THE ENDING OF A GREAT TRILOGY! | Back to the Future Part III (1990) | FIRST TIME WATCHING REACTION!
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Uhm... I don't think dogs live 30 years. His dog in 1955 was Copernicus, his dog in 1985 was called Einstein.
Yeah, imagine how elderly he'd be in 1985 for that to be the same dog.
Sadly both those dogs are dead now 😢
They're also different breeds, Copernicus is a lot smaller
The first moment I've ever questioned Emme's intelligence. 'How could that be Einstein!' I yelled at the screen. 'Marty just said Einstein was "what you call your dog in 1985".' Is she just not listening?
@@AndyAnonymous Copernicus is a puppy
Did you notice that when the Delorean returned to 1985, the ravine was called 'Eastwood Ravine'? 😂 Presumably the townsfolk thought 'Clint' went into the ravine with the locomotive instead of Clara!
@@BenBanjo87 That would also make Doc Brown a wanted train thief.
@@Greybeardmedic I guess they forgave him since he "lost his friend" during their experiment.
@@martyklestadt6766 Good point, he did rid the town of one Buford 'Mad Dog' Tannen.
You forgot 2 things.
1) Copernicus and Einstein are two different dogs, one owned by 1955 Doc, one owned by 1985 Doc. Dogs don't live 30 years.
2) In Part 2, you hear Marty's mother say he got into a car accident with a Rolls Royce, broke his hand, and couldn't play music any more. The payoff was here at the end, avoiding the accident.
Nice reaction though. :)
For some reason, I didn't realize for many years until many viewings later, that the accident he avoided at the end of Part III was the same accident referred to in Part II.
Amazing how the town's 'oxymoron' name doesn't get more mention. 😂
@ The "Hill" part of the town name was probably named after a person. It is funny now that you mention it, though.
@@martyklestadt6766
Right ? ... "Hill" "Valley" ? 😆 ... A hill is the opposite of a valley ...
😂 👍
Fun fact: Needles' gang is made up of member from each of the Tannen gangs. The guy riding shotgun in his truck was in Buford's gang. the guy in yellow in the back was in Griff's gang, and the other guy was in Biff's gang.
And the actor playing Needles is Flea from Red Hot Chili Peppers
@@GAMBIT909 And fleas live on dogs!
Water filtration didn't happen until 1900s. That's why everyone drank whiskey and such as no bacteria due to the alcohol. Also the 3 cowboys in yhw saloon are well known character actors from 60s and 70s. The one with the distinctive voice and mustache has done several voice acting jobs for Disney like Robin Hood and Lady And The Tramp
I knew they were like Western actors but didn't recognize the moustache guy's voice til just now.
Also one of the bullets in _Who Framed Roger Rabbit?_
Those guys were also technical advisors on the movie. They taught Tom Wilson how to ride horses and shoot guns and all the other things you have to know about being in a western. He said that for him, learning from those guys was the coolest part about the entire trilogy.
"I didn't realize this ending would be so anxiety inducing..." Emme, you've seen the other two movies. Pretty sure you said the same thing in those two 🤣Loved the reaction as always!
For the record, all gun fights took place at, High Noon. ... that way no one had the advantage of having the sun at their back, and in the other guy's eyes.
Irony = As a condition to shooting in Northern California, the makeshift 1885 hill valley was allowed to stay after filming was done and was quite a tourist attraction...until a bolt of lightning hit the clock tower in 1996, burning it to the ground. Anyways, you've earned my subscription.
LOL that is ironic!
clock tower wasnt there. The lightning bolt hit something else
A gun being called a peacemaker makes sense because when it is used to be a reference to what could happen to you if you don't obey it. It used to be thought of that way back in those days. People who respected the gun did not have issues therefore it definitely WAS a peacemaker
1) Average lifespan for small dogs is 13-16 years; for large dogs 10-13 years
2) Copernicus in 1955 is smaller than Einstein in 1985; but I don't know if they are even the same breed:
The oldest recorded dog died before reaching 31.
