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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/somewhere_in_time_1980.jpg]]
2
3->''"Someday in the past he ''will'' find her..."''
4-->-- '''{{Tagline}}'''
5
6A 1980 film adaptation of Creator/RichardMatheson's ''Bid Time Return'', directed by Creator/JeannotSzwarc and scored by Music/JohnBarry. The screenplay was written by Matheson himself.
7
8Even if you have SingleTargetSexuality, you just might give up after finding out that your One True Love exists in a different time period. But that doesn't stop playwright and writer Richard Collier (Creator/ChristopherReeve), who for lack of a better description manages to [[MentalTimeTravel psych himself back in time]] to find the beautiful woman he's seen in an old photograph. That's right, the space-time continuum is just no match for ThePowerOfLove.
9
10Richard arrives in [[TheEdwardianEra the year 1912]], in the same vintage hotel room he was staying at in 1980. Soon he encounters the woman he's looking for, stage actress Elise [=McKenna=] (Creator/JaneSeymourActress). However, her overprotective manager William Fawcett Robinson (Creator/ChristopherPlummer) won't put up with anyone romancing ''his'' star.
11
12----
13!!This work provides examples of:
14* AdaptationalLocationChange: The novel is set at the Hotel del Coronado near San Diego. The film was originally going to be filmed there, but it was discovered that it had too many modern touches (like power lines and TV antennas). Eventually a friend of director Creator/JeannotSzwarc suggested the Grand Hotel on Michigan's Mackinac Island.
15* AdaptedOut: Richard's brother Robert from the novel is left out of the film.
16* ArtShift: The 1912 scenes were shot on different film stock with different lenses than the present day scenes, to enhance the period feeling.
17* AuthorAvatar: A story by a [[Creator/RichardMatheson writer named Richard]] centers on...[[MostWritersAreWriters a writer named Richard]]. Matheson prepped for the original novel by staying for several weeks at the Hotel del Coronado and essentially acting out Richard's character arc. He says the book was inspired by ''his'' becoming infatuated by the hotel's portrait of actress Maude Adams (see NoCelebritiesWereHarmed entry below).
18* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler: Richard dies of grief after being separated from Elise and returned to his own time, but is [[TogetherInDeath reunited with Elise]] in heaven.]]
19* TheConstant: Arthur.
20* ContrivedCoincidence: Elise conveniently dies the same night she gives Richard the watch.
21* CrazyJealousGuy: Though he doesn't admit to having romantic/sexual feelings for Elise, Robinson definitely comes across this way.
22* CreatorCameo: Richard Matheson appears as the 1912 man who stares at Richard following the latter's [[ThereWillBeToiletPaper less-than-successful attempt]] to shave with a straight razor. ("Astonishing!")
23* DiesDifferentlyInTheAdaptation: [[spoiler: Rather than a brain tumor, Richard essentially starves himself to death.]]
24* TheEdwardianEra: The 1912 scenes.
25* TheEighties: The 1980 scenes. Okay, the ''very early'' Eighties.
26* ExtremelyShortTimespan: Even though the story covers two time periods that are about 70 years apart[[note]]68 years in the movie, 75 in the book[[/note]], from Richard's perspective the main events happen over a very short period of time: he stays in the hotel for only a couple of weeks (exactly eight days in the book), and his time spent in the past is barely more than a day.
27%%* FadeToWhite
28%%* FantasticRomance
29* FashionsNeverChange: Subverted: Elise informs Richard that his suit is 15 years out of style.
30* FilmOfTheBook: Based on Creator/RichardMatheson's 1975 novel ''Bid Time Return'', which was later renamed ''Somewhere in Time'' to capitalize on the film's enduring popularity.
31* ForgottenThemeTuneLyrics: A post-film example -- the theme was given lyrics in TheNineties and turned into a song of the same title for Creator/MichaelCrawford. It appears on the soundtrack to his Las Vegas show ''Theatre/{{EFX}}!'', where it served as a prerecorded prelude due to its fantasy theme, but it's easy to interpret the first-person lyrics as coming from Richard's point of view.
32* GorgeousPeriodDress: Elise wears some magnificent examples of late-Edwardian (1910 to 1914) couture.
33%%* HaveWeMetYet
34* HerHeartWillGoOn: Unusual in that the story is seen from the man's perspective.
35* HeroicBSOD: Richard has a major one after he's separated from Elise, to the point of not eating for a week. [[spoiler:[[DeathByDespair He does not get better]].]]
36* HighClassGloves: Elise wears these seemingly half the entire length of her screen time in the film.
