Over Run Over
1 season 3/21/2016 to 4/10/2016, 22 episodes
| S - | Ep - | 2016/03/21 |
| TV Series | - min | |
| ACT DRA SF THR | Hong Kong | |
A police officer (who, after traveling back in time to prevent her father's death, experiences severe repercussions of the butterfly effect. While on patrol duty, EU sergeant Ling Sun-fung and her team are called to assist a criminal chase. A gun battle erupts and Sun-fung loses her father, who dies from a stray bullet to the head. Sun-fung continues the pursuit, but a strange natural phenomena suddenly turns her away, taking her back to April 1three days prior to the incident. Realising that she has traveled back in time, she uses this opportunity to save her father's life. Village chief "Ditch", an informant for the ICAC, discovers Sun-fung's special ability and teams up with her to investigate a corrupted cop. Unfortunately, their persistent disruption to the timeline causes severe butterfly effects, with unsettling consequences. Sun-fung learns that her power to change the past does not make her able to control the future.
"Over Tea"
| S - | Ep - | 2010/11/02 |
| Short Story | - min | |
The story begins... Deugaw lifted his china cup again. He looked ancient, but gained fifteen years as his hands started to shake when the little cup came off the saucer
Overlooked Man Paradox
Did Alpha ignore his own father and treat him as a stranger?
| S - | Ep - | |
| - min | ||
Alpha ignored the man approaching him and treated him as a stranger. The man was his father. Did Alpha ignore his own father and treat him as a stranger?
Oxford Time-Traveling Historians: All Clear
| S - | Ep - | 2010/02/02 |
| Novel | 656 min | |
All Clear begins where Blackout left off, with Michael Davies (posing as an American journalist, Mike Davis), Polly Churchill (as Polly Sebastian), and Merope Ward (posing as Eileen O'Reilly) trapped in 1940 Britain during the Blitz. Just as in Blackout, the novel switches between multiple people and times. As the novel opens, Polly Churchill, who is posing as Polly Sebastian, a shop assistant, realizes that she has a deadline. She had already visited Oxford and London in 1943. Since she was able to do that, and she now believes she is trapped in 1940, she must either have returned to the future by 1943, or died. She is convinced that she will in fact die. Meanwhile, Merope and Michael have found Polly after discovering that their drops are also unable to return them to the future. Now together, the three believe that their own actions, particularly in Mike's case, may have changed the future so that there is no time travel, and that possibly it will involve Germany winning the war. The Oxford Time-Traveling Historians Time travelers from 2048 go to the London Blitz during World War II to observe and end up being part of it. Blackout and All Clear Novel published in two parts.
Oxford Time-Traveling Historians: Blackout
| S - | Ep - | 2010/02/02 |
| Novel | 512 min | |
Blackout and All Clear are the two volumes that comprise a 2010 science fiction novel by American author Connie Willis. Blackout was published February 2, 2010 by Spectra. The second part, the conclusion All Clear, was released as a separate book on October 19, 2010.[1] The diptych won the 2010 Nebula Award for Best Novel,[2] the 2011 Locus Award for Best Science Fiction Novel,[3] and the 2011 Hugo Award for Best Novel.[4][5] These two volumes are the most recent of four books and a short story that Willis has written involving time travel from Oxford during the mid 21st century. Willis imagines a near future (first introduced in her 1982 story "Fire Watch" and featured in two of her previous novels: Doomsday Book and To Say Nothing of the Dog) in which historians conduct field work by traveling into the past as observers. The research is mainly conducted at the University of Oxford in England in the mid-21st century. In their world, time-travel has been known since the early 21st century. The time-travel device, a portal called "the Net", remains in the time-traveler's present, while sending the time-traveler to a particular location (called "the drop") and time. They can return from the same location when someone in the future re-opens the Net for them at an agreed upon "rendezvous" time. The Oxford Time-Traveling Historians Time travelers from 2048 go to the London Blitz during World War II to observe and end up being part of it. Blackout and All Clear Novel published in two parts.
