REACTING to *Back to the Future 3* IS THIS THE BEST ONE??? (First Time Watching) Classic Movies
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024
- Links: direct.me/whit...
James and Ninetailedbrush watch the incredible 80s movie classic and end to the trilogy, Back to the Future Part 3! Doc Brown and Marty McFly return for a final incredible adventure! But they are joined by another...Clara Clayton...ooh and the are in the old American West! Enjoy!
#backtothefuture #reaction #firsttimewatching #timetravel #classicmovies #western
Merch Store:
teespring.com/...
For exclusive content, early access and much more...
Patreon: www.patreon.co...
For business or collaborations email:
peeweecinemasbusiness@gmail.com
Hero Patrons:
Sheldon
Dominic Lynch
dennis
KotorTrek99
PurpleCorgi
Clearly_False
SeaNoodles
Daniel Fuchs
Rose_Moonies
SimianSupreme
SavageDiplomat
Lane Waldon
Danyelle
Alex R
NyxYt
Sole James
Annabelle Arsenault
Crystal Kugelman
Priscila
Everett (PixelMight) Baker
Jumbles Gaming
Richard Ngo
MIST PLAYZ
Christopher Fischlein
Sarah 9
Avi Gossai
GillyBean
Chantel W
Anthony Allan
Marianne
Rob Williams
c James Torley
Hailey Newman
Jasmen Hunter
Kathryn Fike
Joseph E.W.
Chicken Ala Queen
Jennifer Perez
Maria Oncoy
Gecko Dmitrievich-Shcherbatskaya
Person
Jonah Wilson
Belzeref
Ricky Flores
Fran
Dale
Justin Feldman
Anna Roth
Sha Jackson
Susana Canales
iisublime
Maria Harrington
Brendizzzzle
Elizabeth Olivero
Valeria Loera
Chloe Winterbottom
DarthDecimus24
Paige Perez
Jordan Cski
Dominik Klar
Quietjbc
Dylan H
Kaitlyn
Alicia Hauskins
Cat Hack
maemisfitz
Ashley ‘LJ’ Peters
Kat Bland
goonghana
Andrea Mason
Senko
Kadin Osceola
Angelie Romo
Pritha Hajra
Samantha Reandeau
Jen
Kelly
Teddy O'Hea
J Michael Bell
Kora Orion
ripeka manawatu
Toni Griffith
Raymundo Bustos
Deseray Stoner
Don Hart
Seirsan
Tamija
Jess Bracero
Cedric
Brook Snyder
Katie Langton
Emag
alan bartee
Rhodessa Gonzales
Cedrick Desjardins
Justine
Shannon Warkentin
Morgan Tinkey
Mariah E.
myFather’sdaughter
Shelly Do
Elisa Luna
Adlight Makayi
Noternie
pattinaggiojo
Klara
Imani Lee
Annie519
kyolover16
lorenajocelyne
Allora TV
Demetria Conley
florence
Arin
Alice
Avery
Mikey71
Kat Garrett
GO.
Sarah Mosinski
Ronja Greger
Terrie Vasquez
Sophia Jackson
Taylor Fortenberry
ImGonnaPutSomeDirtInYourEye
Melanie
Andrew Hansen
Fritz (Sarah B)
Ashly Heilmann
Ashley Stephenson
Haley Hastings
Nerd Going Outside
whatshername009 .
Isabella Hayes-Hollands
Raikiri29
Skylight106
Lisa Ferguson
Kage Uzumaki
Jessica Gorder
Emily
Jessica Heebner
Shannon Roux
Tom Ekstrand
Madelyn Lafferty
jonathan Edge
Mona7
FOTSnax
Ann
elishia monaghan
w_m
Angeldanger145
Anne
ronnie
Coco
Kristin Carter - Развлечения
How would you rank this trilogy??
Best to worst- 1, 3, 2. I enjoy all 3 of them
Best to worst - 2, 3, 1
One of my favorite movies
From best to the worst, 1, 3, 2.
In terms of objective quality, best to worst (and i hate using the word "worst", because I adore ALL these movies): it's 1, 3, 2. But if I'm being honest, the one I tend to revisit the most is Part 2. This really is a true trilogy.
Michael J Fox was apparently left unconscious while filming Marty's hanging scene. Fortunately, he was rescued just in time by Robert Zmeckis, who realised that Fox's acting looked TOO realistic.
MJF said in an interview that he and Robert Zemeckis used to say, "pain is temporary, film is forever".
@@ScientificallyStupid That's a common line with film makers. I heard Peter Jackson say that on Lord of the Rings. It's so true though. Some people don't realize all that they go through to entertain us.
@@robertmolton6761 I cringe watching a lot of those scenes now and wonder if the physical trauma Michael J Fox put himself through somehow contributed to what he's dealing with now. Conversely, I think Lloyd Kaufman said once in an interview that no movie is worth someone being hurt...but nobody is lining up to give his films an Oscar. So there's that.
I agree about liking this one much better than # 2. Too much Biff in the second one. 1 & 3 are best. I had no idea that MJF was hurt so badly in that hanging scene!!
