I think it figured out how the "To Be Continued..." text affects Back in Time and Alan Silvestri's theme music. I think the theme music ends as the word "Amblin" is formed before "Entertainment" appears which would cause longer silence before the MPAA screen. There should be a comparison video showing the two credits side by side. The VHS version with "To Be Continued..." and the normal credits playing simultaneously. What do you say, folks? Would you like to show a full credits comparison video?
On the theatrical prints of the movie (thanks to a user named Tom’s Video Stash for the proof), after the MPAA PG rating info cuts to black, right there, almost instantly, the Universal Studios thing appears (fades from black at the beginning). “When In Hollywood, Visit Universal Studios.” The question I will now ask is: How did the film editors manage to trim off the “When in Hollywood, Visit Universal Studios” thing that originally appeared on the movie (Back to the Future)? Referring to the home media releases, of course (outside of the theatrical release). m.ruclips.net/video/bVmQtpNA6wo/видео.html
I think it figured out how the "To Be Continued..." text affects Back in Time and Alan Silvestri's theme music. I think the theme music ends as the word "Amblin" is formed before "Entertainment" appears which would cause longer silence before the MPAA screen. There should be a comparison video showing the two credits side by side. The VHS version with "To Be Continued..." and the normal credits playing simultaneously. What do you say, folks? Would you like to show a full credits comparison video?
I used to have this VHS. I got it at McDonald's in 1994 as part of a promotion they had.
On the theatrical prints of the movie (thanks to a user named Tom’s Video Stash for the proof), after the MPAA PG rating info cuts to black, right there, almost instantly, the Universal Studios thing appears (fades from black at the beginning).
“When In Hollywood, Visit Universal Studios.”
The question I will now ask is: How did the film editors manage to trim off the “When in Hollywood, Visit Universal Studios” thing that originally appeared on the movie (Back to the Future)? Referring to the home media releases, of course (outside of the theatrical release).
m.ruclips.net/video/bVmQtpNA6wo/видео.html
The Universal Studios Hollywood Bumper Is Removed On The VHS Beta Laserdisc DVD Blu-ray and 4k Release Of Back To The Future
That explains this is from the MCA/Universal vhs copy not the MCA Home Video one.