37* KarmaHoudini: Robinson faces no consequences for having Richard knocked out and tied up.
38* LoveBeforeFirstSight: Richard decides to go back in time after seeing and falling in love with a picture of Elise.
39* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane:
40** A definite implication in the original book, averted somewhat in the film, which eliminates the book's subplot that Richard has been diagnosed with a brain tumor. Nevertheless, Creator/RogerEbert writes in his review of the film, "The movie never makes it clear whether the playwright actually does travel through time, or only hypnotizes himself into thinking he does." [[https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/somewhere-in-time-1980]] Arguably, the film provides independent evidence that Richard's journey through time did take place, by showing Elise as an old woman begging him to "come back to [her]" and Richard's interaction with the young Arthur--neither of which happens in the book. Moreover, since the book is written entirely in first person (representing Richard's personal memoir), and since Richard has a medical condition that can cause hallucinations, it has an UnreliableNarrator--so that even the apparent proofs of his time-travel journey, such as his finding his signature in the hotel's archive, are suspect.
41** Robinson's enmity toward Richard has both a simple explanation (he's deeply protective of Elise and a bit of a CrazyJealousGuy) and some more fantastic possibilities (he can see the future, or somehow knows that Richard is a time traveler).
42* MentalTimeTravel: Richard is able to cross time through the means of self hypnosis.
43* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: Elise [=McKenna=] is a thinly-veiled fictionalization of [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maude_Adams Maude Adams]], the most popular American stage actress of the early 20th Century. Like Elise, Adams was born in [[UsefulNotes/{{Utah}} Salt Lake City]], had a [[TheSvengali somewhat Svengali-ish]] manager (Charles Frohman), and [[ReclusiveArtist retired early from acting]] (Adams did so for health reasons after contracting a bad case of UsefulNotes/TheSpanishFlu in 1918).
44* NostalgiaHeaven: [[spoiler: Richard and Elise are reunited in Fluffy Cloud Heaven upon Richard's death.]]
45* ObscuredSpecialEffects: The time travel is achieved through the mundane process of [[MentalTimeTravel self hypnosis]]. The visuals used to represent Richard's journey through time are similar to those that might be used in any ordinary drama to represent falling in and out of a dream. Reportedly, because the story involved time travel as a plot element, this was done to avoid being [[SciFiGhetto lumped in with]] all of the science fiction genre films during the post ''Franchise/StarWars'' era.
46* OldFashionedRowboatDate: Not old-fashioned concerning the time it happens. During the FallingInLoveMontage, we see Richard and Elise rowing a boat.
47* SceneOfWonder: When Richard first mind-travels back to the 1910s era. He steps out into the hotel lounge and is stunned by the sight of TheEdwardianEra crowd.
48* TheSeventies: The 1972 scenes.
49* ShoutOut: Professor Finney is one to Jack Finney, whose novel ''Literature/TimeAndAgain'' was the TropeCodifier for MentalTimeTravel and a big influence on this story.
50* SingleTargetSexuality: Richard and Elise.
51* SomethingWeForgot: Richard unfortunately didn't remember to make one final check of his pockets before heading off to 1912.
52* StableTimeLoop: The watch.
53** The portrait of Elise that Richard falls in love with also works something like this: [[spoiler: after he's travelled back in time and she's falling in love with him, the reason she looks so happy and beautiful in the photograph is because she sees him while it's being taken.]]
54* StarCrossedLovers: Richard and Elise. [[spoiler:They're reunited in the afterlife, however.]]
55* TimeShiftedActor: Creator/BillErwin and Creator/SusanFrench play elderly version of Arthur and Elise, respectively.
56* TimeTravel: One of the first films to really explore the emotional effects that a time traveler might experience.
57* TimeTravelRomance: Richard becomes smitten with a photo of Elise and goes back in time to be with her. While not the UrExample or even the TropeCodifier, the film is probably the most famous example of this trope.
58* ThrowItIn: In-universe. Elise gets lost in her lines in the [[ShowWithinAShow play]], during a scene discussing love; she instead begins daydreaming about finding her (Elise's) real true love. Unfortunately the effect is more awkward and stilted than romantic, at least for anyone who is not Richard. The other actress looks uncomfortable, and Elise's manager is none too thrilled.
59* WhamLine: An interesting use of this to make things murkier, when Robinson tells Richard "I know who you are," but doesn't elaborate. Is it just an idle threat, or does Robinson really somehow know about the time travel?
60%%* YourUniverseOrMine
61* YouAlreadyChangedThePast: This is discovered before going back, not after, resulting in VujaDe.

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