@@sarahfullerton6894 when I was a kid I liked the "future" part of II. The first movie is objectively a better movie, almost perfect....But three will always be my favorite.
Fun fact:
There were 4 time machines in 1955 😃
1 - the one that Marty back from 1985.
2 - the one that old Biff back from 2015
3 - The one Doc and Marty back from alternate 1985
4 - the one hidden in the mine from 1885
And there were two time machines in 1885.
1. The one Doc was in that was hit by lightning in the sky in 1955.
2. The one that Marty went back in.
They could have just gone back to the cave in 1885 and syphoned the gas out of the other one, and used whatever parts they needed. Then later, in 1955, gas and replacement parts would be available.
@@PhilBagels Refined petrol has a low shelf life. Doc would know this and storing it for 70 years would cause huge damage to the car, so it was already syphoned by the time Doc buried it.
@@therenegade79 But Marty arrives like the day after Doc sent the letter. The gas has only been in the tank for maybe a month or however long Doc was there before he wrote the letter.
@@PhilBagels Yes but Marty takes a full day to get to town. Car is already buried by then.
@@therenegade79 So he and Doc dig it out and siphon the gas. Just like they did in 1955.
Apparently, the real Clint Eastwood got a big kick out of the line "If you don't go out there, everybody everywhere will say "Clint Eastwood is the biggest yellow belly in the West." The filmmakers also sought him out to ask him permission to use his name.
@@guyintenn the movie commentary with the directors confirmed all this
@@guyintenn no you can't use their name without permission lol. Clint Eastwood is a living legend when it came to westerns. They sought him out to get his approval since they didn't want to disrespect him and Clint Eastwood did give his blessing he said so himself in an interview a while back also I think Michael J. Fox and Robert Zameckas stated this fact in the DVD commentary
@@guyintenn The first 2 sentences of your comment made me pause because they perfectly define the bible, and yet that rumor seems to escape scrutiny just fine...
And your cheeky last line got you a very enthusiastic LIKE! ;-]
@@guyintenn Neither does Weird Al. He doesn't need the permission of the artists he parodies to do it, but he still asks for permission out of respect for the original artists.
when they asked for his permission he said "go ahead, make my day".
and that is todays dad joke, kids!
Did you guys notice when the Delorean showed up back in the present on the train tracks, it was called Eastwood Ravine instead of Clayton Ravine lol
No I didn’t!!
@@whitenoisereacts - 40:23
I did.
I always wondered why they both called it Clayton Ravine, when the tombstone said Doc had met and fallen in love with her, when we see them only meeting because he intervened and saved her.
But then I realized that I think that at that point they were both just remembering their original, unaltered, timeline. But that had they looked up the name of the Ravine before sending Marty back to the old west it would've already had a different name in that modified timeline.
@@Galiant2010 in the ol west, it was Shona Ravine. Then in the "original timeline" Clara, fall into it and to honor her, it was Named Clayton Revine. Then, Doc and Marty, saved her, and after that, Everyone thought, Marty aka Clint Eastwood crashed with the train down there. So to honor and remember him, they named it Eastwood Ravine.
5:30
Remember, in 1955 Japan was still rebuilding after the umm... war. It wasn't until the late 1960s until Japan had a stable economy. But, the moment they started VCRs and small cars, they expanded rapidly.
If it was cheap junk it was made in Japan, up until the mid seventies or eighties. The cheap junk title has now moved over to China.
The scene in BTTF part II where Biff is in the hot tub watching that Clint Eastwood movie revealing the bulletproof armour, another great foreshadowing.
"Dude" used to be an insult in the old west. It meant someone who was a "poser", not an actual cowhand though they may be trying to act as one. That's where the term "Dude Ranch" comes from. It was usually rich easterners paying for the experience of western living.
It's still used that way today. If an authentic rancher calls you a dude it's not a complement.
Um, it's still an insult among what's left of the cowboy culture.
Anybody remember the show, 'Hey Dude'? I never cared for it much. But I always really liked the intro, which you guys reminded me of.
Apparently, the stunt crew loved working on that movie because most of them started their career doing westerns, but not a lot of movies had horses anymore at the time of Back to the Future. To go back on horses was really fun for them.
Fun fact: What Marty does while being chased by a bear is legitimate advice. Throw something behind you and the bear will stop to investigate it for a while giving you more time to get away.
I thought depend on the bear, some advice was stay still so think you dead or statue
@@mlee6050 I've read that that's false survival advice. Similar to the idea of peeing on a jellyfish sting. Started getting spread around, somehow, but is actually not good advice. AFAIK the best advice for predators (can't speak for the decoy with bears, though) is to just try and make yourself look big and sound loud to scare them off. But I'm no survival expert, either lol...
@@Galiant2010 must ask Bear Grylls, predator? Makes sense in some way as didn't they say jellyfish needed pre adolescent boy pee for it? Think was that they said older doesn't work
@@Galiant2010 The problem with the bear is the fact it can outrun a human, easily. They are much faster... Even Usain Bolt would be slower.
