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The trailer at the end was originally shown in the theaters in 1989, as part II & III were already produced together. This was the first time someone did it this way, before the Lord of the Rings Trilogy (2001), The Matrix Reloaded/Revolutions (2003) and Kill Bill Vol. I & II (2003). The use of motion controlled cameras for doubling (and tripling) the actors was also an SFX milestone, before that only static shots without camera movements were possible. And they had to recreate the whole scene from the end of the first movie because they could not get the actress back who played Jennifer. Later runs of part I on TV or VHS added a "to be continued…" to the end scene, because in 1985 no one actually thought about a sequel let alone a franchise.
@Power106Fan that doesn't sound linear to me. There would be no instance in 2015 where anything changed around Marty and doc because once the book is handed over 30 years ago that 2015 never would've existed at all. Doc and Marty never go back in time because doc is in jail and biff knows Marty knows. That loop is basically cut off to them without another time machine. They would have to stop old biff from getting in that car.
The teaser for 3 was on the original theatrical release for BTTF 2. 2 and 3 were filmed at the same time and were released within months of each other - 2 came out in November 1989 and 3 in May 1990.
Blue, you need to follow that kitten around with a camera and put together a highlight reel of the shenanigans. What an adorable little baby! My youngest (of 7 cats) is 2 years old, and he still acts like a kitten. He was a trip when he was a baby. He could run through the slats of the baby gate we keep on our bedroom (to keep the dogs out). Now, he has to jump over it like the rest of the adult cats.
The actress who plays Jennifer in this one and part 3 was also in an enjoyable movie from the 80s called Adventures in Babysitting. This one was my favorite for a long time but hard to pick from the trilogy for me now which would be my top pick.
Trixy, if you go back and rewatch Part II again, you can spot several Easter eggs that hint at where they were going to go with Part III. From Marty playing the video game in 2015; and Doc saying he’ll regret never visiting his favorite historical era in The Old West, to the video showing Biff’s ancestry with great-grandfather Buford Tannen, and the time circuits resetting to “January 1st, 1885”. It’s spread out to give an indication of what was to come; partly because these two movies (Part II and Part III) were filmed back to back. Part II came out in November 1989, Part III was set for a May 1990 release. That’s why they included the short teaser for Part Iii at the end. It was a way to let the fans know another film was coming soon; that unlike with Star Wars or Star Trek you didn’t have to wait 2-3 years for the next film to come out.
If I remember correctly they had to recreate the town when they decided to make the sequels so they rebuilt the set for 1955 Hill Valley then aged it to 1985 Hill Valley, then aged THAT to 2015 Hill Valley. Or did they start with 1885 Hill Valley? Oh and did you notice that Blue reacted to Fistful of Dollars a couple of weeks ago. Time travel. :)
@@daverhoden445 In the first movie, they shot all of the 1955 stuff first, then they had to transition it to make it look like 1985. For this film, a bulk of the back lot set was made to look first like alternate 1985 Hill Valley then it was changed again to make it appear like 2015 Hill Valley; except for one stretch of road that was for the few scenes in 1955; where Marty goes undercover to follow Biff, he sees him talking to Lorraine about the school dance, and hides in the back of the car from Biff and Old Biff.
The confusing stairwell in Biffs palace is because it's two different sets of stairs, one for even floors and one for odd floors. It helps alot if a building needed to be evacuated in an emergency.
As far as I know, you are the first reactor to have seen the 'Dollars' trilogy before having seen the Back to the Future trilogy. That's really cool because you recognized it. The climax of A Fistful of Dollars on alternate Biff's tv.
Scriptwriter Bob Gale said that they had no intention of making a sequel after the first movie. Simply getting the first Back To The Future made was a battle because no Hollywood studio wanted to produce it except Steven Spielberg and his company Amblin Entertainment. The DeLorean taking off and flying was just meant to be a funny gag. But after the first movie became the biggest hit of 1985, people demanded a sequel. Gale admits that if they had planned on making a Part 2, he would not have Jennifer get in the DeLorean with Marty and Doc. But because she got in the car with them, she had to be included in Part 2's story, which was a plot complication that Gale struggled to write around. That's why she spends a chunk of the movie's first act sedated in an alley. Also, you probably noticed that they recast Jennifer. It was necessary because the original actress had to quit acting to take care of her mother as she was battling cancer.
The stunt woman who doubled for Darlene Vogel (Spike), the character who asked Marty Jr if he had no scrote, seriously injured herself when she hit a metal pillar in the scene where they go through the courthouse window.
The guy in the future who mentions wanting to go back and place a bet on the Cubs (who actually DID win the World Series one year after 2015!) is the same guy who was Biff’s car mechanic in 1955. Also, the actor is the voice of Roger Rabbit in Who Framed Roger Rabbit?
