Best Time Travel Movies
What makes a great time travel movie? Is it a believable plot device explaining time travel? Is it just having a cool story? The truth is a great time travel movie hits on more than one of those tropes, and the best time travel movies ever made are ones you probably already know by heart.
Just a couple of rules for the list. In order for a movie to be considered, the plot has to be centrally about time travel and not used as a deus ex machina, like in "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban." And it can't be a film where time is used as a construct, like in "Arrival" where the main character experiences time all at once but doesn't actually time travel.
These are the best time travel movies of all time.
30. Timecop
Note: This article contains plot spoilers.
Release date: Sept. 16, 1994
Director: Peter Hyams
Starring: Jean-Claude Van Damme, Mia Sara, Ron Silver, Bruce McGill, Gloria Reuben
Budget: $27 million
Box office: $101.6 million
Bottom line: Sometimes, it's OK to not think too deeply about the mechanics of time travel and just have a damn good time watching a movie.
"Timecop" is a time travel movie presented as a straight action piece. It does that well enough that we can ignore a time travel machine that essentially involves a modified go-kart track.
Movie fans loathe giving Jean-Claude Van Damme credit for a great run in the late 1980s and early 1990s, but he was box-office gold beginning with "Bloodsport" in 1988 until things came crashing down with a series of flops like "The Quest" in 1995 and "Double Team" in 1997.
If we're doing JCVD rankings, "Timecop" deserves to be near the top.
Streaming on: Amazon ($)
29. Safety Not Guaranteed
Release date: June 8, 2012
Director: Colin Trevorrow
Starring: Aubrey Plaza, Mark Duplass, Jake Johnson, Karan Soni, Kristen Bell, Jeff Garlin, Mary Lynn Rjaskub
Budget: $750,000
Box office: $4.4 million
Bottom line: Few time travel films are able to incorporate the depth of characters that "Safety Not Guaranteed" pulls off. It's a huge credit to a trio of leads in Aubrey Plaza, Mark Duplass and Jake Johnson.
That the film spends so much time talking about time travel but not actually time traveling is an aside. This is a romantic comedy at heart and leans into that to its benefit.
In one of the bigger director come-ups in the last 20 years, Colin Trevorrow made this movie for $750,000 and its reception led Universal Pictures to hire him to direct "Jurassic World" as his next movie. With a budget of $150 million.
Streaming on: Tubi
28. Somewhere in Time
Release date: Oct. 3, 1980
Director: Jeannot Szwaroc
Starring: Christopher Reeve, Jane Seymour, Christopher Plummer, Teresa Wright
Budget: $4 million
Box office: $9.7 million
Bottom line: Most people know Richard Matheson because he wrote the novel "I Am Legend," which has been made into movies several times, most notably by Will Smith in 2007. But Matheson also wrote "Bid Time Return," which was the basis for "Somewhere in Time," probably a movie your grandma really loved back in the day.
Within the subgenre of romantic time travel movies, "Somewhere in Time" stands out in large part because of how much movie fans loved and miss Christopher Reeve. Outside of "Superman," this is probably his signature role.
In an interesting twist, director Jeannot Szwarc would helm "Supergirl" in 1984.
Streaming on: Tubi
27. Last Night in Soho
Release date: Oct. 29, 2021
Director: Edgar Wright
Starring: Anya Taylor-Joy, Thomasin McKenzie, Matt Smith, Terence Stamp, Diana Rigg, Michael Ajao
Budget: $43 million
Box office: $23 million
Bottom line: Director Edgar Wright is truly one of a kind. He's crafted a career out of making groundbreaking films, and his last few years have gotten more away from the comedic bend he was known for early on.
While "Last Night in Soho" ended up being a box-office flop, our guess is a lot of that had to do with the pandemic.
Wright has a knack for finding stars on their way up, which he's done here with Anya Taylor-Joy fresh off the success of "The Queen's Gambit" on Netflix.
Streaming on: Amazon ($)
26. Freejack
Release date: Jan. 17, 1992
Director: Geoff Murphy
Starring: Emilio Estevez, Rene Russo, Mick Jagger, Anthony Hopkins
Budget: $30 million
Box office: $37 million
Bottom line: "Freejack" is off the chain. A bananas, early 1990s sci-fi/time travel movie starring Emilio Estevez as an F1 race car driver who is snatched out of time the moment before he's obliterated in a fiery crash during a race.