There are so many things I love about this movie. I like the way it reverses the roles between Doc and Marty - even to the point that Marty says, "Great Scott!" to which Doc replies, "I know, heavy, right?"
That whole last act, as Doc passes out, through the "gunfight", and the whole train scene they keep cranking up the suspense level and it never goes down. Everything that happens just adds another "oh crap, what are they going to do now!?" dynamic to the story, and then they leave you hanging as Doc and Clara float off and Marty finally makes it back to the future.
So when the train shows up and we meet Doc and his boys, it closes that last hanging thread and leaves you thoroughly satisfied.
Actually, Clint Eastwood only just started acting in the 1950's, but he wouldn't gain notoriety until later.
If you go back and watch Part 2, there are a few hints about what is going to happen in Part 3. Doc tells Marty that his favorite time period is the Old West, and when Doc talks about giving up time travel, he says his next field of study will be "women". We also see a video outside Biff's Pleasure Palace detailing the Tannen family lineage in which Buford "Mad Dog" Tannen is mentioned. And when Marty interrupts Biff in the jacuzzi, the Clint Eastwood movie "A Fistful Of Dollars" is playing where he uses a sheet of metal as a bulletproof vest.
Glad you mentioned these Easter eggs.
They really boost some of the random antics of the second movie for me.
You can also see the movie poster of Tarantula in the drive-in theater, which had Clint Eastwood as a minor, uncredited actor.
i guess you could say the Wild Gunman scene in part 2 was foreshadowing an event in part 3. not as good as your list but i guess it counts.
The time circuits also keep showing 1885 and Doc wears a shirt with cowboys on it while in the 1950s too.
Now THAT'S what I call foreshadowing
"Everyone is killing it with the accents" they had a dialect coach teaching the principals, she trained the 1885 McFly couple on a very specific accent from a specific village.
@@callumcowan7047 I'm not a linguist, I'm just reporting what I've learned from DVD commentary tracks and a lot of reading. Maybe the actors didn't pull off the task to your satisfaction, but as far as the available info says, that was the intention.
@@DC_Prox yeah I'm Scots/irish in Scotland and these accents do not sound real, sorry :/
I’m Irish and it’s honestly not too bad, I can tell that it’s fake but it does sound like they are attempting an actual Irish accent and they said baby exactly right (like babby).
The bit about Doc saying he read Jules Verne as a kid, even though from Clara's perspective that shouldn't work temporally, vaguely reminds me of a bit of dialogue from Falcon and the Winter Soldier
Sam: "How do you know about Gandalf?"
Bucky: "I read 'The Hobbit'... in 1937, when it first came out."
I’m confused he couldn’t have read Jules Verne (if he wasn’t a time traveler I mean) as a child but the hobbit really did come out in 1937
Doc's dog in the 50's is Copernicus, and he does look different than Einstein if you look closely. If ir remember correctly, Copernicus is a smaller dog, though both are shaggy dogs roughly the same color.
Also, "dude" was sort of an insult back in that day. It meant a guy who was overly concerned about his looks and fashion, and thus not manly, and since Marty was wearing the weird cheesy 1950's "cowboy" clothes Doc gave him when they first met, Buford Tannen calls him a "dude" throughout the movie as a way to insult him and imply Marty's effeminate.
I love the romantic scene between Doc and Clara, because it was the first and probably only on screen kiss for Christopher Lloyd.
"I don't even know what Clint Eastwoods first movie was"
Well... if you look at the scene where Marty says to Doc that Clint Eastwood never wore clothes like that, there's two posters next to him. Revenge of the Creature and Tarantula, both came out in 1955 and both featured an uncredited appearance by a young, unknown actor, making his bid at Hollywood fame. That Actor? Clint Eastwood. That's why Marty points at the posters when he says "That's right, you haven't heard of him yet." A tiny detail that's super easy to miss, but once you know it, you see every time.
18:54 Clara is in the background waiting for Doc to pick her up. That's how they originally met.
re: James' question about the car being buried for 70 years: "wouldn't it corrode?" well...the body of the Delorean was made of stainless steel, which is why it looks so freaking cool- so the body wouldn't rust or even corrode since a mine in southern California would probably stay at a fairly constant temp and humidity (the parts making up the engine, exhaust, etc are a different story).
It doesn't matter if the body corrodes or not, a car can drive just fine with a rusted up body. The issue is that the wiring and parts of the engine would have corroded, which they would have. But it's Hollywood movie so we just have to suspend our believe in order to further the story.
@@theshadowfax239 that's what I meant! I should have been clearer, sorry about that.
The movie briefly does touch that minor repairs needed to be made along with new tires. Probably a handwavey effect of acknowledging the decay.
the main issue is a Delorean would never survive any of this stuff in these movies. if it went 88 it probably would fall apart. cool looking? yes good car? hell no!
@@markmac2206 I always wondered about the inflection of the line: “you built a time machine… out of a DeLoreon?” 😅
There are some call-outs to this movie in the second one. In the last one when Marty went to the reality where Biff was super rich and everything was falling apart, there was a tv playing the biography of biff, and it said something about ‘dating all the way back to the 1800’s’ with his ancestor mad dog tannen.
