Time at the Top


Time at the Top, is a 1999 cable television film for Showtime that was directed by Jimmy Kaufman and written by Linda Brookover and Alain Silver based on from the award-winning by Edward Ormondroyd. It stars Elisha Cuthbert, Timothy Busfield, and Lynne Adams.

Synopsis

Susan Shawson, a 13-year old high-school, inadvertently travels back in time in her apartment building's elevator. As altered by Dr. Reynolds, a retired physicist living upstairs, this secret time machine transports Susan from Philadelphia of 1998 back to exactly the same spot in 1881. There she meets Victoria Walker, a girl her age in need of assistance with her own family problems, most notably a schemer named Cyrus Sweeney trying to take advantage of her widowed mother Nora.
When she returns to the present, Susan discovers that her widower father Frank has been frantically searching for her, assisted by neighbor Edward Ormondroyd and local police detective Gagin. Gradually discovering the power of time travel, Susan, Victoria, and her young brother Robert, travel back and forth in time and succeed in changing both the past and the future.

Cast

Time at the Top was part of Showtime's reported commitment to "producing original family-oriented films" in 1998–99, as part of their "Original Pictures for All Ages" franchise. The script, written by Linda Brookover and Alain Silver, was based on a novel by Edward Ormondroyd.

Reception

Los Angeles Times critic Don Heckman reviewed the film as "predictable" and a "bit heavy-handed at times", with a "slogging sort of pace", though Heckman praised Cuthbert's performance as Susan as "skillfully portrayed".

Accolades

Time at the Top was awarded the Certificate of Merit as a Finalist in the Houston World Film Festival and also The Film Advisory Board's Award of Excellence. It was in competition at the Cairo International Film Festival and Falstaff International Film Festival and also screened at the Festival of Festivals, Saint Petersburg

Home media

Showtime licensed video rights for Time at the Top to Square Dog Pictures, a subsidiary of Blockbuster Video, which printed hundreds of VHS copies in order to fill enough shelves at Blockbuster Video locations to make a given title as if it were a major release.