advertistment, 1956, for a program featuring
Invasion of the Body Snatchers and
The Atomic Man (the American title of
Timeslip)
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Quite a creditable addition to the British school of 'scientific' thrillers. As in his recent
The Brain Machine [1956], Ken Hughes' direction is brisk and assured, although he has not here been very well served by the script; the scenes of light relief in particular are somewhat tame. Tension is well sustained in the first half of the film, but later there are rather an overwhelming number of revelations and interest flags as a result of a too sudden onrush of events.
Timeslip scores over some of its predecessors, though, in its handling of minor characters, notably in the hospital sequences. Gene Nelson gives a good-humoured performance as the reporter, and Faith Domergue partners him quite competently."
TV Guide called it a "dumb movie with an interesting premise."
AllMovie thought its "absolutely fascinating premise" unfortunately translated into "lack of imagination in the script"; but from an able cast, Faith Domergue was "especially welcome", and the reviewer concluded "The budget is clearly low, but (Ken) Hughes does well with what he has."
The Radio Times Guide to Films gave the film 2/5 stars, writing: "In this quaint British sci-fi oddity, a radiation overdose propels an atomic scientist seven seconds into the future. Numerous muddled plotlines intertwine, with gangsters and spies trying to exploit his reaction to events before they happen, but nothing too interesting is done with the nifty premise." ==References==