The gun salesman at the festival was a well-known actor at the time and had been in Mel Brooks' classic western comedy Blazing Saddles. The three older men in the saloon were also long time western movie veterans. The whole town was also built out in the California desert to give it an authentic look. Overall I still think the first movie is the best in the series, but I waver between two and three as my second favorite every so often.
Oh blazing saddles??? Nice!!!
I thought that grin looked familiar. Thanks for the confirmation!
And the band playing at the clock raising is ZZ Top.
*I love how Doc tells marty that he doesn't want him to go back in time and arrive to accidentally knock down a tree or something, which is what he exactly did in the 1st movie...which resulted in the name change of twin pines to lone pine or something like that, lol. Also, the frisbee thing was a callback to part 2 when he used the frisbee like matches holder to knock the gun out of Biff's hand in his office, and the clint eastwood/metal oven door plate as a bulletproof vest was from a few dollars more, the movie biff was watching with the 2 girls in the hot tub when marty was talking to him & I think it was on the TV at the beginning of part 3, so it might've stuck in marty's mind subconsciously while he was asleep, lol (?) & the word "Dude" was more of a slang insult word for somebody who was upper-class, which is why marty was called that by Buford because of the way he was dressed; A "City Slicker"*
Mary Steenburgen (Clara) was intentionally cast in this film to mirror another time travel movie she had done 11 years earlier called Time After Time. Pretty good film with H.G. Wells traveling to the future in an attempt to catch one of the most infamous serial killers ever, who has escaped to the present time.
Time After Time was a great movie!
Have you noticed that when Marty arrives in the train tracks, the signal reads Eastwood Ravine instead of Clayton? haha, and the guy playing Needles is Flea, from the Red Hot Chilli Peppers
Great reaction guys. Always love your stuff. Fun fact, the band playing at the town festival is actually ZZ Top! Their song Doublback was featured in the movie. AND their beards are real. 😳
My first theater experience with the franchise.
I'd only seen the other 2 at home on tv or video.
The teaser trailer for part 3 at the end of part 2 was so cool.
This was definitely Doc Brown's story learning more about himself and being happy with not just science.
Marty's much needed push to stand up for himself was coming to bare and I liked that too.
The ending was so unbelievable.
You can't help but call this one of the greatest trilogies ever.
Technically there was a part 4.
It was an Saturday morning, animated series that ran 2 seasons (26 episodes) on 2 networks.
It had live-action interludes with Christopher Lloyd as Doc Brown and also had Bill Nye in his first TV appearances.
2 of the actors from the movies did voice-work.
Mary Steenburgen (Clara) and Thomas F. Wilson (all of the Tannen characters).
What an time to be alive in this era.
Technically there is also the Tt video game of the series and has a segment that takes place before 1955, when doc of the time was younger and girl crazed.
Thomas F Wilson is the unsung hero of these movies
Also dumb flex: my fathers best friends brother is the principle James Tolkan lol
the car wouldn't corrode cause the frame is made out of stainless steel ;)
Doc mentioned that in the first movie on the parking lot I think.
Lol, there are a lot more parts of a car, (and most way more important) than the body. The engine, wiring, etc would have no doubt corroded. All the important parts that make a car work.
Interestingly Clint Eastwood's first acting credit for both film and TV was 1955, so it's not impossible Doc from 1955 would have heard of him, just highly unlikely as he wasn't exactly famous. You're right he's still alive but he's in his 90s, he's been acting a long time.
Yea, he is a TV show 'bad guy' from 1955 till 1959, but he didn't get to be 'known' till is recurring role in the series "Rawhide" in 1959. His break out movie was 1964's A Fist Full Of Dollars.
The director always said that each movie wasn't focused on Marty but the people around Marty. Part 1 he said was George Mcfly, Part 2 was Biff & Part 3 was the Doc
Good writing will sometimes use one character as a flat arch to emphasize those while a character arch (George (positive), Biff (negative), doc (positive)… however Marty was shoehorned into an arch with the whole “chicken” motif.
It wasn’t in part 1, introduced in 2, and resolved in 3. Possibly hand-waving that we didn’t know enough about Marty in part 1 yo see this part of his character.
Though I really like the theory that this was developed because he saw his dad (George) bullied all through time and wanted to be associated with success, not the nerdy failure he saw of his father.
@@xianartman it's amazing they were able to put it together when it wasn't planned. They also killed off George Mcfly in part 2 because Crispen Glover refused to come back. They never even wanted to go to the future which is why we spend little time there & they hated that they put Jennifer in the car but they managed to use all there percieved problems & neatly wrapped up the story to make it look like it was planned
@@rxtsec1 totally agree!
Clint Eastwood's first movie was 1955, so it would already have happened, but he was not well-known yet.
Yes. Everything he did that year were bit parts, most uncredited. He wouldn't become a name until 1959 when he was cast in Rawhide.
