:23:05
What? ls it hot?
- It's cold. Damn cold.
:23:12
Einstein, you little devil!
:23:16
Einstein's clock is exactly one minute
behind mine and still ticking!
:23:23
He's okay.
- He's fine.
:23:25
He's completely unaware
that anything happened.
:23:27
As far as he's concerned,
the trip was instantaneous.
:23:30
That's why his watch is exactly
one minute behind mine.
:23:32
He skipped over that minute to
instantly arrive at this moment in time.
:23:36
I'll show you how it works.
:23:40
First, you turn the time circuits on.
:23:46
This tells you where you're going,
this where you are and this where you were.
:23:50
Input your destination time on this keypad.
:23:53
Say you want to see the signing
of the Declaration of lndependence.
:23:58
Or witness the birth of Christ.
:24:03
Here's a red-letter date
in the history of science.
:24:06
November 5, 1955.
:24:12
Yes, of course.
:24:13
November 5, 1955.
:24:17
What happened?
:24:20
That was the day I invented time travel.
:24:22
I remember it vividly.
:24:24
I was standing on my toilet
hanging a clock.
:24:26
The porcelain was wet.
l slipped, hit my head on the sink.
:24:29
When I came to, I had a revelation.
:24:31
A vision. A picture in my head.
A picture of this.
:24:35
This is what makes time travel possible.
:24:38
The flux capacitor.
:24:40
Flux capacitor?
:24:41
It's taken almost 30 years and my family
fortune to realize the vision of that day.
:24:46
My God, has it been that long?
:24:49
Things have certainly changed around here.
:24:52
I remember when this was all farmland
as far as the eye could see.
:24:57
Old man Peabody owned all of this.