One day at the end of the 19th century, newspaperman Larry Stevens is given the gift of tomorrow’s newspaper by the ghost of the archive man, Pops Benson. That leads him to improve his position at the newspaper by scooping a story, but it also leads to trouble, more of tomorrow’s papers, and a romance with the alluring clairvoyant Sylvia.

So why do I count this as time travel when, for example, The Gap in the Curtain is not? The future newspapers in Gap never actually appeared, and it felt as if they were mere visions of a possible future, whereas we had no doubt that Larry holds an actual copy of tomorrow’s paper in his hands. And besides, It Happened Tomorrow had a great take on how events may be fated and yet, when accompanied by charming misunderstandings, lead to the unexpected.

Early Edition, one of my favorite TV shows, uses the same idea of tomorrow’s paper, but its creators said that the show was not based on this movie.
Michael Main
But I’m afraid I’m going to end up at the St. George Hotel at 6:25 no matter where I go.

Tags

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Variants

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  1. It Happened Tomorrow by Dudley Nichols and René Clair, directed by René Clair (premiered for the Allied Forces, Bougainville Island, New Guinea, 27 March 1944).
  2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . written by Dudley Nichols
    Helene Fraenkel (dialogue)
    [Error: Missing ']]' tag for wikilink] (story)
    Lord Dunsany (based on a work by)
    Lewis R. Foster (other contribution)
    . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . directed by René Clair

Indexer Notes

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  1. Credit: Lewis R. Foster is credited for ideas.