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Dom Robinson reviews

Back to the Future Trilogy

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When you're young, films can have a huge influence on your life. For me, Back to the Future was one of those films..

The crux of the trilogy's storyline is well-known and doesn't need a great deal of explaining here. The first film sees Marty McFly (Michael J Fox) zooming 30 years into the future by accident on a trip that Dr Emmett Brown (Christopher Lloyd) should've made, except for the fact that Brown stole some plutonium to make said trips from Libyan terrorists and, well, life has a habit of catching up with you.

With Marty having travelled back thirty years to November 5th, 1955, he has to track down the Doc, find a way of powering the car - given that plutonium is unavailable and reunite his parents - given that an accidental meeting with both of them individually has caused his mother (Lea Thompson) to fall in love with him, leaving his father (Crispin Glover, only appearing in this film in the trilogy) to continue being the same bullied dork he always was. Oh, and there's also the school bully Biff (Thomas F Wilson) to contend with.



An oedipus complex in reverse.


Having reinstated his life at the end of Part 1, and improving it considerably, since by Part 2 the Doc has gone 30 years into the future and seen the problem with Marty's wayward kids. Taking Marty and Jennifer (Claudia Wells in the first film, but sadly replaced with the ugly-as-sin Elisabeth Shue for the sequels) back with him, thus follows a convoluted plot that some found to much to comprehend as Marty buys a Sports Almanac which is stolen by an elderly Biff.

Marty and the Doc only realise the effect this has had when they return to 1985 and find things rather different, since Biff has taken over the town and turned into an even nastier shit. It'll take another trip back to 1955 to sort the mess out once and for all, but not only must he avoid his parents a second time, but he must also make sure he doesn't run into himself doing things the first time round. The Doc must also ensure the same thing at some point later in the proceedings.



The Doc is about to have a shocking time...


The third film was shot back-to-back with the second, but released eight months later in the cinema. At the end of Part 2, the Doc was sent back in time to 1885, a time he always wanted to visit. Marty's about to leave his best friend be, except that (a) there wouldn't be a film and (b) he learns that the Doc gets shot in the back and killed by one of Biff's bullying ancestors.

While I loved the first two films, the third was great entertainment but slightly lacking overall as it largely combines a rehash of the first film in a Wild West setting, with a love story between the Doc and local girl Clara Clayton (Mary Steenburgen), with everything working out perfectly in the end as they try to get back to 1985, but it had an ending that was rather too cheesy for my tastes. Just what did happen to Claudia Wells for the sequels though?



Meet the parents... sort of.


The trouble with watching a film like the first one in the series in January 1986 when you're only 13 is that Marty is so damn cool and the film causes such a big hit with your teenage mind that you want your dull teenage life to be that exciting too, and that's just not going to happen. Whether it's skateboarding along on the back of cars while waving at the girls in the exercise gym, driving a DeLorean or simply waking up with your arm strangely behind your back with your face ground into the pillow, you want your life to be like that. Again, it's not going to happen. However, at least in 2002 you can both watch this trilogy and play Grand Theft Auto: Vice City to take your mind back to 1986.

The Back to the Future trilogy is an exceptional one. By the end of the third film, all the loose ends are tied up, the cast have easily proved their worth (apart from Shue, who was only able to make up for a crap acting past when she appeared in the superb drama Leaving Las Vegas) and upon revisiting the films, you realise the staggering number of paradoxes that link the future to the past, such as George and Marty's behaviour over the generations, the clock tower and Mayor Goldie Wilson.

As an aside, the first two films also include Young Guns's Casey Siemaszko and Titanic's Billy Zane as part of Biff's gang. Huey Lewis, who provides the first film's theme tune, The Power of Love, has a cameo early on as he tells Marty his group is "just too darn loud" in the talent auditions.

Michael J Fox was actually born Michael Andrew Fox, in Canada on June 9th 1961, but changed the middle initial to "J" as a tribute to character actor Michael J Pollard. He's had a few duff films along the way such as The Smell of My Success, but has been fantastic in comedic roles for both Doc Hollywood and The Hard Way, not to mention a first-rate appearance in 1988's Bright Lights Big City as he gets hooked on drugs and has to cope with the impending death of his terminally-ill mother. I just hope he can overcome his condition with Parkinson's disease, as diagnosed in 1991 and which forced him to quit his role in the US TV sitcom Spin City. He's still managed to come back with voice roles in a number of films such as both Stuart Little films.


Presented in 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen, the picture is does have a slight problem. At times it appears a bit on the grainy side. This isn't a massive problem but you do feel that maybe Universal could've remastered it just that little bit better.

The extras that appear on each disc may not be too copious, but they still allow enough room on each of the three DVDs for both a Dolby Digital 5.1 and DTS 5.1 soundtracks. I always go for the latter and it's well worth it. The special effects are best used for when the car comes into its own, not to mention the opening twang of Marty's guitar in the first film, while dialogue and other ambient moments, plus Alan Silvestri's memorable score.


Cover
The Back to the Future Trilogy DVD boxset.


Three discs - three sets of extras.

Disc 1:


Disc 2:


Disc 3:

So, not the greatest amount of extras and they leave a couple of things unexplained, such as the whereabouts of Claudia Wells.

Subtitles for the films come in English, there are 20 chapters to each film and the menus feature clips and music from the film.

BTTF Part 1
BTTF Part 2
BTTF Part 3
PICTURE QUALITY
SOUND QUALITY
EXTRAS





OVERALL

Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 2002.

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