Conclusion: Doc owned two different dogs.
Since time travel is only a conjectured possibility, any "rules" must be theoretical. So the proper answer to any question about time travel is "I haven't the foggiest idea."
The train wasn't shooting lasers at the end, it's the same as when the car creates the energy field just ahead to travel through time - a good example is when Marty goes from 1885 to 1985, you can see it really well there.
"All those movies are the same, just in different settings" -- IMHO, that's part of what made the franchise so great; they didn't try to "expand" and instead stuck to Hill Valley.
My favorite "Back to the Future" videogame (the Telltale one) does the same -- adding more variations of Hill Valley to tell the story.
Agree.
Bob Zemeckis and Bob Gale also say that it's one of the themes of the trilogy: history tends to repeat itself.
Everyone thinks the natives that Marty runs into would freak out at seeing a car driving. Why? "Some contraption off the White Man," they'd think. "A locomotive without a track, maybe."
Also they are kinda preoccupied by the Cavalry in hot pursuit.
I never see any reactor say that taking Clara to the future was actually necessary to keep the timeline the same. Since she was supposed to die, anything she does from that date on would alter the timeline more and more. And if Doc and Clara stay and live anywhere after 1985, they and the children shouldn't be creating any paradoxes.
Except in one line she lived, to bury Doc. And went on her way from there. That timeline got totally disrupted.
21:07 Clara’s horses were spooked by a snake, which caused them to run off uncontrollably.
Horses still spook like that today
@@robbob5302 yeah it's almost like horses are still the same after so many years...
@ So much for Evolution, right?
😄
Technically the language of ‘Indians’ isn’t outdated since that scene was set in 1955. It was however quite awkward when they use that term in Star Trek which is set far in the future.
The sheer number of reactors who don't understand that a dog in 1955 won't be the same one as a dog in 1985... 🤷♂️
Also, one is 10 times the size of the other.
Then again, it had 30 more years to grow... 😂😂😂
Oh wow. Does that happen a lot?😬
I'm amazed at the sheer number of commenters who apologize for her, saying that it can be confusing for a first-time viewer. Excuse me? I was a first-time viewer and knew he had a different dog in the first movie when Marty first showed up in 1955.
Even mad dog tannen looked different from the preview of part 3 at the end of part 2 to actual part 3. Derrrr
@@TheEbonyElephant Yes, it does.
@13m - "A bath house, out in the open like that?" - I've been part of the setup staff for a large camping event (12,000 people), and when there aren't enough bathhouses (the site had two), yes, we set up temporary shower tents. Didn't leave the sides down though 🙂
@16m - Cigarettes were not yet common in 1885. It was either chewing tobacco or cigars, which you spit out or threw out the stub respectively.
@21m - Horses can get spooked and try to run. A predator animal is a typical reason.
@28m - Calico is a medium weight cotton fabric, often printed with patterns like flowers. Tannen was talking about Clara and her dress. Calico cats have multicolored fur and are named after the fabric.
I don't know if you know this but, Frisbee, the company, started out making pie plates. That's true.
That scene in the saloon, Marty wasn’t only watching out for his own reputation. He had Clint Eastwoods name, to protect as well!😂
'Spittoon' is the word you were looking for.
27:19 the little boy is the Principal's Father
He takes this lesson to heart and when he grows up he teaches it to his son: Principal Strickland who would give Marty and his Father giref.
More like the principals’s great-grandfather.
@@Ernie_CentofantiMean the principal is grown up in 1955 so could be the father even is pretty old and still working in 1985
@@andreasfrobyIt would make Strickland over 70 in 1955 and over 100 when he was still Principal in 1985. It’s far more likely that the boy was Principal Strickland’s father or grandfather. If he were about 10 years old in the film, he would have been perhaps in his 30s in around 1905 and in his 80s by 1955. If Principal Strickland were his youngest child he could have feasibly fathered him in his 4”s, during the 1920s. This would make Principal Strickland in his 60s in 1985, which would be a believable age assuming he’s close to full retirement age. However, this would mean he was only in his 30s in 1955. And he looks so much older than that.