With time travel movies, they don't always have to be works of art. "Freejack" is definitely not that. No doubt Anthony Hopkins was a bit frosty about the film being released as he was gearing up to win an Academy Award for "Silence of the Lambs" when he called it "terrible" on "The David Letterman Show" around the time of its release.
"Freejack" isn't terrible. It's actually a lot of fun. If you like "Robocop" and "Total Recall," this is in that vein.
Streaming on: HBO Max
25. Time Bandits
Release date: July 10, 1981
Director: Terry Gilliam
Starring: Craig Warnock, John Cleese, Sean Connery, Shelley Duvall, Ian Holm, Kenny Baker, Peter Vaughan, David Warner, David Rappaport, Jack Purvis
Budget: $5 million
Box office: $42.4 million
Bottom line: Kids who grew up in the 1980s remember "Time Bandits" well from an extended run on cable television throughout the decade, right at the advent of HBO, Showtime and Cinemax.
Director Terry Gilliam has an affinity for time travel in his films. You'll see his name on this list again soon. "Time Bandits" was the first film in what Gilliam called his "Imagination Trilogy," followed by "Brazil" in 1985 and "The Adventures of Baron Munchausen" in 1988.
What made "Time Bandits" so endearing is the kid at the heart of the story — smart as a whip, time-hopping, 11-year-old Kevin. Upon rewatch, the thing that stood out was the bonkers ending to this movie. Had it not been for the deaths of several leads in the decade following its release, we have no doubt a sequel could have been pulled off.
Streaming on: HBO Max
24. The Final Countdown
Release date: Aug. 1, 1980
Director: Don Taylor
Starring: Kirk Douglas, Martin Sheen, Katharine Ross, James Farentino, Ron O'Neal, Charles Durning
Budget: $12.5 million
Box office: $16.6 million
Bottom line: Just one year removed from "Apocalypse Now," we got Martin Sheen in a great sci-fi film with "The Final Countdown." A movie that asks the question of what would happen if our most tricked-out, modern aircraft carrier was transported back in time to one day before the attack on Pearl Harbor.
"The Final Countdown" has one cool thing about it that not a lot of time travel movies have — it ends on a fairly large cliffhanger.
Netflix, please be advised, we would like a 10-episode reboot whenever you get a chance.
Streaming on: Tubi
23. Peggy Sue Got Married
Release date: Oct. 10, 1986
Director: Francis Ford Coppola
Starring: Kathleen Turner, Nicolas Cage, Barry Miller, Joan Allen, Kevin J. O'Connor, Jim Carrey, Catherine Hicks
Budget: $18 million
Box office: $41.5 million
Bottom line: It may have been too close after the release of "Back to the Future" for movie audiences to fully embrace another time travel movie, but "Peggy Sue Got Married" is one of Kathleen Turner's better films and the best film legendary director Francis Ford Coppola made in the 1980s, which proved to be the wasteland of his career.
"Peggy Sue" would be much higher on the list were it not for the absolutely bonkers performance of Coppola's nephew, Nicolas Cage, in one of his first leading roles. The discord between Turner and Cage later led to a lawsuit after she said he was arrested for two DUIs and for stealing a chihuahua during filming.
Cage sued for defamation and won after proving the claims weren't true, and she was ordered to pay Cage's legal fees and make a "substantial" donation to charity.
Streaming on: Starz
22. Don't Let Go
Release date: Aug. 30, 2019
Director: Jacob Aaron Estes
Starring: David Oyelowo, Storm Reid, Byron Mann, Mykelti Williamson
Budget: $5 million
Box office: $5.3 million
Bottom line: "Don't Let Go" was a criminally underrated movie when it came out in the summer of 2019. It's a low-budget film that does that thing where it seems like it cost a lot more than it did.
"Don't Let Go" also skirts the edge of our "can't use time as a construct" rule. It also essentially steals most of its reasoning with how time works from the 2000 film "Frequency" to great effect.
Why "Don't Let Go" works so well is because of the two stars at its heart, the brilliant David Oyelowo and up-and-coming actress Storm Reid, who we hope is in our favorite movies and television shows for the next 30 or 40 years.
