Aw dude, don't jinx it. Hollyweird is devoid of new ideas. If any of the others are anything to go by, it would be race and gender swapping with a cringe laden PC take on the wild west.....what an absolute nightmare.
I actually wouldn't mind, as long as they told a whole new story with the same premise. Someone travelling from 2020 to 1990 would find the world as strange as Marty found 1955. If they did a "third movie visits the far past" thing, do the 1920s. A remake would have to find other characters than Doc and Marty, however. The originals had all the story they need, and it'd be sacrilege to try to expand on it or to do it again. Have the remake feature entirely new characters, who have to find a way to get back to the present from the past. That's the base premise, then have an absolute minimum of copying elements from the originals beyond that. No Doc, no Biff, no McFly, maybe not even a DeLorean. Just an adventure in time. Keep the name and the theme music, but apart from that, be original and creative. I'd watch that.
@@Codraroll and then Twitter would backlash that Reboot, i think its should be a young man stealing a Delorean and accidently go back to past and have to find out the one who makes time travel devices
I've always considered Back to the Future to be a single movie, told in three acts that each have their own distinctive visual and thematic tone. Easily the best cinematic journey through time.
@@petersarubbi You rule! It's SO TRUE--if you pick up part 2 RIGHT when they blast into 2015 from when the DeLorean comes at the screen in the flash of light from the end of 1, then fade from Doc fainting at the end of 2 to him and Marty waking up in his house in 3 and take out all of the credits including 1 so that they're all saved for the end there's the whole thing!! If Zemeckis and Gale did that, maybe even putting the deleted scenes back in to make up for the time the credits would have been, and then re-released it in theaters I WOULD SO GO TO SEE IT!! Get my giant bag of popcorn and a few 2 liter bottles of Diet Coke and chill through all five hours and some! I did the math once, so tightly condensed it's about that long:)
Thankfully, Robert Zemeckis has always said he will block all attempts to make sequels to the trilogy. I think he said something along the lines of "not while I'm alive", so we should be safe. That said, after he's dead then he won't have the power to block any such attempts. I'd like to think that his wishes are honoured forever but that might end up to be wishful thinking. Note to Disney: Don't even _go_ there! You've got the rights to everything else, you don't _need_ the rights to this as well! You already rejected it before the first film was made so keep it that way! Leave it alone!
When you spoke of foreshadowing for the third movie appearing in the second movie, you forgot the hot tub scene, in which Biff was watching Clint Eastwood using a piece of metal as a surprise bulletproof vest. Even that harkens back to Doc using a surprise bulletproof vest in the end of Back to the Future. So technically, a bulletproof vest appears in all three movies.
Another detail left out, is that Doc's 2015 shirt with the "Steam engines and cowboys" eventually goes on to become his mask that he wears while stealing the train in BTTF 3. The colors are faded, but you can definitely still see the trains pattern.
Not only do you seem to know they have sequels in the future, but you also goofed and revealed mintys gender change to miny in 2032. Be careful fellow time traveler! Your slip ups can hurt all of us.
It's true that he put it on all of his contracts, but these agreements are only valid until his and Bob Gale's deaths and like they said, they are sure that when they'll be gone the studios will reboot it, but until then it's not going to happen.
@Shawn Tetlow I love that he did that! THAT is the mark of a true BOSS:) The only remake I'd be cool with is if he and Gale turned the trilogy EXACTLY as it is into animation, I don't know what tech it is that takes a movie and converts it into a cartoon but I don't doubt it's out there, JUST to see how it turns out. Marty would actually LOOK like a kid and the makeup and digital effects would look WAY better, I know that much!
My favorite line from this movie has to be when Doc says "A hundred years ago? That's THIS year!" Also, so glad you mentioned creepy Vern pointing to his junk. It really is one of those things you can't unsee.
I'd love a sequel or reboot. Part 4 could be a found time machine with Marty caught between dimensions warning about how time travel causes parkinsons (vibrating until he's between dimensions in this case.) I'd like a series, with Eric Stolz playing the father.
Totally agree not just with BTTF but with ALL reboots. Post Tobey Maguire Spiderman origin movie springs to mind. Nearest thing to a sequel/reboot I would recommend is the BTTF Musical which I was VERY VERY... lucky to see when I traveled from here in Northern Ireland to Manchester, England JUST before Covid-19 UK lockdown. PHEW!