What makes it hard to fathom is that Strickland always looked old. “Did that guy ever have hair?” So it’s hard to tell how old he is in either 1955 or 1985.
@@GrilloTheFlightless that was what tried to say I guess, sorry English not first language, becasue I answer that probably not his Great grandfather. But father or grandfather
Shortly after this movie, there was an animated BTTF series on CBS Saturday mornings. The show dealt with Doc and family coming back to 1985 to live and usually it was his kids or Marty getting into time travel situations...
Asks a complex biology question, doesn't question why a dog would live over 30 years...
I know right?
Can’t stop watching baby Mochi sleeping in the background 😻
Admit it, Doc. You were Not borrowing the locomotive. Regardless of how things went, it was not coming back. Borrowing implies returning it.
Crazy 🤯 thought, at one point in time there were 4 DeLorean time machines in 1955. The one Marty originally took to 1955 in the first movie, the one Doc and Marty took there in the second movie, the one Biff stole to give himself the almanac, and the one burried in the mine. ALL the same car BUT in 4 places at the same time!
I liked the way the guy on the train who Clara described the Doc to in that flowery way seemed to be like “yes, that’s how I’d describe him!”
is dog in 1955 was Copernicus, dogs don't live 30 years, got a new dog in Called him Einstein
Fun reaction. Just a couple thoughts:
42:11 I agree it was "convenient" of Clara to overhear this conversation from a plot perspective. However,
9:30 This was not a "conveniently placed cave" in the same way. It was part of the calculus of why Doc Brown chose that location as a transport point. Right before takeoff, he told Marty "...there's a small cave over there which will be a perfect place to hide the time vehicle." So Marty was driving into the general vicinity of the cave Doc had planned for. Marty wasn't conveniently lucky enough to have randomly stumbled upon it. The writers addressed it w/ that throwaway line.
Finally, this was a funny observation you made for part 3 of the trilogy:
15:27 "Wow. Marty goes back in time and nearly immediately dies." Considering that when he goes back in time the first time in the first movie, old man Peabody "immediately " takes 3 shots at him with his shotgun.
Also Marty and Doc nearly get crashed by a plane when they returned from the future.
Mad Dog Tannen couldn't be killed either. If he had been killed it would have ended the Tannen line in 1885. Such an event would mean Biff would not have been born and that would have changed George and Lorraine's future.
Copernicus is name of dog in 55 Einstein in 85 Doc just likes a certain breed
They are completely different breeds and completely different sizes😂
@@c.alderman I didn't catch up on the different breed on my first viewing either. I knew there were different dogs at least though.
12:21 My granddad had a friend who shot rabbits and pheasants - I recall a number of childhood meals that included such a moment ^_~
13:38 You might notice that the cart displays the same surname as the truck in the '55 setting - evidently a family business passed down the generations.
13:50 "That's really old!" *laughs in British* My house is only a decade younger - by the standards of many buildings in my city it's still quite new ^.^
27:52 Calico is a cotton fabric used to make women’s dresses and other garments. When the man said, “Piece of calico” that was his way of referring to an attractive woman, since that is what she is wearing.
Actually, and I don't know which is correct, so I'm just saying, but Calico is also a term that refers to a certain type of horse, cat, or whatever that is basically white with blotches of color, usually brown, black, or grey, which I'm guessing resembles the fabric? I think in the context of the old west, or at least western movies, I think referring to an attractive woman as a calico would be more like implying that she's like a pretty pony, or something like that.
@@richiecabral3602 Sounds plausible to me.
@@Ernie_Centofanti actually, when Buford grabs her to dance, he calls her a filly, which is a female horse under 4 years of age, and a more common expression to refer to a woman, so ...
@@richiecabral3602 Good point.
It could be a dress, however it is also used to refer to something that appears in both Black and White. For example a Calico Horse or Calico Antelope.
