Timelapse of the Future

Timelapse of the Future:
A Journey to the End of Time
Mars in future ring close-up, looking like small rocks hovering. The title is enlarged at the center.
The YouTube thumbnail
Directed byJohn Boswell
Written byJohn Boswell
Produced byJohn Boswell
Narrated byDavid Attenborough
Craig Childs
Brian Cox
Neil DeGrasse Tyson
Michelle Thaller
Lawrence Krauss
Michio Kaku
Mike Rowe
Phil Plait
Janna Levin
Stephen Hawking
Sean M. Carroll
Alex Filippenko
Martin Rees
Andrey Lysenko (in Russian version)
Edited byJohn Boswell
Music byJohn Boswell
Animation byJohn Boswell (several)
Layouts byJohn Boswell
Backgrounds byJohn Boswell
Production
company
Amber Mountain Studios
Distributed byAmber Mountain Studios
Release date
  • March 20, 2019 (2019-03-20)
Running time
29 minutes 21 seconds
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box officeest. US$US$29,300-314,000[A]

Timelapse of the Future: A Journey to the End of Time is a 2019 short epic documentary film created by American astronomy-themed musician and filmmaker John D. Boswell, made as a follow-up to his other short film Timelapse of the Entire Universe.[1] Running at 29 minutes, it is a flowmotion—a combination of a hyper-lapse, time-lapse, and regular shots—of the universe from 2019 to the end of time, with the lapse rate doubling every five seconds. The film consists of self-made and fair use footage from films, the Internet, and speeches by scientists, using current knowledge and combining different hypotheses.

Boswell spent six months on production, beginning in mid-2018, with several months of research prior. It was initially conceived as an art installation without dialogue, but later changed due to the weight of the subject matter. The film's soundtrack combines original music with stock audio; the former was later released in an album titled The Arrow of Time.

Timelapse of the Future was released on Boswell's YouTube channel melodysheep and screened on several venues; it also won the 2020 Webby Awards. The film became viral, garnering millions of views and generally positive reviews for its audiovisual craft, though some of the plot points were noted as mere speculations. The film inspired a song and music video by Noah Cyrus.


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  1. ^ Boswell, John D. (February 14, 2019). "Coming soon: my most ambitious release yet" Archived July 22, 2020, at the Wayback Machine. Melodysheep. Retrieved July 22, 2020 – via Patreon. Open access icon