In the scene where Marty is moonwalking and launches the spittoon at Mad Dog, I've always wondered why he had no bullets in his gun, but I have a theory. The whole reason Mad Dog and his posse comes into town is to find the Doc and shake him down for the $80. I posit that Mad Dog bought a new horse after he shot the one that threw the shoe, and this left him without money for bullets.
Sounds like a solid theory.
I have to admit, I was proud of this theory... for about 10 minutes after I put up the post. Then I remembered that right before the scene, Mad Dog had been shooting at his feet. However, he probably only had those bullets, which is, partially, why he tried to strangle him.(the other reason being that he was making a statement about what happens to people who mess with him)
Notice shirt Doc is wearing with trains on it.. Remember from part 2, the movie Biff was watching and the video game in the Cafe.
I've LOVED watching this trilogy with you! Your enthusiasm was infectious. Thanks for a trip down memory lane, guys!
The movie poster Marty points to when he remembers that Doc wouldn't have heard of Clint Eastwood yet is the poster of his first movie. He played a smaller part so it makes Doc doesn't know of him yet.
This is a fun conclusion to a beloved film series.
Lol, for the record Japan was notorious for low quality exports in 50s.
Not to mention the fact that 10 years post WW2, most Americans were still pretty upset with Japan.
Thanks, gentlemen! I loved this. I appreciate this series so much. The future is what you make it! :D
Yeah!!!!
Actually, Clint Eastwood's first movie was released in August of 1955. In fact, one if the movies being shown at the drive-in where Marty goes back to 1885 is that first movie!
To be fair, Doc's doesn't seem like much of a moviegoer, so a first film might not be enough to make a dent in his pop culture knowledge of Eastwood
This third movie is my favourite, it's just fun and different from the rest. Loved all the reactions.
Thank you guys for reacting this amazing trilogy one of my favorites excellent👍👍👍👍
the interesting part about this movie is the fact it's the only one set in a western era that isnt a western and recognizes piles of horse shit in the street. Every other western the streets are always clean.
Lol that’s tru
Interesting take given that critics like Siskel & Ebert pointed out that this movie's setting is more of a stereotypical western rather than the actual 1880s.
@@jp3813 I mean, that depends where in the country you're talking. East coast in the late 19th century was much more "modern" and industrial. The time of steam ships, the Titanic just around the corner at the turn of the century. And cars. But the west coast, aka "the old west" was still old fashioned as that modern stuff took more time to work it's way out there. We even see this in Red Dead Redemption, which is set in 1911, but is very much an old western. Even though it's just 1 year before the Titanic.
There's also a good comedy with Don Knotts that I grew up watching called The Shakiest Gun in the West. Where Don Knotts is on the east coast with all of life's modern amenities of the time, learning to become a dentist. But then somehow gets pulled into shenannigans across the country and in the old west.
All that to say... this movie is both a stereotypical western AND the "actual" 1880s.
I SO love the sweetness of this movie.
Sometimes following your heart IS the logical thing.
I love the mix of sci-fi and western in this one! Think you guys might like "Cowboys and Aliens" also :)
Edit: didn't see anyone mention it, the band at the festival is ZZ Top
I love that movie. Good suggestion. I had my teens watch that without telling them what it was called first. They loved it
Don't know if you all noticed that the Ravine was now called Eastwood Ravine. Didn't hear you say anything about that. I love this trilogy. So, so good. Glad you watched it.
Thomas F. Wilson should've been a big star. He was brilliant in all 3 movies- especially this one. He's a very talented comedian. I also love how he embraces Biff to this day. Rank: The 1st one is my favorite movie of all time- BY FAR #1. #2. Part 3- loved it. #3 Part 2-
His "Questions" song is comedy gold.
He got some roles after these movies. He appeared in few CW Arrowverse a few times.
I love Tom's RUclips channel. He lives quite an interesting life. Really nice guy.
Can we all agree that this trilogy DOES NOT need a remake? It's just fine without being 'reinterpreted' just cause they can.
Agreed!!!
Universal can’t legally bring the series back without Bob Zemeckis’ blessing.
@@jdude9314 Hopefully, he will agree that it's not necessary. ;-]
@@robertcartier5088 He does agree. He’s said it in interviews multiple times. He will legally block all attempts by Universal to revive, reboot and remake the series since he has the final rights to all 3 films. Every new piece of Back to the Future media that gets produced has to get his blessing first. Otherwise, it won’t happen.
@@jdude9314 Good to hear! ;-]
Elisabeth Shue, Marty's girlfriend in this one, stars in her own fun but suspenseful 80's film, Adventures In Babysitting. Think it was well done and you might get a kick out of it.
During the early sixties I gave my son an almost identical outfit as Marty was wearing. We, in Holland, only recently had our first tv set, and didn't know better than that cowboys looked like that (from circus shows).
The crane shot where you see the sign "Hill Valley" and then see the whole town was straight out of the film "Once Upon A Time In The West" with Charles Bronson and Henry Fonda.... A great western made by the same director of A Fistful Of Dollars, For A Few Dollars More & The Good The Bad & The Ugly with Clint Eastwood!
