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Back to the Future trilogy


The Back to the Future trilogy is a comedic science fiction film trilogy written by Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis, directed by Zemeckis, and distributed by Universal Pictures. The plot follows the adventures of high-school student Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) and scientist Dr. Emmett Brown (Christopher Lloyd) as they use a modified De Lorean automobile to time travel to different periods in the history of Hill Valley, California.

The first film was the highest grossing film of 1985 and became an international phenomenon, leading to two sequels which were filmed back-to-back and released in 1989 and 1990 respectively. The trilogy is widely noted for its irreverent comedy, eccentric characters and ability to incorporate complex theories of time-travel without confusing the audience. Though the two sequels did not perform quite as well at the box office as the first film, the trilogy remains immensely popular after 20 years and has yielded such spin-offs as an and a at the Universal Studios theme parks in Orlando, Florida (now closed); Universal City, California (now closed), and Osaka, Japan.

Main cast


Michael J. Fox as Marty McFly, Marty McFly, Jr. (son of Marty), Marlene McFly (daughter of Marty), and Seamus McFly (great-great-grandfather of Marty).
Christopher Lloyd as Dr. Emmett Brown
Thomas F. Wilson as Biff Tannen, Griff Tannen (grandson of Biff) and Buford "Mad Dog" Tannen (great-grandfather of Biff)
Lea Thompson as Lorraine Baines (McFly/Tannen) and Maggie McFly (Seamus' wife, Marty's great-great-grandmother)
James Tolkan as Mr. Strickland and Chief Marshal James Strickland (grandfather)
Claudia Wells and Elisabeth Shue as Jennifer Parker (McFly)
Crispin Glover and Jeffrey Weissman as George McFly
Mary Steenburgen as Clara Clayton

Storylines


A hallmark of the Back to the Future trilogy and a contributor to its popularity is its use of commonalities: running gags, similar events, catch phrases, and parallel situations that recur in the different time frames from film to film.

Back to the Future


17-year-old Marty McFly is accidentally sent back in time to 1955 in a time machine built from a DeLorean by eccentric scientist Emmett L. Brown, also known as "Doc". Upon arriving in 1955, Marty inadvertently causes his mother (Lorraine McFly) to fall in love with him, rather than with his father (George McFly). This begins to cause what Doc Brown later describes as a paradox that would cause Marty to disappear from existence. To make matters worse, Marty did not bring back any extra plutonium to power the time machine, so he must find the 1955 version of Doc Brown to help him reunite his parents and return to 1985. Biff Tannen, the antagonist, causes difficulty in the conflict resolution. Marty successfully causes his parents to fall in love and simultaneously ruins the future of Biff Tannen, who in the end is an auto detailer instead of George McFly's co-worker. Marty learns in the end that his familial situation has improved because of the way his parents' relationship was changed by his intervention in the past. Doc Brown and the De Lorean appear and Doc tells Marty that he has returned from the future, and that Marty must come back to the future with him.

Back to the Future Part II


Doc Brown travels with Marty to the year 2015 where he has discovered Marty's family is in ruins. Marty buys a sports almanac containing the outcomes of 50 years worth (1950–2000) of sporting events. However, Doc catches him and throws the almanac in the trash, where the aged Biff Tannen finds it. While Marty and Doc are at Marty's future house, Biff steals the De Lorean time machine and gives the book to himself at right before he goes to the dance at the end of the first movie. When Doc and Marty return to 1985, they find that Biff has used the almanac's knowledge for financial gain, which allows him to turn Courthouse Square into a 27 story casino, "own" Hill Valley, get away with the murder of Marty's father, and later marry Marty's mother. Marty learns that Biff was given the book by an old man in 1955, so he and Doc go back to that date in order to steal the almanac from Biff before he can use it to destroy their lives. They accomplish this in a complex fashion, often crossing their own past-selves' paths. When the duo are about to travel back to 1985, a lightning bolt strikes the De Lorean and scrambles the time circuits, sending Doc back to 1885 and leaving Marty stranded in 1955.

Back to the Future Part III


After finding out that Doc Brown is trapped in 1885, Marty sets out to find the 1955 Doc to help him fix the DeLorean (which has been waiting for him in a mineshaft for 70 years) and restore it to working order. Learning that Doc gets shot in 1885, Marty travels back in time to save Doc (who becomes a blacksmith) and bring him back to the future. Unfortunately, Marty rips a hole in the fuel line, rendering the DeLorean immobile. Furthermore, Doc falls in love with schoolteacher Clara Clayton, and considers staying in 1885. Marty must convince Doc to come back with him and find a way to get back to his time before it's too late. After several dramatic action scenes involving a speeding locomotive, Marty returns to 1985 in the restored De Lorean. It appears on a train track as planned, and Marty jumps out just in time to see the DeLorean time machine destroyed by a modern train. He worries that Doc has been lost in the past forever, when suddenly Doc Brown appears in a new time machine, modeled after a locomotive. He introduces Marty to Clara (to whom he is now married) and his two sons, Jules and Verne. When Marty asks if Doc and his family are going to the future, Doc replies that he's already been to the future. The locomotive flies across the sky and disappears, and the trilogy ends.

