10 Best Movies Like Netflix's Time Cut

Since Netflix’s Time Cut seems to borrow many sci-fi and horror tropes and themes from other renowned films, viewers who enjoyed watching it should have many other movies on their watch lists. Unfolding through several different timelines, Time Cut is among the many flicks that use time travel as a narrative device to walk viewers through the complexities of fate, grief, and the consequences of changing the past. However, despite being driven by a complex sci-fi concept, Time Cut does not take itself too seriously and focuses less on getting time travel “right.”

Apart from featuring characters who travel through time, Netflix’s Time Cut also presents a slasher element, allowing it to blend its sci-fi with horror. Although Time Cut is not as violent as one would expect a slasher horror flick to be, it features a fair share of brutal killing scenes that add some intense thrills to its otherwise familiar narrative. Since Time Cut‘s approach towards both slasher horror and sci-fi feels derivative in more ways than one, audiences who liked watching it can check out many other similar films.

10 The Butterfly Effect

Directed by Eric Bress and J. Mackye Gruber

Starring Ashton Kutcher, The Butterfly Effect premiered in 2004 and received poor reviews from most critics. However, despite having an underwhelming critical reception, the movie became a box office hit, earning $96 million on a budget of $13 million. Owing to its commercial success, the movie even spawned two sequels, which have little to no connection with the original film, both in terms of character beats and story progression.

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The 10 Best Time Travel Movies, Ranked

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Over two decades after its release, The Butterfly Effect has a Rotten Tomatoes critics’ score of 34%. However, when it comes to its audience score, the movie has an impressive 81%, with many praising its dark and twisted take on time travel. As the movie’s title suggests, it refers to the butterfly effect in chaos theory, which suggests that even the smallest changes in a deterministic nonlinear system can cause massive differences in a futuristic state. With this idea at its core, the movie walks through several extreme scenarios that show how altering the past can significantly change the future.

9 Project Almanac

Directed by Dean Israelite

Similar to Time Cut, Project Almanac introduces many time travel rules in its early moments but later sets out to present a more chaotic narrative. Instead of being scientifically accurate, Project Almanac focuses more on having a relatable coming-of-age drama that unfolds through a “found footage” filming style. If the movie’s plot inconsistencies and paradoxes are ignored, it can be a fun one-time watch like Netflix’s Time Cut and can even be seen multiple times by viewers who can overlook its lack of adherence to time travel logic.

Marking Dean Israelite’s directorial debut, Project Almanac earned $33 million at the global box office against a budget of $12 million. Although the film’s box office performance was not impressive, it managed to break even, suggesting that its mixed critical reception did not hurt its commercial numbers. One of the biggest reasons why the film was able to have a decent performance at the box office was its ability to portray time travel in a more accessible and grounded way, allowing a wider range of audiences to relate to its storyline.

8 About Time

Directed by Richard Curtis

Unlike Time Cut, About Time does not have any slasher horror elements and focuses more on adult characters traveling through time. However, similar to the Netflix film, it presents a wildly fantastical take on time travel. Although About Time received mixed reviews from critics when it first premiered, the film has garnered more positive attention over the years, with many appreciating the performances of its cast and emotionally stirring take on the romance genre. The film’s story is driven by a man who learns he possesses the ability to time travel and uses it to build a better future for himself.

The characters in Netflix’s Time Cut effectively use their time travel adventures to fix their timeline and improve their futures. However, the main character in About Time struggles to change his fate. His story feels more personal and tragic because, no matter what he does to alter certain events of his timeline, the sands of time slip away into disastrous consequences.

7 Another Earth

Directed by Mike Cahill

Starring Brit Marling of The OA fame, Another Earth is among the sci-fi films that demand multiple viewings to truly understand the scope of its themes and emotional depths. The film is driven by a bizarre concept where a second Earth suddenly appears in the Solar system. The closer it gets to the original Earth, the more the lives of two individuals, Rhonda and John, are impacted. Unlike Time Cut, Another Earth does not directly feature time travel.

Another Earth
may not be for everyone because it demands viewers to stretch their suspension of disbelief a little too far.