I can watch this trilogy millions of times, like the Die Hard, Halloween or Star Wars franchises. Never gets dull. I just watched Blade Trinity and loved it. I’m so fussy with movies.
Don't forget the Terminator and Alien franchises. (At least the early ones.)
The 80s. Back when movies became iconic.
Mary Steenburgen (Clara) has a history of falling in love with time travelers. Time After Time (1979) is a *heck* of a movie costarring her.
She actually married _that_ one irl.
To me whenever I see her she's always Clara Clayton or "The 'mom' in Elf" lol
James’s : “Marty?” in jennifer’s voice at the end killed me
Great movie, very underrated in the trilogy. I laughed out loud when NineTail said 'we don't have time for that' when Doc and Clara flew off blissfully on the hoverboard :'D
In the past there should be two DeLoreans. The one doc put in the mine and the one Marty brought back from 1955. They could use the 1885 Delorean in the mine. It has a good fuel line and should have fuel in it unless doc drained the fuel to store it.
the one in the mine has to be complete and untouched or Marty couldnt use it to get to 1885
That just occurred to me for the first time, too, despite watching this a million times. I’m assuming he drained it?
@@moonfisher It's been a peeve of mine for years. I've always thought even if Doc did drain the fuel, he's a scientist, even though they only had a few days he should know how to refine crude oil into gasoline. Where to get crude in California in 1880 I don't know. It wasn't discovered in Bakersfield until the 1890's.
The lone windmill in the middle of nowhere, right next to the tracks, without a purpose grinds my gear too. It should be pumping water into an overhead tank for the trains or, even though it's so close to the tracks, pumping water for cattle.
Then the "brake" line on a train when they had just barely invented air brakes 20 years earlier. Even if emergency brakes did exist at the time it would only notify the engineer it wouldn't slam on the brakes of the engine.
The bridge to the future would be a problem too. When they replace bridges they usually build NEXT to the original bridge so they can continue service. Marty should have appeared out in space about 100 feet left or right of the modern bridge. Even if they did manage to put it in the same place at the same angle, infrastructure is usually built up. The modern track level would be at a different height than the old bridge causing Marty to pop out underneath or above the modern bridge. Plus you have the danger of the line possibly going out of service and the derelict bridge being torn down or the line being re-routed around the ravine.
I still remember seeing this in the theater when I was 14. Everyone was stunned when the Delorean was smashed to pieces. My favorite of the 3 in my opinion.
What was the reaction of the Train time machine? Pretty sure a flying steaming train would be so cool to see in theatre just like watch DeLorean flying for the first time at the end of the first movie.
@@Tooba-K123 Everyone was taken back. They were like "Wow! That's is so awesome!" People wished that some model manufactur would make a model of it.
44:52 That's because Part 2 and 3 were originally written as one movie, but was split into two.
"They actually threw a train off the thing."
Someone needs to see Buster Keaton's THE GENERAL.
I'm half wondering if the time train was created from the Delorean stored in the mine of the past? There were technically two Deloreans sharing the same time period, Marty came back with the one that Doc had stored in the mine and would be destroyed in the future, but Doc still had the Delorean he was blasted back into the past with buried in the mine for Marty to find in the century ahead. Then again, time travel can cause headaches.
Is that was the case, wouldn’t they have used the fuel from the DeLorean that Doc had?
@@Tooba-K123 it probably didn't have fuel. Doc knew Marty could fill it up in 1955.
@@Lensmaster1 yeah I figured it out later that Marty probably went ahead at a time when Doc might’ve already filled out the fuel.
Amusingly Nike stole the name from a Greek goddess... the cowboy actually accidentally pronounced the name better than the sports brand ever has
Here's something interesting to think about. Theoretically when Marty and Doc are in the "alternate" 1955, there were 4 DeLorean time machines in Hill Valley. You had the one that Marty took when he ran from the Libyans, the one Biff took from 2015, the one Doc and Marty arrived in, and the one Doc buried the cemetery mine. Of course this would make sense if everything about the trilogy was a predestination paradox.
Maybe this could be why the film keeps showing the lightning strike. In 1 at the end, in 2 in the middle (and a second at end), and 3 at the beginning. Time really revolves around that event for all the trilogy.
fyi .....the band at the dance is ZZ Top
I like 3 the best. It feels a little more polished. Plus, it's a pretty decent western 😉
34:30 - the rope Clara pulled on is called an "Emergency Cord". Some passenger trains still have them but have mostly been replaced by electronic controls and can only be operated by railroad employees due to abuse by disruptive passengers.
I didnt hear u guys mention how at the end the sign that said Eastwood Ravine. Instead of the school teachers name "clayton" revine. Like in the 1st one. Twin pines mall became lone pine mall!