Streaming on: Amazon ($)
21. MIB3
Release date: May 25, 2012
Director: Barry Sonnenfeld
Starring: Will Smith, Tommy Lee Jones, Josh Brolin, Jermaine Clement, Emma Thompson
Budget: $225 million
Box office: $624 million
Bottom line: The "Men in Black" franchise — the Will Smith version — came to a fitting close with "MIB3" in 2012, thanks to a smart time travel plotline that saw Josh Brolin stepping in as a young Tommy Lee Jones, which turned out to be a perfect fit.
It's such perfect casting because we can't think of another actor in Hollywood that could have actually played Jones' younger version. There's an especially poignant scene at the end that involves Will Smith's character "J" watching a mind-bending twist that wraps all three films together.
Streaming on: Freeform
20. 12 Monkeys
Release date: Dec. 29, 1995
Director: Terry Gilliam
Starring: Bruce Willis, Brad Pitt, Madeleine Stowe, Christopher Plummer
Budget: $29.5 million
Box office: $168.8 million
Bottom line: Terry Gilliam gets two films on the list with "Time Bandits" and "12 Monkeys." The latter earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor for Brad Pitt.
"12 Monkeys" was actually a loose remake of a French short film from 1962 called "Le Jetee" that used nuclear war as the backdrop for time travel. "Monkeys" uses a virus Bruce Willis is trying to hop back in time to stop from wiping out most of the earth's population.
Gilliam worried Pitt wouldn't be able to pull off the fidgety aspects of his character so he simply took away his cigarettes and it did the trick.
Streaming on: Amazon Prime
19. Star Trek (2009)
Release date: May 8, 2009
Director: J.J. Abrams
Starring: Chris Pine, Zach Quinto, Zoe Saldana, John Cho, Eric Bana, Bruce Greenwood, Winona Ryder, Karl Urban, Anton Yelchin, Leonard Nimoy
Budget: $150 million
Box office: $385.7 million
Bottom line: We should give the "Star Trek" reboot from J.J. Abrams more credit for being one of the better sci-fi films of the last 20 years. It catches a handful of young actors right before they shoot out of the stratosphere and has a wonderful villain in Eric Bana.
Where the movie really kicks into high gear is when the time travel aspects start to enter the picture and we get New Spock and Old Spock. The scenes between Chris Pine (Captain Kirk) and Leonard Nimoy are especially memorable.
Our sadness really lies with the big-budget fourth installment of the current "Star Trek" franchise that never came to fruition. It would have leaned more heavily into the time travel aspects and brought back Chris Hemsworth as Captain Kirk's father.
Streaming on: Amazon ($)
18. Planet of the Apes (1968)
Release date: April 3, 1968
Director: Franklin J. Schaffner
Starring: Charlton Hesston, Roddy McDowall, Maurice Evans, Kim Hunter, James Whitmore, James Daly, Linda Harrison
Budget: $5.8 million
Box office: $33.4 million
Bottom line: The original "Planet of the Apes" essentially uses the same rules for time travel as "Interstellar" — the further you get away from the Earth and continue to experience time the same, it is occurring at a much faster rate back on Earth.
In that vein, we don't even realize it's a time travel movie until that last, awe-inspiring shot of the Statue of Liberty on the beach, Charlton Heston crumpled in the sand and realizing that he'd actually made his way back to Earth. Just thousands and thousands of years in the future.
Streaming on: YouTube
17. Palm Springs
Release date: July 10, 2020
Director: Max Barbakow
Starring: Andy Samberg, Cristin Milioti, J.K. Simmons
Budget: $5 million
Box office: N/A
Bottom line: Released in the middle of the pandemic, the Andy Samberg-led "Palm Springs" was one of the bigger hits put out when movie theaters were still closed. It even ended up with Golden Globe nominations for Best Motion Picture Musical or Comedy and Best Actor in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for Samberg.
You will see this trope several times because it's the most reliable time travel device — repeating the same day over and over again. "Palm Springs," however, does something unique. In most of these types of films, it's just one person getting to live that day over and over.
When Samberg realizes there's more than just him in the loop, the film takes off.
Streaming on: Hulu
16. Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home
Release date: Nov. 26, 1986
Director: Leonard Nimoy
Starring: William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, James Doohan, George Takei, Walter Koenig, Nichelle Nichols
Budget: $26 million
Box office: $133 million
Bottom line: OK, we will go ahead and say it. "The Voyage Home" is a better "Star Trek" movie than the "Wrath of Khan" and is better than both of the sequels that came out in the 2010s.
