I’m sorry, but apart from the fact that instantaneous travel through space always
implies time travel, I didn’t see a lick of time travel in this version of Madeleine
L’Engle’s classic.
— Michael Main
We’re mostly just ordinary.
A Wrinkle in Time by Susan Shilliday, directed by John Kent Harrison (Toronto International Film Festival for
Children, 25 April 2003).
An unabashedly pretentious adaptation of L’Engle’s fine children’s, well deserving
of the Rotten Tomatoes consensus that it’s “less than the sum of its parts.” Meg
views her past, but with no actual time travel[font=Roboto, arial, sans-serif]™[/font].