The Yesterday Machine (1963)

Written, produced, and directed by Russ Marker, The Yesterday Machine is a wildly ambitious regional science fiction thriller that blends Cold War paranoia, pulp horror, and speculative time travel into a low-budget fever dream. Shot in Texas and released in various markets between 1963 and 1965, the film stars Tim Holt—in his final screen role—as a police lieutenant investigating a series of bizarre disappearances linked to a Nazi scientist’s time machine.

Plot Summary
After a young woman vanishes near a rural Texas road, her sister and a local reporter begin investigating. They uncover a hidden laboratory run by Dr. Von Hauser, a former Nazi physicist who has built a functioning time machine. His goal: to retrieve Adolf Hitler from the past and resurrect the Third Reich in the present.

As the protagonists are captured and subjected to Von Hauser’s twisted experiments, they must escape before history is rewritten. The film climaxes with a surreal confrontation in the time machine chamber, where science, ideology, and melodrama collide.

Cast Highlights

  • Tim Holt as Lt. Partane
  • James Britton as Jim Crandall
  • Ann Pellegrino as Sandy De Mar
  • Jack Herman as Dr. Von Hauser
  • Robert Bob Kelly as Detective Lasky
  • Linda Jenkins, Margie De Mar, and Jay Ramsey in supporting roles

Behind the Scenes Trivia

  • Director Russ Marker was a Dallas-based filmmaker who financed the film independently, using local actors and crew.
  • Tim Holt, a former Western star, came out of retirement for this role—his first screen appearance in over a decade.
  • The film’s time machine was built from scrap metal, radio parts, and blinking lights, giving it a surreal, almost steampunk aesthetic.
  • Dialogue scenes were often shot in single takes, with minimal rehearsal, contributing to the film’s awkward pacing and stilted delivery.
  • The film’s release date varies by source—some list 1963, others 1965 or 1966—due to its staggered regional distribution.
  • Despite its flaws, the film tackles philosophical questions about time, morality, and historical consequence, making it more ambitious than its budget suggests.

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