The Wizard of Speed and Time

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The Wizard of Speed and Time
TWOSAT.jpg
Directed by Mike Jittlov
Written byMike Jittlov
Produced byRichard Kaye
Starring
Cinematography Russell Carpenter
Edited byMike Jittlov
Music by John Massari
Distributed by Shapiro-Glickenhaus Entertainment
Release dates
  • May 13, 1988 (1988-05-13)(Cannes)
  • September 22, 1989 (1989-09-22)(US)
Running time
95 min
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1,535,000 (estimated)

The Wizard of Speed and Time is a 1988 low-budget feature film written, directed, and starring animator Mike Jittlov, as well as a 1979 16 mm short film, also by Jittlov. [1] [2]

Contents

1979 short film

In the original short film, a young man in a green wizard costume runs throughout America at super speed, much like the superhero The Flash. Along the way, he gives a hitchhiking woman (Toni Handcock) a swift lift to another city and gives golden stars to other women who want a trip themselves. He then slips on a banana peel and comically crashes into a film stage, which he then brings to life in magical ways.

Jittlov is a special effects technician, and he produced all of the special effects in the film himself, many through stop motion animation.

This short film originally was shown as a segment of an episode of The Wonderful World of Disney . The episode was called "Major Effects" and was aired to coincide with the release of Disney's The Black Hole in 1979.

The film segment then began to be shown at science fiction conventions around the country, gaining popularity, prompting Jittlov to eventually create a (semi-)fictionalized account, in the form of a feature film, of how this short film came to be. [3]

1988 feature film

Years later, Jittlov was able to remake the short, as well as incorporate portions of some of his other short films (such as Time Tripper and Animato ), into a feature-length 35 mm film. The feature version recounts the exploits of a special effects "wizard" (played by Jittlov) trying to fulfill his dream of making a full-length movie. The tricks of movie magic are exposed; but so are the tribulations of the independent moviemaker working around the heavily unionized Hollywood film industry.

Straeker: There are your film cans, but you can't move them.

Jittlov: Why? Are they stuck to the floor?

Straeker: No, to the system!

Many scenes in the movie turned out to be only too prophetic, according to Jittlov. In the film, a director, Lucky Straeker (Steve Brodie), and a producer, Harvey Bookman (Richard Kaye), bet over whether Jittlov can actually complete a major effects assignment, and Bookman does everything in his power to thwart Jittlov.

Richard Kaye produced the film and starred as one of the main characters, Harvey Bookman, also a producer. Richard Kaye's daughter Lauri Kaye, at the age of 16, was the production secretary of The Wizard of Speed and Time and performed in the film as a voice-over artist and a hand model.

The feature film is also filled with subliminal messages, many hidden in single frames during the "Wizard Run" sequence (which was remade and expanded from the original short film), or hidden in electrical sparks generated by various happenings in the film. [4]

The feature film was filmed in 1983 to 1986, released to theaters in 1989 (though it was never widely distributed), and was later released on VHS and laserdisc. Although there is no official DVD release yet, Jittlov's fans have (with Jittlov's knowledge and at least tacit approval) created a DVD image file, and made it available for free on peer-to-peer networks until such time as an official release is realized.

Production

Mike Jittlov spent 14 years trying to get the film made independently, as he didn't want to compromise his artistic vision for the film (as would've been the case with a studio production). [7] Much like he had done with his short films, Jittlov sprinkled subliminal messages throughout the feature length version of The Wizard of Speed and Time that pushed words associated with positivity and fulfillment. [7]

Legacy

In the November 2019 Marvel comic book Loki, issue 5, the title character states that The Wizard of Speed and Time is his favorite film. [8]

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References

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  2. The Wizard of Speed and Time (S) (1979) , retrieved 2023-10-04
  3. Cavalier, Stephen (2015-12-10). "100 Greatest Animated Shorts / The Wizard of Speed and Time / Mike Jittlov". Skwigly Animation Magazine. Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  4. "The Wizard of Speed and Time" . Retrieved 22 May 2019 via Internet Archive.
  5. ""Merry Birthday" Lyrics". 16 April 1998. Archived from the original on 16 April 1998. Retrieved 22 May 2019.
  6. "Aqui Vale Todo: El Mago De La Velocidad Y El Tiempo". Aquivaletodo.blogspot.com. 24 April 2011. Retrieved 2011-10-27.
  7. 1 2 Fiebiger, Daniel (1982). "The Wizard of Speed and Time". Cinefantastique. Fourth Castle Micromedia. Retrieved August 15, 2023.
  8. "Loki #5 Review". Marvel Heroes Library. Retrieved 2012-05-19.