However, like the Netflix film, it shows how even the smallest decisions in one’s past can send ripples down the past. It highlights how every event forks an individual’s future into an alternate reality, leading to bizarre outcomes and unforeseen consequences that challenge the idea of free will. Another Earth may not be for everyone because it demands viewers to stretch their suspension of disbelief a little too far. However, audiences looking for something deeper and more thought-provoking after Time Cut must check it out.

6 The Babysitter

Directed by McG

2017’s The Babysitter is a fun horror comedy that is not original in any way. However, in its runtime of a little below an hour and a half, the film packs enough kills and one-liners to keep viewers invested and white-knuckled. Netflix’s Time Cut tries to harken back to the 80s’ slasher movies with its horror elements but fails to explore the depths of the genre. Therefore, viewers who wish to see more gore and darkly comical moments in Time Cut must watch The Babysitter as it does not shy away from embracing the rules of the slasher genre and presenting some hilarious pop-culture gags.

5 A Wonderful Knife

Directed by Tyler MacIntyre

A Wonderful Knife can almost be seen as a spiritual successor to Time Cut. Like Time Cut‘s Lucy, its main character, Winnie, ends up saving her town from a serial killer. However, unlike Lucy, this is not where her story ends. Winnie suddenly finds herself in a parallel universe where she must not only overpower the killer again but also find a way to return to her original reality. Like Time Cut, It’s A Wonderful Life also received mixed reviews when it first hit the big screens. However, the film still packs enough holiday-themed horror and comedy to keep most viewers entertained.

4 Freaky

Directed by Christopher Landon

Directed by Christopher Landon, Freaky offers a unique take on the slasher thriller genre, where a high-school student swaps bodies with a middle-aged killer. To ensure she does not stay trapped in the killer’s body forever, she must race against time to find a way to swap back to her original body. With Vince Vaughn as its central serial killer, the movie adopts a campy tone that perfectly aligns with its bizarre storyline. Although it is hard to take Freaky too seriously because of its dark body-swapping humor, it also effectively introduces serious themes surrounding gender stereotyping among teenagers.

3 Happy Death Day

Directed by Christopher Landon

Happy Death Day is another creative Christopher Landon slasher that reflects the director’s penchant for mixing familiar sci-fi tropes with horror and comedy. Driven by the Groundhog Day time loop trope, Happy Death Day follows Theresa Gelbman, who continues living the same day after getting murdered by a serial killer. Even though the time loop trope has been used way too many times in movies of all genres, the film’s tongue-in-cheek approach and B-grade aesthetic allow it to stand out from the crowd. The film also adopts creative ways to ensure viewers cannot guess what could happen in the next time loop.

2 Totally Killer

Directed by Nahnatchka Khan

Many viewers have noticed how Time Cut seems a little too similar to Totally Killer. Since both movies feature teenage characters who accidentally travel back in time and get the opportunity to save their loved ones from a serial killer, it is understandable why many are drawing parallels between the two. However, beyond the initial story setup, the two movies are quite different from one another.

Movie

Rotten Tomatoes Critics’ Score

Rotten Tomatoes Audience Score

Totally Killer

87%

77%

Time Cut

29%

32%

While Time Cut remains relatively linear throughout its runtime and only introduces one major twist in its final moments, Totally Killer is packed with many twists and turns in its second half. Unlike Time Cut, Totally Killer also refuses to take itself too seriously, which makes it easier for viewers to overlook its time travel paradoxes and plot holes. Totally Killer also boasts an impressive Rotten Tomatoes score of 87%, making it far more acclaimed than Time Cut.

1 Back to the Future

Directed by Robert Zemeckis

Almost midway through its runtime, Time Cut takes a jab at Back to the Future. One of its main characters says that altering the past will lead to a lot more than one’s disappearance from a few photos, referencing the iconic scene from Back to the Future where Marty’s actions in the past start erasing his existence from the future. However, despite being critical of Back to the Future‘s portrayal of time travel, Time Cut adopts many of its story devices and comes nowhere close to being as iconic as the 1985 movie.

Therefore, audiences who liked Time Cut will certainly enjoy revisiting Back to the Future as it remains one of the most influential films in the time travel genre. While the fate of Time Cut‘s sequels remains unknown, Back to the Future also has two sequels that walk through how the consequences of altering the past spiral out of control and force Marty and Doc to travel to the future.

Zrodlo