Another way to look at "Voyage" is as the conclusion of a three-film arc that began with "Khan" continued to "The Search for Spock" and ended here, with director Leonard Nimoy making a sci-fi film about environmentalism that earned four Academy Award nominations and saw the crew of the USS Enterprise traveling back in time to steal humpback whales in order to save the planet in the distant future.
It's not as wacky as that sounds. If you like sci-fi and time travel movies, this is worth your time.
Streaming on: Paramount+
15. Flight of the Navigator
Release date: Aug. 1, 1986
Director: Randal Kleiser
Starring: Joey Cramer, Paul Reubens, Veronica Cartwright, Cliff DeYoung, Sarah Jessica Parker, Matt Adler, Howard Hesseman, Albie Whitaker
Budget: $9 million
Box office: $18.5 million
Bottom line: "Flight of the Navigator" is a movie that kind of got lost in the wash in the mid-1980s but has stayed alive in the hearts and minds of fans over the last 30-plus years.
Plenty of things stand out about "Navigator" on numerous rewatches — the amazing special effects (for the time), a young Sarah Jessica Parker in one of her first movie roles and an especially smart use of time travel.
It's no surprise this movie is getting a reboot on Disney+ with director Bryce Dallas
Streaming on: Disney+
14. Hot Tub Time Machine
Release date: March 26, 2010
Director: Steve Pink
Starring: John Cusack, Rob Corddry, Craig Robinson, Clark Duke, Crisping Glover, Lizzy Caplan, Chevy Chase
Budget: $36 million
Box office: $64.6 million
Bottom line: John Cusack spent long enough in "serious" movies that it was a welcome sight to see him getting back in the comedy game, where he first started, with "Hot Tub Time Machine" in 2010.
We love a good time travel movie, and as far as comedies go, this is one of the best to blend the two genres together. Cusack showed he was as good at knowing when to get back in the comedy game as when to get out. He was the only member of the main cast to not appear in the 2015 sequel, which grossed almost $50 million less than the original and was demolished by critics and moviegoers.
Motley Lou, indeed.
Streaming on: Hulu, TNT
13. Predestination
Release date: Aug. 28, 2014
Director: The Spierig Brothers
Starring: Ethan Hawke, Sarah Snook, Noah Taylor
Budget: $5 million
Box office: $5.4 million
Bottom line: No film will melt your mind more than "Predestination" — a largely forgotten and underappreciated film out of Australia from 2014.
We could not get into the plot mechanics of "Predestination" without giving away every bit of the plot. This usually wouldn't matter, but we're assuming quite a few people haven't gotten the chance to see it yet.
Streaming on: Tubi
12. The Terminator
Release date: Oct. 26, 1984
Director: James Cameron
Starring: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Linda Hamilton, Michael Biehn, Paul Winfield
Budget: $6.4 million
Box office: $78.3 million
Bottom line: This is the movie that made Arnold Schwarzenegger a huge star and established the "Terminator" franchise to begin with. Since the original film's release in 1984, there have been five sequels and a television series.
The franchise itself is totally based off time travel. And in the hands of director James Cameron it's handled as well as it ever has been. "Terminator" has an underrated twist. John Connor sends his top lieutenant, Kyle Reese, back in time to save his mother at the same time the machines do. Then Reese gets his mom pregnant. With John Connor.
Mind blown.
Streaming on: Tubi, Amazon Prime
11. Looper
Release date: Sept. 28, 2012
Director: Rian Johnson
Starring: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Bruce Willis, Emily Blunt, Paul Dano, Piper Perabo, Jeff Daniels, Noah Segan, Garret Dillahunt
Budget: $30 million
Box office: $176.5 million
Bottom line: If you want evidence that Rian Johnson is a genius filmmaker, look no further than his 2012 film "Looper." He wrote, directed and drafted Joseph Gordon-Levitt to star in this movie after JGL starred in his first feature, the teenage detective noir "Brick" in 2005.
Any time travel movie worth its weight in plutonium should draw you in for multiple viewings, which "Looper" does with ease. This movie also features peak, post-prime Bruce Willis, and actress Emily Blunt seems to have a thing for finding her way into elite time travel and sci-fi movies.
