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The Time Machine: HG Wells’ Legacy in 1960s Sci-Fi

Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

Release Date: 07/19/2025

First Men in the Moon: From HG Wells to 1964 show art First Men in the Moon: From HG Wells to 1964

Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

As always there are spoilers ahead! You can follow the podcast on social media on ,  and .  If you would like to be a patron of the podcast you can join Patreon and for £3 or $3 a month you can get ad free version of the show.   First Men on the Moon was written by HG Wells and serialised in The Strand Magazine beginning in 1900. The book was published in 1901 a year before Georges Méliès kicked off science fiction cinema with La Voyage dans la Lune in 1902. (You can learn more about that film in episode number 2 .)  Then in the swinging 60s as the space race...

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Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

I am very sorry but I have been unwell this past week. (But I am on the mend!) Multiple visits to the hospital mean that although I have the next episode recorded I have not been able to edit it. I've heard many podcasts serve up older episodes in this circumstance. Maybe an annoyance to those who have already heard all the episodes but for those who haven't since it is 2026 it's probably a good opportunity to watch Metropolis (1927) as this year is the year it was set. I have two remarkable and engaging academics speak about it. Sonja Fritzsche is a professor of German Studies and an...

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Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

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Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

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Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

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More Episodes

As always there are spoilers ahead!

You can follow the podcast on ThreadsInstagram and Bluesky

HG Wells shadow is a long one and his seminal work on time travel was published in 1895. But well over a half a century later Hollywood was still hooked on Herbert (George Wells). The Time Machine was directed by George Pal and released 1960. From the turn of the century to the beginning of a new decade my amazing guests break down the themes and influences on this mid-century steampunk precursor.

Keith Williams is a Reader in English Literature at the University of Dundee where he runs the science fiction programme. He has a special interest in the pre 1945 period and is the author of the book H.G. Wells, Modernity and the Movies.

Ian Scott is a Professor of American Film and History at The University of Manchester. He has written extensively about politics and film in Hollywood.

 

Chapters

00:00 Intro

02:39 HG Wells in 1985: the book and the birth of cinema

05:37 1960s USA: the cusp of a new age

10:02 The influences on Wells: Thomas Henry Huxley and William Morris

17:21 James Bond: Rod Taylor’s missed opportunity

19:08 Time travel: the time machine, mannequins and the BBC

27:57 The far-flung future: evolution, class and nuclear war

35:32 Fritz Lang, Metropolis, and the death of flower power

39:24 The Legacy

47:09 Recommendations for the listener

 

NEXT EPISODE!

Next week I will be discussing the Eastern Block with brainy experts and discussing one of the first sci-fi films from the region Der schweigende Stern, AKA The Silent Star from 1960. 

It was also re-edited and released as The First Spaceship on Venus. You may like to watch the MST3K version on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BVmgb3jEimQ

If you are in the USA and have a public library card you should be able to find the film on Kanopy: https://www.kanopy.com/en/product/116646 

The film is available to rent online depending on your region. Just Watch should be able to help. 

If you felt very committed you could also buy this DVD collection of DEFA sci-fi which includes writing and interviews with the amazing Sonja Fritzsche, Evan Torner and Mark Bould: https://eurekavideo.co.uk/movie/strange-new-worlds-science-fiction-at-defa/