My grandma lives in the area where this was filmed and even got to meet Christopher Lloyd and get an autograph from him when they were filming there. Sadly, she lost that autograph when a bar and restaurant she and my grandpa owned at the time caught on fire. Speaking of fires, here's a bonus fact: the western set actually got destroyed in a fire caused by lightening in 1996, which was also the set for the 1994 movie Bad Girls.
That's what happens when you build a house in the middle of nowhere. I went to a school that they just built in the middle of a cornfield, even left the barn It got hit by lightening the first year it was open and all our electronics were destroyed. Insurance paid for it. Also, a flag pole got hit near some kids. No one was hurt. Then they installed a bunch to lightning rods.
When Marty is in the saloon getting shot at, before he stamps on the floor boards causing the spittoon to land on mad dog. The shuffling sounds effects were done by Michael Winslow.
@@amkrause2004 "newton and the apple" "Bohr and the coffeetable" "einstein and the boredom of his job" "hawking and the pursuit of a single equation" "sagan and his quest for the proper question" "Asimov and his call for predicting the future" "Heinlein and his quest for individual humanity" the list goes on..and on..and on..
Another bit of foreshadowing in part II was Doc telling Marty he had gone to a rejuvenation clinic that had easily "added another 30 to 40 years" to his life. They did that in order to establish him being able to have a long, happy life with Clara despite his age. _And I ADORE that._ 💜 Honestly Doc and Clara have been one of my OTPs since I was a child in the '90s, long before I knew what an OTP even _was._ They're just so sweet together!
I fondly remember the debut of III in the summer of 1990 - The theatre I was managing in SoCal ran the trilogy Back-to-Back-to-Back - 1,000 happy fans for the day watching Doc Brown and Marty's adventures. Good times!
Some other facts: -Before Clara was introduced, she was seen in the background when Doc & Marty are looking at the train map. -During the scene where they steal the train, Doc's facemask is made from the train shirt he wore in part two. -In 1985, Needles's gang is made up of actors who were in Biff's, Griff's and Buford's gangs. And about part two not having a musician, Needles was played by Flea from The Red Hot Chili Peppers. Seen in the 2015 phone call.
The Flea character raced Marty in III as well, causing him to crash into a Rolls Royce and wreck his guitar hand, as alluded to in Part II. This was avoided in the end of III where he goes into reverse instead.
The actress who played Clara was also in Time After Time in the late 70s, where she basically acted exactly the same when H.G. Wells (also her love interest) tells her he's from the past (rather than Doc being from the future).
13:09 you can hear the fading out "Number 01". No worries about it, shit happens. Just wanted to let you know for the "future". Thanks for your videos man!
Didn't know about the western print on Docs shirt in part 2, thanks Minty. It seems every time I watch the trilogy or BTTF trivia videos like this one I learn something new and I'm a 49 year old BTTF geek for flips sake.
The bandanna Doc wears over his face when they steal the train in part 3 is actually made from the Hawaiian shirt with the cowboys and steam trains pattern from part 2.
Back to the future part three is my all-time favorite of the trilogy. No questions no if ands or butts. For me it goes 3,1,2. Another favorite movie of mine is a million ways to die in the west. I love how they were able to get both Christopher Lloyd as Doc brown with the DeLorean as a cameo. Plus Matt Clark who played the bartender in back to the future part III played the old prospector with his dog plugger who gets shot
3 was my least favorite as a kid. But watching the trilogy almost every year, I've grown to appreciate it as much as the other parts. It aged very well.
I agree 100 percent. Regardless of your political leaning, I just enjoyed movies where it wasn't about women, race, rich vs poor, etc. These were just fun and exciting movies everyone could enjoy.
Great video, Minty! The Back to the Future Trilogy is one of my favorites. I agree. Please no remakes or reboots! The movies are awesome just as they are! Be Safe Out There, Minty!
The part of Seamus McFly should have gone to original Marty McFlyactor, Eric Stoltz. Dunno why but I can see him playing Marty's great great grand father.
There is a pop icon in part 2. Flea from red hot chilli peppers - he is Marty's arsehole boss. And also the guy who goads marty into the truck race. I love your vids mate, keep up the good work 😀
I know this one doesn't get all the love, but I truly love Back to the Future III. The relationship between Doc and Marty really shone through in this one. They were truly the best of friends.
Termors, Kindergarten Cop, Child's Play 2, and Darkman came out In the year of 1990 as the same with Back to The Future Part 3 (1990), there all are very Great and Fun Movies of 1990 from Universal to Enjoyed & Loved watching.