It's not her last appearance on this list.
Streaming on: Netflix
10. About Time
Release date: Sept. 4, 2013
Director: Richard Curtis
Starring: Domhnall Gleeson, Rachel McAdams, Bill Nighy, Tom Hollander, Margot Robbie
Budget: $12 million
Box office: $88.5 million
Bottom line: Richard Curtis has written and directed some of the best romantic comedies of the last 20 years. His foray into time travel movies stayed in that vein with "About Time" about a lineage of men who can time travel.
"About Time" is about more than just time travel or the romance between Domhnall Gleeson and Rachel McAdams at the heart of the film. It's about learning to appreciate life as it happens. "About Time" was also, somewhat surprisingly, the last movie Curtis directed.
"The difference between having a good idea for a movie and a finished movie is the same as seeing a pretty girl across the floor at a party and being there when she gives birth to your third child," Curtis said. "It's a very long journey."
Streaming on: Netflix
9. Happy Death Day/Happy Death Day 2U
Release date (Happy Death Day): Oct. 13, 2017
Release date (Happy Death Day 2U): Feb. 13, 2019
Director: Christopher Landon
Starring: Jessica Rothe, Israel Broussard, Suraj Sharma, Steve Zissis
Happy Death Day budget: $4.8 million
Happy Death Day box office (budget): $125.5 million
Happy Death Day 2U budget: $9 million
Happy Death Day 2U box office: $64.6 million
Bottom line: We are cheating a little bit here by listing "Happy Death Day" and its sequel "Happy Death Day 2U" in one spot, but that's in the hopes that people discover both movies for the first time and at the same time. And realize the story is just one movie, essentially.
Considering the total budget of the two movies put together was roughly $14 million and the two movies grossed almost $200 million together, we'd be surprised if we don't get another installation in the "Happy Death Day" franchise at some point.
Happy Death Day streaming on: Amazon ($)
Happy Death Day 2U streaming on: Hulu
8. Avengers: Endgame
Release date: April 26, 2019
Director: Anthony Russo and Joe Russo
Starring: Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, Josh Brolin, Mark Ruffalo, Scarlett Johansson, Chris Hemsworth, Jermey Renner, Don Cheadle, Paul Rudd, Brie Larson, Karen Gillan, Benedict Wong, Gwyenth Paltrow
Budget: $400 million
Box office: $2.798 billion
Bottom line: There has never been a bigger movie in Hollywood history than "Avengers: Endgame" — the finale to the 11-year long "Infinity Saga" from Marvel Studios. And one of the things we loved most about it was how seamlessly it integrated time travel into the plot.
While the actual time travel is pure adrenaline rush, the scenes where our heroes discuss time travel are almost as good, most notably when Ant-Man/Scott Lang tries to explain time travel to Tony Stark and when Rhodey offers his solution to fixing The Snap.
One thing the filmmakers did when it came to time travel in this movie is something we wish more would do when they play in this genre. They contacted actual physicists. Doing research pays off. Imagine that.
Streaming on: Disney+
7. Terminator 2: Judgment Day
Release date: July 3, 1991
Director: James Cameron
Starring: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Linda Hamilton, Edward Furlong, Robert Patrick, Joe Morton
Budget: $100 million
Box office: $520.9 million
Bottom line: The original "Terminator" film in 1984 used time travel as its major plot device and created one of the all-time mind-bending plot twists when John Connor sends his own dad back in time to meet his mom for the first time. But our money is with "T2" for the sheer spectacle of it all.
For all of the plot mechanisms that time travel offers, it's really at home in the expert hands of director James Cameron, who drafts Joe Morton in as the scientist who eventually creates Skynet — the artificial intelligence system that wipes out almost all of humanity.
Streaming on: Netflix
6. Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure
Release date: Feb. 17, 1989
Director: Stephen Herek
Starring: Keanu Reeves, Alex Winter, George Carlin, Bernie Casey
Budget: $10 million
Box office: $40.5 million
Bottom line: You will never have more fun time traveling than when you hit the metaphysical waves with Bill S. Preston, Esq., and Ted "Theodore" Logan in the surprise hit from 1989 that was the first step on the road to gigantic movie stardom for Keanu Reeves.