27:00 27:35 29:17 46:07 46:40 In 1955, there was a moment when there were four time machines in Hill Valley at once! Marty moved on one, fleeing the terrorists, on the second - the old Biff, when he stole her from the future, on the third - Doc and Marty, who flew in to sort out Biff's tricks. And the fourth car has been tucked away in a cave since Doc got to the Wild West. For this reason, 1955 attracted the time machine so strongly. 4 time machines from different times in one point. The year 1955 concentrated in itself the enormous energy of the space-time continuum. That's why 1955 is so important.
In part 3, the three man band playing and spinning their instruments, is an homage to the most popular band and MTV videos In the world at that time, ZZ Top! 😮😮😮
Every one ever, including me, made jokes October 21st 2015 how it didn't look like the movie. But, they still got big TV screens, Google glass and 80's nostalgia right. 8:34 Elijah Wood in the red right there. That's right, Frodo is in this movie. 19:50 Well, it is the universe's biggest mystery. I wish Doc had solved it, cause I sure can't.
16:12 Many assume George McFly was upside down because they had to recast the actor after Crispin Glover wasn't available (there are conflicting accounts whether it was a money issue or if his other demands were to high) and it does help to disguise the switch. But Jeffrey Weissman (the actor who does play George in this part) explained that George was always written as being upside down in this scene because during filming of part 1 Crispin Glover drove the crew mad as he reportedly had difficulties staying on his marks. To prevent him from running all over the place again, out of frame and out of focus, Bob Zemeckis and Bob Gale invented this device to make it impossible for him to move on his own.
Jennifer seeing herself and her older self, saying "I'm young!" while her younger self says, "I'm old!" is hilarious, and a lot of people pass it over, either they don't notice it or don't get a kick out of it like I do. I thinks its hilarious, but quick and hard to understand without subtitles, so not everyone notices.
The set-up of the cemetary scene by George McFly's grave was a nod to the scene in "It's A Wonderful Life" where George Bailey and Clarence are by the grave of George's brother, Harry Bailey.
This one is my favorite. They did such a great job weaving the events of the first one with the new situation of Doc and Marty. It played as an entire story and didn’t seem forced or out of place. The events carried through as they should’ve.
They were going to give George more screentime in the future but Crispin Glover wanted more money to be in the sequel. That's why they recast him and used stock footage for 1955
"That guy" who wants to save the clock tower in 2015 is the older version of Terry, the owner of Western Auto in 1955, who helps Biff decrapify his car. Terry actually sets things in motion in BTTF2 when, through a seemingly offhand comment about the Chicago Cubs, he gives Marty the idea to buy the sports almanac. Terry is played by comedian Charles Fleischer who also was the voice of Roger Rabbit in Who Framed Roger Rabbit?. Terry was to have a bigger role in BTTF2 but a further scene in the future was deleted. Apparently, in that scene, Terry confronts Old Biff about the unpaid bill for the work done on Biff's car 60 years ago, even mentioning the exact date. This is what inspires Old Biff to return to that very day to hand off the almanac to himself (cheap Biff will never have to pay that bill), and it explains why Terry gets a second appearance. Round and round we go...
The high inflation of the late 1970s/early 1980s was a recent memory when this movie was made, so expecting future inflation to be similarly high wasn't an unreasonable expectation.
Funny thing is: he traveled to the year 2015 and is shocked that the Chicago Cubs won the world series which shocks him because in his time, the Cubs hadn’t won it in 80 years but in real life the Cubs did actually end a 100+ year drought and actually won the World Series in 2016!
I am so glad you called the "greatest mystery of the universe"! 😆👍 And your reaction was priceless. 🤣 I REALLY hate that they've kept the teaser for III at the end of II. It's such an unwelcome spoiler.
Christopher Lloyd actually could not see through the silver "future shades" glasses, so he used the car to guide him toward "Marty" and counted his steps to stop at the right spot.
I literally just bought a LaserDisc player and VCR on Ebay so I could watch them like from my childhood. I have 12 copies of this trilogy. LaserDisc, VHS, DVD, BluRay and digital.
On that day October 21, 2015 was actually called Back to the future day and was celebrated. Nike the shoe company even released for a limited time replica self lacing power shoes with the exact look as the ones in this film and gave Michael J Fox the first ever pair.
