Kate & Leopold.
Yes, in the popular suspended-animation musical genre.
Unfrozen Caveman Lawyer?
I remember a Judge Dredd strip which gives this trope short shrift: a squadron of WW2 Luftwaffe fighters suddenly appear over Mega City One and are very quickly shot down and that is that.
Lightning by Dean R. Koontz involves Nazi time travelers who are raiding the present for war-winning technology.
In the Time Wars series by Simon Hawke one of the major characters is a medieval woman who joins up with the protagonists and spends the rest of the series all over the timeline, including the present. There’s also one book where Jules Verne semi-inadvertently ends up on a present-day nuclear submarine that’s been stolen by an eccentric villain. One of the protagonists comments to Verne that while he can’t be allowed to talk about time travel and endanger the timeline, there’s no reason why he couldn’t write a novel inspired by his experiences…
In a similar vein, I remember a couple episodes of Bewitched where a historical figure was (accidentally?) brought forward to the present.
Mel Gibson played a WW II pilot who was frozen or something until present day (early 90s). Forever Young, maybe.
There was the children’s TV series Catweazle about an 11th century wizard who travelled to the modern day.
George Washington!
The 1966 sitcom It’s About Time ran for one season of 26 episodes. For the first 18 episodes, two astronauts who passed through a time warp were trapped in a prehistoric era. In episode 19, they returned to the present, and brought a cave family with them. The final 8 episodes were about the cave family trying to understand modern times.
There was a TV series called Outlaws in which a sheriff in 1899 caught up to a gang of bank robbers, when the whole group of them is struck by lightning that somehow transports them to the 1980s. They call a truce while they adjust to their new surroundings, and, this being a 1986 TV series, they decide to open a detective agency. (No, this was not a comedy. Not intentionally, anyway.)
It’s About Time opening and closing themes.
♬ It’s about time
It’s about space
It’s about time to slap your face! ♬
.
People from a remote English village at the time of the Black Death end up in a modern New Zealand city in The Navigator: A Medieval Odyssey, a very somber, strange little movie.
Maybe too convoluted, but the protagonist in Heinlein’s Door into Summer travels from (1) a future just ahead of the then-present to (2) 30 years in the future via cryo-sleep, then (3) returns to his original time with a time machine and (4) cryo-sleeps his way back to his new present.
Yeah, too convoluted. And it involves cats. But it starts with one of the most lovely paragraphs the old grump ever wrote.
I enjoyed “The Man From Earth,” about a time traveler of sorts. It’s about a prehistoric man who just happened to survive for thousands of years and lives now in contemporary America.
I loved that story but it was so sad.
To find a cure for the plague they tunnel deep into the ground, where they find Hell, suitably represented by night-time Auckland after the shops have closed.
And the revised version used in the last 8 episodes.