Clint Eastwood made his debut in a bit part in 1954's "Creature From the Black Lagoon". He became famous as one of the stars of the TV series, "Rawhide" in 1959. Doc will hear the name again 4 years after Marty first mentioned it.
please please please watch the Indiana Jones Trilogy it honestly made my childhood
i love back to the future, ever since i was a kid watching it with my parents. it feels like a very timeless (ha) series... it's just as enjoyable now as it was back when i first saw it. it was fun watching along with you guys and i'm glad you enjoyed it so much! i love all three movies, but numbers 1 and 3 are definitely my favorites too :)
I was always happy that Doc got his own lover interest in the 3rd movie. :)
You guys need to react to more of Zemeckis' work - some of his other films are incredible. Would love to see you react to Who Framed Roger Rabbit and Death Becomes Her.
If you haven't watched either "Time After Time" or "Goin' South" before watching this, then you're missing out on approximately 75% of the humor in this film. It's heavily based on both those movies, which star Mary Steenburgen and give this film its personality.
Pat Buttram was one of the old guys in the saloon (Jeb). He was in the old sitcom
Green Acres and was also a voice actor in several Disney animated movies.
He was the VA for Napoleon in The Aristocats, the Sheriff of Nottingham in Robin Hood,
Luke (swamp inhabitant) in The Rescuers, Chief (hunting dog) in The Fox and the Hound,
and a Toon Bullet #3 in Who Framed Roger Rabbit. He played a small part in A Goofy movie
as well.
Did the 2nd movie get hit by copyright or something? I was waiting until you guys had all 3 uploaded to watch them all at once but now I only see 1 and 3 in your playlist
Okay, three things:
1.) Buford called Marty "dude" because way back when, it was slang for a fancy little city boy.
2.) In regard to how crazy Doc was in the 1950s and how he might get into trouble for blowing up cemetaries and lightning experiments etc, there's a deleted scene that reveals he's been bribing the police to leave him alone. When he told the cop he had a permit for his equipment, he actually just got his wallet and paid the guy off.
3.) The "Suit and Coffin Shop" guy was an undertaker, obvious from the way he dressed and spoke.
this one is my fav of the 3. nice analysis. doc deserves more that just logic. waiting for the next one. (i was obsessed with it all my teenage years)
Fun Fact: The guy running the carnival game was also in Blazing Saddles and currently runs a car dealership nearby where I live XD
Corrosion: The body of the DeLorean was made of made of brushed stainless steel. That is why they were all gray. They weren’t painted and so you couldn’t scratch the paint.
if u ever find spare time after this try and check out Back to the Future the game that was made by Telltale (the original Telltale not the new one) it was by far one of the their better titles...it fits with the films so well and is basically a part 4 to the story...you're how that is possible after how this finishes...well...i won't spoil it...check the game out to see...i can promise it makes sense and you won't be disappointed.
Back to the Future
Back to the Future 2: Biff's Revenge
Back to the Future 3: The Old West
Back to the Future 4 (game): It's About Time
First one is the best, third one is close behind it, and then there's the second one somewhere in the rear. Honestly, I skipped y'all's reaction to BTTF2. Been waiting for this one, though! You guys are a hoot to watch.
Here are the things that I always wondered about:
1. What did Doc do with the Gas from the car wrapped up in the mine?
2. Doc has everything he needs to build a simple fracking still from his ice cube machine. Oil is available in 1885.
3. Where is the town getting its kerosene for its lamps. Gasoline is a by product from the making of kerosene
4. Go back to Del Gado mine and under Docs initials on the wall, write "bring can of gas"
5. Have Mr. Fusion fire the flux capacitor without going 88. The car wasn't going 88 when Doc got sent back to 1885.
Just some thoughts.
Clint Eastwood first started acting in films in 1955, but I believe his big break-out role was the "Man with No Name" in the mid 1960s films: A Fistfull of Dollars (the film Biff was watching in the 2nd movie), For a Few Dollars More, and The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly. 🤠
Wow. Some many historical and cultural references missed. Whoosh, right over their heads! Well maybe there was more in the full reaction. But I can't shake the feeling that kids today have lost so much of their heritage. It's like in "Stand By Me" where Chris says "Kids lose everything!"
When you think about it, Marty is the only one who is different from his 1985 counterparts. The Doc he left, who actually died at the beginning of the 1st movie, is essentially a different Doc from the one at the end of the 1st movie. Same goes for like Marty's family, his friends and Biff. With all the time jumping it is pretty hard to think time-wise, but 1980s Doc still ages naturally even though he goes back to the 1880s.
Excuse me while I indulge in a little trivia and interesting points about the movie:
- This is the first time in all three movies where Marty willingly travels through time of his own accord back to the 1880s.
- The "made in Japan" line wasn't meant to be a dig or a derogatory statement about the Japanese. Back in the 1950s, Japan was still reeling from the consequences of their actions during WWII. And as such, they were pretty much considered a third world country. Anything that came from there back then was typically not at all well made as a result of the economic hardships that were besetting the country. Today it is completely the exact opposite, thankfully.
- The gun that Doc fires into the air at the Drive-In theater in 1955 is the same gun that Doc uses in the mall parking lot to try and fend off the Libyans.