Time Travel Theory


Time travel is one of the primary storytelling elements in the Back to the Future series. While there are no rules of time travel in real life, only theories, the film series generally adheres to a single set of rules of how the timeline can be affected.

In the films, a time traveler can have a direct effect on the timeline, and thus alter the future. When traveling to the past, a traveler can alter events such that they no longer correspond to the events as they occurred in the traveler's own past. However, the traveler retains the memory of his original experiences, and not memories of the new timeline. The Back to the Future series thus follows the grandfather paradox theory of time travel, and not the predestination paradox theory. However, as seen in Part I, if a traveler causes changes in the past that will ultimately result in his non-existence in the future, he will fade from existence, but only once the possibility of their existence is entirely eliminated. Physical artifacts can also bear the results of changes in the timeline. In the series, several photographs and a printed document, all brought back from a future time, are immediately altered as a result of changes made in the past. The immediate changes indicate that the timeline is changed whenever a change in the past is made.

Every jump into the past depicted in the Back to the Future saga puts the traveller along a new timeline, as their presence in the past is itself a change made to the timeline. When traveling forward in time, the traveler arrives in the future along the same timeline they departed from. The films do not explore the question of whether travelling into the future causes a change in the timeline from that point on, and whether a timeline exists/existed in which the traveler did not arrive in the future. However, Doc Brown simplifies the theory in Part II, stating that whenever a time traveler alters events occurring in the past (in his case, Biff giving his younger self the almanac), they effectively bring an alternate timeline into existence from that point in time. He does not indicate that the travel into the past itself changes the timeline.

Doc Brown suggests that it may be disastrous for someone to meet themselves while traveling through time. Marty sees a past instance of himself numerous times in Part II, with no special consequences; however, he is aware of his past self's experiences and his past self does not see him. Jennifer and her future self come face to face in Part II and both faint, but again, there are no other consequences. Imagineer Bruce Gordon suggested in issue #108 of Starlog Magazine that no second version of the time traveler exists until the time traveler goes back in time and sees himself in the past. There is some ambiguity as to how changes in the past affect travelers left in the future. Doc, Marty and Jennifer seem unaffected by "Old" Biff's trip to 1955 which causes his younger self to rise to control the city. Biff's trip seems to have no effect on the three travelers. Also, in Part II, Jennifer is left on her front porch; she is found there in Part III after many changes in the timeline. In both cases, the timeline seems to change around the travelers who originate in another timeline.

While there is no set number of timelines in existence throughout the films, as unseen trips through time are made off-screen, the following is a list of timelines actually seen. Jumps to the future are presumed not to create new timelines:
The original, unaltered timeline that exists at the start of Part I.
Marty accidentally jumps back to 1955, and subsequently alters his parent's past. Marty returns to 1985, and the movie ends in this timeline. Doc also travels to the future off-screen. This is presumably also the timeline in which Doc, in the future, sees the trouble with Marty's kids.
Doc returns to 1985 to pick up Marty and Jennifer at the end of Part I (replayed at the start of Part II). He brings them to the 2015 where they see their family.
"Old" Biff heads back to 1955 in the stollen DeLorean with the sports almanac to give to his younger self. He then returns to 2015, having set his past self up to be rich and powerful.
Marty, Doc and Jennifer return to 1985 (dubbed "1985A") in which Biff controls much of the city. They unwittingly leave Jennifer asleep on her porch. The Doc native to this timeline has been committed, and the Marty of this timeline is overseas at school.
Marty and Doc travel to 1955 to prevent the changes. Marty robs Biff of the almanac, while avoiding running into the past version of himself.
The hover-converted DeLorean is struck by lightning and is sent back to 1885. Doc hides the DeLorean and writes Marty a letter which is delivered in 1955. Marty seeks out the Doc of 1955 who helps him recover the car.
Marty travels to 1885 in Part III, where he saves Doc's life, but must return to 1985 alone. Doc, in the past builds a locomotive into a time machine and travels into the future to have it hoverconverted. He may also have stopped in 1985 to retrieve Einstein.
Doc and his family return to 1985 in the locomotive to give Marty his gift. This timeline may begin earlier if Doc's trip to the future was not immediately prior to his arrival in 1985 at the end of Part III

DVD release


In July 1997, Universal Studios announced that Back to the Future would be one of their first 10 releases to the new format, though it ended up being delayed for five years. It was finally released at the end of 2002 in both widescreen and fullscreen versions in a blue box with Marty and Doc on the cover.