@@aaronburratwood.6957 Good for You that you'll Enjoyed movies at 11 year's old, and I agree with you that there are A Lot of Great 90s film's from that year my 5 personal favorite 90s film's are Robert De Niro A Bronx Tale, Con Air, Wes Craven The People Under The Stair's, The Sandlot, & Only The Strong Great film's of the 90s.
5:00 I would like to mention that Mary Steenbergen played another love interest to a time traveler in TIME AFTER TIME, with Malcolm McDowell playing H.G.Wells.
@@shootthemoon6072 I only know of two Hank Williams movies. George Hamilton played him in an old movie from the 60's. And Tom Hiddleston, yes Loki, played him a few years ago
Doc never gets enough credit for absolutely shredding that hoverboard through rough desert at roughly 80 mph while cradling a full grown, fully dressed woman and staring deeply into her eyes. skillz
I love the back to the future movies. Easily in my top ten of all time greatest movies. Yes it was uncommon to film back to back movies in the 80s. But don't forget Superman 1 and 2 which were filmed back to back in the 70s none the less
We didn't really realize it at the time, but the 1990s were a golden age of filmed science fiction. The Back to the Future trilogy certainly played a significant role in leading us in to that. Part III has always been my favorite, because I am a big fan of both westerns and science fiction, and anything that combines them automatically appeals to me.
It was too ugly given the tone of the film. Also, those who got killed in the films were always ressurected so a permanent kill would be pretty messed up.
I love that it’s up to the audience to piece things together that aren’t fully explained. Like how Doc was able to get the train to hover/fly because he was left with the hoverboard technology during the climax.
I think he took the train to the Future and had it hover converted, Marty asks him if he's going to the future and Doc replies " I've already been there" just before it lifts off the ground
@@jimbear62 I believe he was referring to the future in Part II. Either way, I strongly believe that without that hoverboard tech, he wouldnt have been able to make that train in that time period.
@@CitrusBiff Actually I think we're both right.... It's a reference to both movies I think He must of found a way to use the hoverboard's circuitry to make a time circuit or flux capacitor because, the technology really didn't exist in the 1800s outside of the telegraph
Also, in the extras on the DVDs, they explained that a part of the reason for removing the scene of Mad Dog Tannen shooting the sheriff in the back was because there would have been less of a reason later on for Marty to allow Mad Dog to live at the end of the movie. Removing that scene thus allowed the scene where Marty simply knocks Mad Dog into a pile of manure (in a recurring joke in the series) instead of killing him in revenge for the killing of the sheriff to make a lot more sense.
This movie world should never be rebooted, however, if done right, I'd love to see it continue with new characters. Already have the line when the new main character takes the DeLorean through time. "How did you know how to do that?" "I saw the movies..."
I did actually think of a great Back to the Future sequel a few years ago. It revolves around Jules Brown and his adventure to find his long lost brother Vern that vanished somewhere in time when they were still children and his determination through careful planning and research over many years since the accident to bring his long lost brother home who's trapped somewhere in time.
This movie was epic, I saw it in theaters as a kid (like part 2, leaving you with the western part 3 trailer and then I got crazy!!). The problem was the SEGA Genesis game. The first level (horse ride) was really hard, impossible to pass for me. Only a friend of mine did that, and I saw the rest of the game thanks to him. Well, Gianluca, you did a good job!
Also would've been worth mentioning that the photographer in the movie who takes that iconic pic with Marty and Doc next to the clock is the legendary Director of Photography, Dean Cundey. It's a suitable little cameo for the man who also shot classics such as Halloween, Escape from New York, The Thing, Romancing the Stone, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Jurassic Park and Apollo 13.
There is an official continuation of the story through comic books and it’s pretty good. Stays mostly true to the characters. There’s even a storyline based on exactly what happens to Biff in the Alt timeline from when he gets the Almanac.
The Blu-ray collection shown at 11:50 has the animated series included. You can see the discs on the right. There is also a whole lot of comics and the video game that take place after the movies.
@@GhostFortress001 The game is actually very good. It's a proper part 4 of the story. The comics have some very good ones as well that explore stuff never explained in the movies like how Marty met Doc or how Doc built the time train. Good side stories.
The ending scenes with the truck race and the train tracks were filmed in my hometown of Oxnard, CA (well, technically the train tracks were in Port Hueneme) and of course I didnt find this out until after the fact.
I remember them making the two films back to back. When we watched the end of 2 in the cinema and we watched the précis of the third one it was amazing!