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Back to the Future Part II

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Back to the Future 2 is a 1989 film and is the second part of the Back to the Future trilogy. It is the sequel to the first movie in the trilogy, Back to the Future. It was directed by Robert Zemeckis and written by Zemeckis and Bob Gale. The third part of the trilogy, Back to the Future Part III and this movie were filmed simultaneously and released six months apart.

Plot synopsis

The story continues with Marty McFly and Doc Brown as they now leave 1985 to go into the year 2015 to stop Marty's kids from destroying their lives. Since Jennifer has seen the DeLorean, they take her along, but Doc tranquilizes her because she asks too many questions about the future.

Marty's son, Marty Junior, is approached by Griff Tannen, Biff's grandson, and his gang and is asked to join in a robbery. According to Doc, this event eventually leads to the disruption of the entire McFly family. Marty impersonates his son and tells Griff he will not join in. The gang gets angry and chases after Marty. Using a hoverboard, he manages to escape them, and as a result, they crash into the courthouse and end up in jail, thus preventing the robbery.

While Marty is in 2015, he finds an antique store with all sorts of memorabilia from the 1980s, among which is the "Gray's Sports Almanac 1950-2000," containing all sport scores for that time span. Wanting to get rich when he goes back to 1985, Marty buys the almanac, but Doc catches him and puts it in the trash, berating Marty that he did not build a time machine for such trivialities as making money. Old Biff overhears the conversation and takes the almanac.

Jennifer, still tranquilized, is found by the police, mistaken for her future self after thumbprint identification, and taken home. Hiding in a closet, she sees her family life is far from ideal. Then, old Marty gets a phone call from his colleague Needles, who goads him into cooperating in a profitable but illegal scheme. But their boss at CusCo, Mr. Fujitsu, was listening in, and Marty promptly gets fired. Doc finally finds Jennifer and gets her out of the house, after she briefly meets her future self and both faint from the shock of seeing each other.

While Doc is rescuing Jennifer, Old Biff steals the DeLorean and travels to some point in time. Biff then returns just before Marty and Doc return with Jennifer. At that point, Doc decides that when they return to 1985, he is going to destroy the time machine, beliving that is has only caused disaster and misfortune.

Returning to 1985, Marty and Doc see that their time is not what it used to be. Hill Valley is now dilapidated, crime-infested and corrupt. Biff has become a rich and powerful man, and is now married to Marty's mother, Lorraine. Doc realizes that the old Biff must have used the DeLorean to give the sports almanac to his past self, thus changing his future. Marty confronts Biff to find out when and where he got the almanac, which turns out to be in 1955, around the time of the events in the original movie.

In a series of events that closely matches the first movie, the newer version of Marty manages to keep Biff's cronies from beating up his other version, and several times comes close to obtaining the almanac. Eventually, Biff drives off in his newly cleaned car. Hanging onto the side of the car with the aid of the hoverboard, Marty finally grabs the almanac and is rescued by Doc from being overrun by furious Biff's car and Biff crashes into a truck full of manure again.

As the rainstorm from the end of the first film begins, Marty burns the almanac to cinders, thus repairing his future. As revealed earlier in the film, Doc accidentally turns on the time circuits while taking off, which were malfuctioning and flashing the "Destination Time" as January 1, 1885. As Doc attempts to land the DeLorean, the car is suddenly struck by lightning, activating the flux capacitor and sending him back to the year 1885.

A few seconds later a Western Union delivery man appears with a letter. The letter was given to Western Union with the explicit instructions to deliver it to Marty at "this exact location, this exact minute, November 12, 1955." Marty tears open the letter to find out it is in fact from Doc, trapped in 1885. Marty rushes off to find the contemporary 1955 Doc, who has just succeeded in sending other Marty back to the future in the first movie. Upon seeing that Marty has returned from the future, Doc faints and the screen fades out with the words, "To be concluded..." (In Back to the Future Part III).

Deleted footage

In scenes deleted from the film, an older Biff Tannen fades out of existence (much like Marty was in the original movie when interfering with his parents' meeting) once arriving in the future, having been erased from existence in that time period. This can be explained for two different reasons. First, these events created a time paradox. Having created an alternate timeline by giving his younger self the almanac, the old Biff from 2015 no longer exists, now that 2015 will become part the 1985A timeline. Another possibility is that Lorraine, in 1996 of the 1985A timeline, shoots and kills Biff. These events are never implied in the trilogy, although Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale suggest this theory as a way of explaining Biff's "disapperance."

The scene is notable in that Biff started to fade out as Marty and Doc Brown flew off in the DeLorean and only disappeared completely after the sound of the "time burst" is heard. Presumably, had Marty and/or Doc discovered Biff's cane head in the time machine, which Biff broke off when he exited the car, they could have aborted the trip to 1985 and restored the timeline. Had this occurred, Biff would have faded back into existence, much as Marty did in Part 1, after his father kissed his mother.

