In a world where time is currency, a poor man named Will Salas receives a second chance at life when he is given over 100 years of time by a wealthy stranger. He uses his newfound wealth to fall in love with a beautiful woman named Sylvia, who is trapped in a life of luxury. As they navigate the complexities of their time-trading world, they hatch a plan to rob a bank of time and give the poor a chance to live.
Imagine rent, groceries, healthcare, and justice paid with minutes and years from your lifespan. That crisp, visceral metaphor makes economic inequality literal: the rich live for centuries while the poor race a daily clock toward death. The film’s economy-as-time concept is its strongest narrative engine — immediate, easy to grasp, and brutal in consequences. in time 2011 vegamovies
Will Salas (Justin Timberlake), a factory worker who receives a massive "gift" of over a century from a suicidal wealthy man. The Conflict: In a world where time is currency, a
Unlike many sci-fi films where death is abstract, In Time makes it tangible. The constant ticking clocks create relentless tension. One of the most heartbreaking scenes is when Will’s mother runs out of time just seconds before he can reach her. Imagine rent, groceries, healthcare, and justice paid with
Set in a near-future world where aging stops at 25 and time is literal currency, In Time follows Will Salas (Justin Timberlake), a factory worker who suddenly inherits a fortune of time and becomes a target in a society where the rich live forever while the poor race the clock. Will teams up with Sylvia Weis (Amanda Seyfried), the daughter of a time-rich corporate magnate, and the two embark on a high-speed heist to redistribute time.