- The three barflies sitting at the table (Harey Carey, Pat Butram and Dub Taylor) were all western mainstays during the earlier days of Hollywood and have even worked with Clint Eastwood in some of his westerns. They even voiced three of the cartoon bullets in Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Clint Eastwood totally gave the director/writer permission to use his name in the movie. He even laughed real heartily in the theater at the part when someone calls his name "the biggest yellowbelly in the West."
- When Marty is dancing and doing the moonwalk, he is also singing Jackson's song Billie Jean.
- There are so many set pieces that they reuse over and over again in this trilogy (Marty always passing out and awaking in a relative's bed, the models that Doc is always building, the love interest tracking a character down, the different aliases, etc.) that should become old and stale, but somehow this movie trilogy manages to make it work and make it a charming occurrence throughout.
- The western band at the festival is the 80s rock group ZZ Top. The song they wrote for this movie is called "Double Back" and you can hear them playing a country music version of the song during the festival.
- I love how the Tannens always have trouble with idioms.
- (The following info being canon is up for debate depending on if you believe the comics and the TT video game are official) Buford Tannen is Biff's great grandpa. We don't know too much about Biff's grandpa Mugsy Tannen, except to say that he was a gangster. Biff's father Kid Tannen appears in the Tell-Tale video game Back to the Future: The Game and he takes after his father Mugsy becoming a mob boss in the aforementioned game. He is one of the main antagonists of the 5 episode game series.
- Clara's purple dress gave ILM the biggest headache during the blue screen work since purple is, of course, red and blue combined. The smoke from the train's smoke stack also contributed to the problem.
- Notice how the ravine is now named "Eastwood Ravine" due to Marty's heroic actions against Buford Tannen. Y'all should look up the interesting (alternate) history of the several names that the ravine has been called. It is pretty interesting. A full rundown of it is cited in the article "The Most Frequently Asked Questions from Back to the Future" by Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis. And since it is them who wrote it, all the info therein is considered canon. It also contains fascinating trivia about the moives. The whole thing is absolutely worth reading.
And here ends my unsolicited trivia.
I just knew Clara was going to be there. For movies like this, they have happy endings 😊
You kind of HAVE TO react to Neverending Story if you want to do an '80s series. I think it would also fit your channel. There are definitely many more movies from the '80s that are objectively better admittedly.
Well I guess we will cause it just won a poll!!!
This is actually known as the perfect trilogy, teachers of art schools still use the techniques of this trilogy till this day.
I won’t disagree with that lol
In 1955 Clint Eastwood played a jet pilot in Tarantula - although it wasn't credited, so its doubtful that even Marty would have known that.
Too bad Robert Zemeckis' career is gonna end with the live-action remake of PINOCCHIO
Growing up with these movies, you dont appreciate the third one until you get older. Its my favorite one nowadays. Best trilogy of all time.
I want a BTTF shirt that reads, "I do my killing after breakfast".
Just wanted to add to Hey Jamie's comment. The entire series is full of those hidden Easter eggs And foreshadowing. In the first movie, Doc mentions that Twin Pines Mall sits on former Peabody farm land. When Marty first arrives in 1955, he is transported from the parking lot to the field. When he leaves the barn and speeds out to the road, he runs over a pine tree, at the end of the movie, when he returns to 1985 to save Doc from being shot, the name of the mall is Lone Pine Mall. So many more. I could go on for days. Everything in the future correlates to something in the past. You just have to pay attention.
Tom Wilson (Biff/Buford) learned to ride horses & did all of his own stunts in this movie. Clint Eastwood had uncredited roles in the two films on the posters in the drive-in theater. Also, parts II & III were originally written (supposedly) as one script that they planned to cut down, but everybody liked everything in the script and thought it was all necessary to tell the story, so they split it into too movies.
What a legend!!! Love that guy!!
Clint Eastwood was in a few of what they called Spaghetti Westerns in the 60's. They were called that because they were all made in Italy. He then went on in the late 60's to become Dirty Harry.
Shout out guys. New hero patreon member here!
It's fun finally seeing Doc interact with Biff in this one!
when i was 10 i was obsessed with Michael J. Fox and these movies were on TV but not all the time. I recorded them on a VHS during Thanksgiving on year because all 3 were on all day. But the first one is always the best.
My only problem with this movie is there are TWO DeLoreans in 1885 when Marty goes back. Couldn't they have used one DeLorean to repair the other and/or siphoned fuel from one to the other?
You're right but I think they built the train time machine with parts from other delorean
No, because if they mess with the other DeLorean Marty won't be able to use it to go back to 1885 in the first place. And we'll have a major paradox which, according to Doc, could destroy the entire universe.
In fact, Clint Eastwood's acting career started in 1955, the two movie posters at 7:20 (which Marty also gestures towards at 7:27) include his first role 'Revenge of the Creature' and his fourth role 'Tarantula!' which was released in the same year
Damn, I grew up watching these movies!!
2 curious facts:
The guy called "Needles" (this guy in the red truck, who also appeared in part 2) is Flea, the bassist of Red Hot Chilli Peppers, and the guys from the band that plays in the old west, are the members of ZZ Top!
Greetings from Brazil!!