1.It's not often sequels hold up to the original, but this does. Thank you 1980s. 2.This one is the best of the bunch. The next one is inventive but I'm not really into the story. 3. Michael J Fox was affected with 09/11/2001 because it happened right after he announced his Parkinson's disease issue, and it downplayed his efforts to spread information to help fight the disease. 4. Michael J. Fox also played Marty's daughter. 5. Good thing Biff shoots like a Star Wars Stormtrooper🤣 6. The tunnel at the end is the same one they used for "Who Framed Roger Rabbit".
It doesnt make sense to acknowledged that paradox loophope, because how would he even travel back to the future of the 'pre-giving-himself-almanac' timeline 2015? He should arrive in the new biff future, and our doc and marty should either be trapped in the 'original' alternate with no time machine or also blip out themselves... 😬🤷♂️
Because Lorraine shot him in 1996 according to the trilogy faq on the bttf 3 DVD. The paradox was not quite biff coming back to a timeline where he hadn't given his past self the almanac, it was a paradox because biff was dead already WELL before 2015.
More or less. Gale/Canton/Zemeckis/Spielberg called Universal and said "The bad news is we can't release BTTF 2 for the 4th of July, 1989. Good news is we can put out BTTF 2 for Thanksgiving 1989...and BTTF 3 for Memorial day 1990" Universal pretty much shat themselves.
The third movie is as good, or even better than the first movie. They shot the second and third movies at the same time, but released them in theaters a year apart, so yeah... that little teaser was just so people knew there would be a third part.
i just see you put this up. i just watched your part 1 yesterday and was one of the ones commenting indeed to watch all three. i am looking forward to the rest of this and will comment more later when i amd one
@@kanweian6482 I don't know about some of the ones you listed but playing multiple characters is not new like coming to America but they're not on the screen at the same time. I know there's a bunch of Hope law about the kitchen table scene don't remember the exact details off hand but Marty was playing both his son and daughter in that scene
Great Reaction Video Blue..... Yes, the Reshot scenes of part one to add the extra footage needed........ There are Videos on RU-vid showing the side by side comparison of the ending of part one in the Garage, and the same scene in the beginning of part two....... LUV watching you do the mental gymnastics to keep up with the plot......
For a movie in the 80's they put a lot of thought and attention to detail to recreate the scenes from the previous movie, to put Marty in it but not contradict anything major. The funny thing is that when Biff confronts Marty outside the dance and calls him chicken, if Marty hadn't turned around and gone back, then Biff would, probably, have beaten up his old self, when he came through the door, and really screwed the timeline up.
Not really. All Marty, Doc and Jennifer had to do was go back to the past since they were after all changing the future which hadn't come to pass in their present timeline. That is why this movie made no sense as Doc told Marty about his kid and that would be enough to change the future.
Never thought about that but I think your right. Young biff would have beat up old Marty because he saw new marty hit him when he took the almanac. It's also the reason why biffs friends were about to beat old marty up
@MATT CANNON Spoilers but then Marty doesn't learn. Remember docs objective was just to keep martys kids out of jail. That was the only extreme he was willing to help Marty. The other stuff which are life lessons are apart of life weren't extreme enough to take that risk. Heck the risk he took for Marty's kids almost backfired
The first one was is awesome in all the setups and payoffs. The third one will be awesome in all the character growth. The second one is... necessary to follow the story.
I can imagine the looks on kid's faces when they saw Marty's automatic laces and they jaw's dropping when Marty rides the Hoverboard. Kid's faces in '89 watching Marty use the Hoverboard be like -->👁️👄👁️
Doc told Marty to buy a Pepsi, "Here's a 50." Yup, inflation. Grandpa George was upside-down to make it harder to tell he was recast with someone else.
Doc: “…to study the other great mystery of the universe…” Blue: “Women. Ha.” Doc : (after a perfectly timed delay) “…women.” Blue: “OH-HAHAHAHA…” (absolutely dying) 😂
The guy that talks with Marty about the Cubs in the future is the actor who did the voice of Roger Rabbit, Benny the Cab ,( which he sounds like in this scene), and 1 other character in "Who Framed Roger Rabbit ". Notice also that in the antique store there is a stuffed animal of Roger Rabbit.
19:50 This is why I love you. You were willing to make the vaguely politically incorrect joke, and then laugh when the movie does the same. Describe yourself in one video as a hippie. You’re a bit more traditionalist than maybe you think, so you’re my kind of hippie. (And speaking of hippies, think about a reaction to “Kelly’s Heroes,” a WWII movie with Clint Eastwood.)
The old guy you asked if you knew is Terry. In the past he's the mechanic who fixes Biff's car. The actor is Charles Fleischer and the voice of Roger Rabbit. Also another random connection between Who Framed Roger Rabbit and BTTF, besides Zemeckis, is the tunnel that Biff chases Marty down is the same tunnel in Toon Town from Roger Rabbit.