each iteration is producing.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top