Oxford Time-Traveling Historians: "Fire Watch"
| S - | Ep - | |
| Short Story | - min | |
The story of a time-traveling "historian" who goes back to The Blitz in London. He's annoyed by this as he had spent years preparing to travel with St. Paul and gets sent to participate in the fire watch at St. Paul's Cathedral, in London, instead. The Oxford Time-Traveling Historians The story won both a Hugo Award for Best Novelette and a Nebula Award for Best Novelette.[1] It was included in her short-story collections Fire Watch (1984) and The Best of Connie Willis (2013). The idea of a time-travelling history department at Oxford University, introduced in this story, was also used in her later novels Doomsday Book, To Say Nothing of the Dog, and Blackout/All Clear. Willis's writing of "Fire Watch" predates the production of Doomsday Book by about a decade. However, Kivrin Engle, the main character of Doomsday Book, also appears as a minor character in "Fire Watch". The story references her experience with the Black Plague while time-traveling in the 14th Century. The character of Professor James Dunworthy figures in "Fire Watch", Doomsday Book, To Say Nothing of the Dog, Blackout, and All Clear.
Oxford Time-Traveling Historians: Doomsday Book
| S - | Ep - | 1992// |
| Novel | 592 min | |
Doomsday Book is a 1992 science fiction novel by American author Connie Willis. The novel won both the Hugo[1] and Nebula[2] Awards, and was shortlisted for other awards.[3] The title of the book is a reference to the Domesday Book of 1086; Kivrin, the main character, says that her recording is "a record of life in the Middle Ages, which is what William the Conqueror's survey turned out to be."[4] The Oxford Time-Traveling Historians Willis imagines a near future (first introduced in her 1982 story "Fire Watch") in which historians conduct field work by traveling into the past as observers. The research is conducted at the University of Oxford in England in the late-21st century.[5] In the fictional universe, history resists time travel which would cause the past to be altered by preventing visits to certain places or times. Typically the machine used for time travel will refuse to function, rendering the trip impossible. In other cases "slippage", a shift in the exact time target, occurs. The time-traveler arrives at the nearest place-and-time suitable for preventing a paradox; variance can be anything from 5 minutes to 5 years. Some periods theoretically accessible can also be deemed too dangerous for the historians by the authorities controlling time travel.[5]
To Say Nothing of the Dog or, How We Found the Bishop's Bird Stump at Last
| S - | Ep - | 1997// |
| Novel | 434 min | |
Comic science fiction novel by Connie Willis. It takes place in the same universe of time-traveling historians she explored in her story Fire Watch and novel Doomsday Book. To Say Nothing of the Dog won both the Hugo and Locus Awards in 1999,[1] and was nominated for the Nebula Award in 1998. Oxford Time Traveling Historians A comedy in which time travelers from 2048 travel back to the 19th century in order to find an artifact for a dictatorial wealthy woman; adventures occur in The Blitz and other occasions. The story begins in 2057 at Oxford University. A machine which makes time travel possible has been developed, but time travel itself is used primarily as a tool for historical research. Although millions were spent to develop time travel as a commercial venture, it turned out to have no profit potential. The natural laws of the "time continuum" prevent anything of significance from being brought from the past to the future, and also act to keep time travellers away from historically critical events, such as the Battle of Waterloo. Any attempt to break these laws results in the time machine preventing the desired goal of travel: the time traveller is sent to the right time but to a distant place (30 miles from the Coventry Cathedral, or Mexico, to give two examples in the novel), or to the right place but a time distant enough to keep the traveller from interfering in a way that might create a paradox (the narrator reaches the Cathedral but in the year 1395). In extreme situations, the continuum can correct paradoxes by changing the course of events in minor ways to keep the eventual outcome the same. The novel opens just as one time traveller appears to have violated the laws of the continuum by bringing a cat from Victorian times to 2057.
Oyayubi Tom (Tom Thumb)
Time Machine De Tsuiseki No Maki
| S 1 | Ep 13 | 1967/05/07 |
| TV Series Episode | - min | |
| Japan | ||
The adventures of "Tom of T.H.U.M.B.", a 6" tall secret agent.