Framing issues


Devoted fans of the films quickly noticed that the video of the widescreen version of Parts II and III contained numerous shots that had been framed incorrectly, either because the shots were too high or low to center the image correctly, or because they "zoomed in" on the image, eliminating portions of the image on all sides. One notable example is when Marty's futuristic jacket adjusts itself to fit him, the misframed version doesn't show the sleeves changing size, thus ruining the visual gag. Outraged fans quickly organized petitions demanding that Universal Studios correct the problem and re-release the DVD set.

In May 2003, Universal corrected the problem and issued "V2" (Version 2) DVDs, that could only be distinguished from the original, flawed DVDs by the mark of a small "V2" near the edge of the discs themselves (and, of course, by comparing the corrected video). However, they did not initially begin packaging the V2 discs with the trilogy box set that was being sent to retailers. Instead, Universal set up a toll-free phone number which owners of the original DVDs could call, and ask for a postage-paid envelope to be sent to them. The owner would send their flawed discs to Universal in the envelope, and would soon thereafter receive the corrected "V2" discs by mail.

In January 2005, Universal began a nationwide promotional campaign, announcing that they would re-issue the DVDs of the trilogy at a special low price (about half the set's original retail price) on January 25, 2005, and then put the entire trilogy on moratorium a week later, on February 1, 2005, with new stickers on the box declared "Lowest Price Ever: Own It Before Time Runs Out!" The discs in this release contained no new content or bonus features from the original release even the packaging was almost identical, except for the promotional sticker and excluding the multi-page, full color DVD menu booklet. No booklet or chapter insert is included in the revised release, but did finally contain the corrected V2 discs. Curiously, only the disc for Part II displays the "V2" marking on its edge; the Part III disc does not, but fans have analyzed its video carefully and concluded that, despite the lack of the "V2" marking, the Part III disc is the corrected one.

Release formats and features


The footage that was shot with Eric Stoltz in the role of Marty McFly before he was replaced with Michael J. Fox has never been officially released. This footage was not included in Universal's original DVD release in 2002 or in 2005, despite many fans hoping that Universal would include it.

Promotional posters


All three posters were created by noted poster artist Drew Struzan, although the original concept poster of Marty looking at his watch by the car was by Wayne Coe. Each poster features a variation on the same pose, and has the same number of characters present as each movie is numbered.

For Part I, Marty is dressed in his 1985 clothes standing beside the original De Lorean time machine, raising his sunglasses and looking at his wristwatch.
For Part II, Marty and Doc are dressed in 2015 clothes beside a hovering De Lorean, raising their sunglasses and looking at their wristwatches.
For Part III, Marty, Doc and Clara are dressed in 1885 clothes beside a De Lorean on rails, holding the brims of their hats and looking at pocket watches.

A modified version of the Part I artwork, which added Doc Brown to the original image, was used on the cover of the trilogy's DVD release.

Games


Various video games based on the Back to the Future movies have been released over the years for home video game systems, including the Commodore 64 computer, the Sega Master System, the Sega Genesis/Megadrive, NES, and Super Nintendo system.
LJN also released Back to the Future Part II & III for the NES in 1990, which unlike the previous game, was a side scrolling platform game that allowed travelling back and forth between the different time periods from the trilogy as Marty attempts to correct the timeline and get back to the real 1985.
A Japanese-only release for the SNES was made based on Back to the Future II. The game was a side-scroller that allowed the player to control Marty on the hoverboard while he battled enemies.
A 1990 pinball game designed by Joe Kaminkow and Ed Cebula and released by Data East Pinball based on the Back to the Future trilogy. This game features three songs that were featured in the movies: "Back in Time" and "Power of Love" (originally performed by Huey Lewis and the News), and Doubleback (originally performed by ZZ Top).IPDB listing for Back to the Future: The Pinball.
The GameCube game, Universal Studios Theme Parks Adventure, featured the as a game. follows just like the ride. Your mission is to chase Biff in Hill Valley through time, future(2015), ice age, and prehistoric.

See also


De Lorean time machine
De Lorean DMC-12
Back to the Future
Back to the Future Part II
Back to the Future Part III
Back to the Future The Ride

External links


BTTF.com
Official Universal Pictures site advertising the trilogy.
BTTF Frequently Asked Questions written by Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis

   
   
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