San Dimas High School never had a senior presentation like the one Bill and Ted delivered in order to graduate with their class. And, in turn, save humanity itself.
But make sure you press pause on the two turgid sequels.
Streaming on: HBO Max
5. Donnie Darko
Release date: Oct. 26, 2001
Director: Richard Kelly
Starring: Jake Gyllenhaal, Jena Malone, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Drew Barrymore, Noah Wyle, Mary McDonnell, Patrick Swayze, James Duval
Budget: $4.5 million
Box office: $7.5 million
Bottom line: This bonkers time travel movie from director Richard Kelly is where a lot of us decided to buy a ton of Jake Gyllenhaal stock.
What we love the most about "Donnie Darko" is that it mixes so many genres effortlessly. All at once, it incorporates sci-fi, high school drama, time travel, family drama and, in the opinions of many, essentially a superhero movie as well.
While writer/director Richard Kelly blew the goodwill from this movie on the dreadful "Southland Tales" — one of the more epic disasters in Hollywood history — it proved Gyllenhaal was a viable leading man.
Streaming on: HBO Max
4. Groundhog Day
Release date: Feb. 12, 1993
Director: Harold Ramis
Starring: Bill Murray, Andie MacDowell, Chris Elliott
Budget: $25 million
Box office: $105 million
Bottom line: If we're getting into a discussion of what Bill Murray's best leading role was, it probably boils down to a trifecta of "Lost in Translation" and "Ghostbusters." But No. 1 is "Groundhog Day" directed by the late Harold Ramis.
This is Murray hitting at the height of his powers. As he got older, he was able to pull off more dramatic roles with more weight to them, but he was at his comic apex with the tale of a weatherman repeating the same day over and over again.
For all its success, this movie proved to be the undoing of longtime friends Murray and Ramis, who clashed over what type of movie they were making. The two didn't speak again until 2014, shortly before Ramis died.
Streaming on: Amazon Prime, Starz
3. Deja Vu
Release date: Nov. 22, 2006
Director: Tony Scott
Starring: Denzel Washington, Paula Patton, Val Kilmer, Bruce Greenberg, Adam Goldberg, Jim Caviezel
Budget: $75 million
Box office: $180.6 million
Bottom line: If we could force Denzel Washington to make another time travel movie, we would. If only because "Deja Vu" is just so, so good. It's a time travel movie but also a thriller and also a whodunnit.
Leave it to Washington, who is perhaps the greatest actor of all time, to step into the time travel genre and drop the mic. Can you imagine what this movie would have been with anyone else in the leading role?
On that note, the pairing between director Tony Scott and Washington should also go down as one of the all-time great director-actor duos of all time. Scott directed 16 films in his career, and a quarter of them starred Washington.
Streaming on: Amazon Prime
2. Edge of Tomorrow
Release date: June 6, 2014
Director: Doug Liman
Starring: Tom Cruise, Emily Blunt, Bill Paxton, Brendan Gleeson
Budget: $178 million
Box office: $370.5 million
Bottom line: The plotline of "living the same day over and over" makes yet another appearance. But it was never done better than what we got here.
Based on the Japanese manga novel "All You Need Is Kill" by Harushi Sakurazaka, this is the best movie Tom Cruise has made in the last 20 years. And the only of his late period movies that holds up to his 1990s heyday.
By the time he dies for the 100th time, you're there with him. It's also director Doug Liman's best movie by a long shot.
Streaming on: Amazon ($)
1. Back to the Future
Release date: July 3, 1985
Director: Robert Zemeckis
Starring: Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd, Thomas F. Wilson, Crispin Glover, Lea Thompson, James Tolkan, Claudia Wells
Budget: $19 million
Box office: $388.8 million
Bottom line: No movie about time travel has ever been as good or as fun as "Back to the Future." It's an infinitely rewatchable delight (imagine that) turned down 40 times before it was finally greenlit following the release of "Romancing the Stone" from director Robert Zemeckis.
In one of the more interesting sliding doors moments in Hollywood history, Zemeckis actually shot the film for one month with Eric Stoltz playing Marty McFly, realized it wasn't working, and fired him in order to replace him with his first choice, Michael J. Fox.
Made for just $19 million, then grossing almost $400 million at the box office and spawning two blockbuster sequels, it became one of the most profitable franchises of all time.
Streaming on: Amazon Prime