Pac-In-Time
| S - | Ep - | |
| Video Game | - min | |
Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures
Pac To The Future
| S 1 | Ep 8 | 2013/06/26 |
| TV Series Episode | 22 min TV-G | |
| ACT COM | USA | |
When Pac and his pals get blasted into the past, he not only finally meets his parents -- and his Baby Pac self - but has an adventure with them during PacWorld War I.
Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures
Rip Van Packle
| S 2 | Ep 7 | |
| TV Series Episode | - min | |
| ACT COM | ||
Pac is swallowed by a giant wormhole, which ejects him into a future where everyone lives under Betrayus' rule.
"Package Deal"
| S - | Ep - | 1980/09/ |
| Short Story | - min | |
Painkiller Jane
Catch Me If You Can
| S 1 | Ep 4 | 2007/05/04 |
| TV Series Episode | 60 min | |
| ACT SF | Canada | |
A Neuro who can see the future warns Jane and the team of their impending death on the day they arrest him. Meanwhile, the team is disturbed by the psychic's purchases.
Painkiller Jane
Playback
| S 1 | Ep 17 | 2007/08/17 |
| TV Series Episode | 47 min | |
| ACT SF | Canada | |
Jane and her team are tracking a Neuro with unknown abilities who is attempting to assassinate a Chinese diplomat. Though they manage to thwart the killer's plan, Jane eventually discovers the neuro's power - he has the ability to rewind and replay the current day over and over again until he gets it right. Usually everyone's memory of events resets to the beginning and no one realizes that they are stuck in a temporal 'loop', but Jane begins to get feelings of Deja-vu and realizes what the Neuro is doing. But with each new day, the killer changes his plans to counter Jane's team attempts to stop him. (time looping ability)
Painleve Paradox
| S - | Ep - | |
| - min | ||
Painleve Paradox The Painlev e paradox is a well-known example by Paul Painlev in rigid-body dynamics that showed that rigid-body dynamics with both contact friction and Coulomb friction is inconsistent. This is due to a number of discontinuities in the behavior of rigid bodies and the discontinuities inherent in the Coulomb friction law, especially when dealing with large coefficients of friction.[1] There exist, however, simple examples which prove that the Painlev paradoxes can appear even for small, realistic friction. Modeling rigid bodies and friction greatly simplifies such applications as animation, robotics and bio-mechanics, it is only an approximation to a full elastic model requiring complex systems of partial differential equations. Rigid body assumption also allows one to clarify many features that would otherwise remain hidden: Painlev paradoxes are one of them. Moreover the rigid body models can be reliably and efficiently simulated, avoiding stiff problems and issues related to the estimation of compliant contact/impact models, which is often quite a delicate matter. The paradox was mathematically resolved in the 1990s by David E. Stewart....
Painting in the Rain
| Film | 92 min | |
Palace
35 Episodes Episode: Playback (Season 1)
| S - | Ep - | 2011/01/31 |
| TV Series | 45 min | |
| DRA HIS ROM SF | China | |
Modern woman travels back in time to Chinese Imperial court. Drama ensues. Luo Qingchuan is a simple and kind-hearted girl from the 21st century. One day she accidentally travels through time and ends up in the 1700s, in the Forbidden City, during the reign of the Kangxi Emperor. She meets her favourite historical figure, the fourth prince Yinzhen, the future Yongzheng Emperor. However, she has to learn the hard way that history books do not always tell the whole story and her broken heart might just be mended by the most unexpected person. Her wit and knowledge of the future puts her right in the middle of the heated competition for the throne. Can she alter history? Whom will she fall in love with? Whom will she choose?
Palace
Episode 1
| S 1 | Ep 1 | 2011/01/31 |
| TV Series Episode | 45 min | |
| DRA | China | |
to 1700s Qing Dynasty
Palace
Episode 39
| S 1 | Ep 39 | |
| TV Series Episode | 45 min | |
| DRA | China | |
return to present day