Many of you have experienced a seemingly never-ending quarantine these past few months due to the coronavirus pandemic devastating the world. There's no doubt you miss coming and going as you please, as well as traveling to your favorite destinations. Now that spring is in full swing, the urge to get up and move is especially overwhelming.

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Perhaps traveling isn't always as great it seems, though. That's the premise explored in the science fiction movies on this list. These features involve time travel and the negative consequences of jumping back and forth through space. While these are some top-notch films, their characters endure disaster, imprisonment, and even death.

Planet of the Apes (1968)

The original Planet of the Apes launched an empire after it hit theaters. Rod Serling of The Twilight Zone fame co-wrote the screenplay for the film, which stars Charlton Heston at the height of his career. Heston's character George Taylor plays an astronaut whose space shuttle crashes into an unknown planet during a light-speed expedition.

It turns out Taylor and his crew have traveled thousands of years into the future, from 1972 to 3978, and the planet they've collided with is ruled by anthropomorphic apes. Taylor is eventually taken hostage by the apes, where he's brought face-to-face with his own species' demise.

Donnie Darko (2001)

Richard Kelly's cult classic is about much more than suburban angst and mental health. Donnie Darko is an intricate, layered story about physics, fate, and time travel. Set in Middlesex, Virginia, during October 1988, the movie stars Jake Gyllenhaal in the title role.

Donnie Darko, a teenager diagnosed with schizophrenia, is visited by a figure in a terrifying rabbit suit who calls himself Frank. Frank tells Donnie the world will end in 28 days, propelling the teen into a month-long search for truth that defies logic and compromises the teen's existence. Gyllenhaal's ensemble supporting cast includes his sister Maggie, Jenna Malone, Patrick Swayze. and Drew Barrymore.

Twelve Monkeys (1995)

British sci-fi auteur Terry Gillam is responsible for this grim tale of a deadly virus that forces humankind to live underground. Bruce Willis plays a prisoner named James Cole, a man living in 2035 who is forced to go back in time to 1996 in order to keep the virus from spreading.

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Full of enticing atmospherics and moody scenarios, Twelve Monkeys co-stars Brad Pitt and Christopher Plummer. Pitt received an Oscar nomination for his role as mental patient Jeffrey Goines.

Looper (2012)

Another well-made time travel movie starring Bruce Willis, Looper is a heady, action-packed narrative from the mind of Rian Johnson. In the film, time travel is illegal, but the technology has been adopted by the mob so they can take out people they deem threats.

Joseph Gordon-Levitt plays a hired assassin known as a looper, a person hired to go back in time in order to do the mob's bidding. Things take a turn when Gordon-Levitt's character Joe learns the mob has put a hit on his future self -- played by Willis.

The Girl Who Leapt Through Time (2006)

The Girl Who Leapt Through Time

The stunning anime The Girl Who Leapt Through Time is a cautionary tale about a teenage girl who uses her ability to time travel for her own ends. When Makoto Konno realizes she can literally leap through time, the girl uses her power to protect her personal relationships.

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The Girl Who Leapt Through Time explores how Makoto learns to accept fate instead of manipulating it with her skills. While disastrous at times, the film is fueled by a heartwarming, coming-of-age theme.

Primer (2004)

Shane Carruth's low-budget masterpiece is equal parts psychological horror and intellectual science fiction. Primer follows two men working in the tech industry who develop a device that allows whatever lies inside it to jump through time. The device, it seems, speeds up the space-time continuum.

The two men, Aaron and Abe, soon use their invention in order to gain both financial and personal renown. Aaron and Abe from both the future and the past collide in a confusing, mild-altering power struggle.

Source Code (2011)

Duncan Jones -- son of David Bowie and director of 2009's Moon -- is responsible for this underrated jigsaw puzzle of a time travel movie. Source Code stars Jake Gyllenhaal as Captain Colter Stevens, a serviceman who agrees to take part in a government experiment after a massive subway explosion kills hundreds in Chicago.

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Stevens is sent back in time to the eight minutes before the train explosion in order to find clues and prevent a second attack. Stevens must repeat his mission over and over again in order to figure out who is responsible for this heinous terrorist attack.

Army of Darkness (1992)

Army of Darkness is the third film in Sam Raimi's Evil Dead trilogy. Bruce Campbell returns as Ash, who is transported -- thanks to a special occult book known as the Necronomicon -- back to the 14th century with his 1988 Oldsmobile.

The one-armed Ash arrives in the late middle ages with a shotgun, his high school chemistry book, and a chainsaw that mounts to his missing arm. These tools come in handy as an army of reanimated skeleton warriors attack the medieval kingdom Ash visits.

The Time Machine (1960)

This classic science fiction adaptation of H.G. Wells's time travel book sees actor Rod Taylor playing Victorian-era inventor George. After making his own time travel device, George pursues the future, eventually reaching the year 802,701.

In the far future, George immerses himself in a seemingly utopian civilization full of dark secrets. The Time Machine is noted for its impressive special effects. While they may be outdated by contemporary standards, they are still fun to watch on the big screen.

Groundhog Day (1993)

Groundhog Day

Harold Ramis's comedy about a man who keeps reliving the same day over and over again is considered one of Bill Murray's best movies. Murray plays a self-centered weatherman named Phil stuck in a loop: every day is suddenly February 2, 1992: Groundhog Day.

As the cycle wages on, Phil realizes a lot about himself and his egotistical ways. Andie McDowell and Chris Eliot co-star.

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