Café 80's

The Café 80's is a fictional restaurant located in downtown Hill Valley in the 2015 scene. The restaurant is of 1980s nostalgia motif and features Max Headroom-style video waiters with depictions of Michael Jackson, Ronald Reagan, and Ayatollah Khomeini. To the left of the restaurant, there is a Wild Gunman arcade game; to the right of the restaurant, there is a Pac-Man arcade game. The building is painted with Miami Vice-inspired pastel colors. The counter with the Pepsi logo is inspired by Japanese design. The Cafe was situated in the same building that housed "the saloon" in 1885, "Lou's Cafe" in 1955 and "Lou's Aerobic Fitness Center" in 1985. According to an early script for the movie, the Cafe 80's is owned by Biff's future son, Biff Tannen, Jr.

Slogan

Food

Drinks

Products

Main cast

The characters of George McFly and Jennifer Parker were played by actors different from those of the original film, requiring that some previous scenes be reshot.

Release details

Promotional poster of Back to the Future Part II featuring the De Lorean DMC-12.
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Promotional poster of Back to the Future Part II featuring the De Lorean DMC-12.

Back to the Future Part II earned $47 million in its first weekend of U.S. release (November 22nd, 1989) and $118 million total US gross – $332 million worldwide. However, this was still short of the first film's gross, and the film experienced a drop of over 50% in its second weekend, a steep figure at the time. The same fate occurred in Part III, which came out only six months later. On December 17th, 2002 Universal Studios released all three movies in a three disc DVD and three tape VHS boxed set which sold extremely well when it was released.

Awards

The movie won a Saturn Award for Best Special Effects for Ken Ralston (the special effects supervisor), a BAFTA Film Award for Ken Ralston, an internet-voted 2003 AOL Movies DVD Premiere Award for the trilogy DVDs, a Golden Screen, and a Young Artist Award. It was nominated in 1990 for a Academy Award for Visual Effects.

Most visual effects nominations were due to the development of a new computer-controlled camera system, called VistaGlide, which was invented specifically for this movie — it enables one actor to play two or even three characters in the same scene while the boundary between the sections of the split screen and the camera itself can be moving.

[A closer look at VistaGlide]

Trivia

Replacement of Crispin Glover

As Bob Gale states in the DVD commentary, actor Crispin Glover was asked to reprise the role of George McFly in this film. Glover indicated interest, but demanded a salary the producers felt was unreasonable. Glover refused to budge, so he was dropped from the picture. As a result, the writers introduced the idea of "killing him off" into the story. During all scenes in which the George McFly character appears in both this film and Back to the Future III, he is played by Jeffrey Weissman and seen wearing sunglasses, from the back, upside-down or, in the background out of focus. This was to prevent audiences from realizing that George McFly was played by a different actor. However, producers also recycled various scenes from the original Back to the Future that included Crispin Glover's portrayal of George McFly. Glover sued Universal for compensation, on grounds that his contract for the first film did not allow subsequent uses of his portrayal of George McFly. Universal settled and new Hollywood rules were written regarding the derivative use of actors' works.

Rumors and urban legends

A Hoverboard
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A Hoverboard

During an interview, director Robert Zemeckis jokingly said that the hoverboards (flying skateboards) used in the movie were real. A surprising number of people thought he was telling the truth and demanded them at toy stores. After the release of Part III, Zemeckis had the opportunity to explain in another interview that all of the flying scenes were accomplished by suspending the boards using wires.

After the Florida Marlins beat the Cleveland Indians in the 1997 World Series, a rumor began to circulate that the movie predicted the Series' result; however, this was not the case. No mention is made of "Florida" winning the World Series at all, and the only mention of a Florida-based team is in a news broadcast which announces that the Chicago Cubs beat a Miami team with an alligator logo (not a marlin) in the 2015 World Series (a joke at the Cubs' expense; they haven't won the World Series since 1908). Many fans cited as evidence the fact that at the time the movie was made, Miami did not even have a Major League Baseball team. This was true, but Miami was at the time the largest metropolitan area in the US without a major league team, and it was considered a foregone conclusion that the city would get a team in the next major league expansion (which occurred in 1993). In the 2003 National League Championship Series, the Cubs actually played the Marlins, and appeared to be on the verge of breaking their curse against the Miami-based team (although in this case, breaking the curse would have involved just reaching the World Series rather than winning it as the movie predicted), though in the end it was not to be, as the Cubs ended up losing the series to the Marlins, who went on to upset the Yankees in the World Series.

Video games

Several video games based on the movies were released. See Back to the Future video games for a list.

See also

External links


The Back to the Future trilogy
Back to the Future | Back to the Future Part II | Back to the Future Part III
Timeline | | | Video games

 


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