A "spit pot" is called a spitoon.
The band playing at the festival is ZZ Top. 😊
Glad someone pointed this out! Also, the song they were playing is an in-period version of Doubleback.
If you’ll notice when Marty returns to 1985, the ravine is named Eastwood ravine 😊
“That’s what I thought…yella-belly.” 🤣🤣
When Doc Brown and Marty are looking at the Train map, you can see a woman behind them, that’s Clara.
Damn, goood eye!
I met Christopher Lloyd and Thomas Wilson/Biff at comic con.
I went on the Back to the Future Ride at Universal Studios Florida
It was a fun ride
Would be nice if they found a way to bring that ride back
Clint Eastwood was in numerous western movies in his younger days, and his characters were never yellow-bellies. And that's what would make the line about him being the biggest one in the west such a funny one.
Also, this is why Marty was never going to be the "real" Clint Eastwood as Emme asked for a moment, because Clint Eastwood is an actor who did westerns, but was not a cowboy in the wild west.
Also in Pt 2, AltBiff is watching and Eastwood western, 'A Fistful of Dollars' I think, where he does the same trick with the metal plate.
What I found funny is that Mr. Haney from Green Acres said that to Marty.
@@DReedsfbayThat's the one that made me laugh the most.
The cave wasn’t convenient. Doc told Marty it’s there for him to stash the car when he travels. Classic for a reason 😂 don’t underestimate the writing 😂 bless up
This is the one I remember the most as a kid. The train made a big impact on me. I enjoy the first the most, this one second.
If you remember the letter Doc said he has been living there for the past 8 months in the year 1885. Also in BTTF 2 when the time circuits was jamming it foreshadowed the date January 1, 1885.
One of the Best trilogies ever put to screen.
Yes.
This, the original 3 Star Wars, and Lord of the Rings.
Arguably The Matrix.
@12:50...when you see Marty's feet kind of stumble, well this wasn't just Marty stumbling by accident, this is unfortunately where Michael J. Fox was starting the early signs of Parkinson's Disease (from what I've heard).
The destruction of the DeLorean always gets me. If you think about it the DeLorean is really a character in it's own right. It went through so many different adventures and incidents with Doc & Marty, without it none of this would have happened. Even the car itself went through changes/overalls like some characters do. In part 1 it started with the plutonium chamber, in part 2 it got the Mr. Fusion which replaced the plutonium chamber and the flying/hoover conversion, in part 3 it got the hood/bonnet time component circuitry & the 50's white wall tires & red wheels then the end of part 3 it got the railroad wheels
Yes, there are a few flaws here and there with each movie but they are easily overlooked and in some cases not even noticeable unless you truly divulge into it. Overall this really is the perfect trilogy, whereas most movie franchises develop many problems with sequels as they start to run out of ideas and become more of a cash cow than anything
True fact, in the scene where Marty is hanging from the rope, he really was in trouble, choking. Luckily when they cut him down he was ok.
This is one of those rare trilogies where all of them are great.
Doc shooting the rope to get Marty down was stolen directly from the Clint Eastwood movie "the Good, the Bad , and the Ugly." Most people don't get the reference or the joke. yes, the Marshall was the "principal from the other movies and was playing an ancestor of that guy. "Are you talkin' to me" facing the mirror was directly stolen from the movie "Taxi Driver" 1976, starring Robert De Niro. the guy hands him a cigar like Clint Eastwood had in the Good, the Bad and the Ugly lol. everyone in the theater laughed hard when the guy said Everybody will say that Clint Eastwood is the biggest yellow belly in the west. Clint did a LOT of westerns, and I'm sure when he saw this he got a big laugh out of the whole thing, Michael J. Fox calling himself Clint Eastwood. Clara getting off the train and going back was stolen from the classic Western "High Noon" [1952], which you MUST see!! Gary Cooper won the Oscar for best actor.
I wasn't ready for the horses on hoverboards imagery.
"My apologies mr Dog, sir" 😂 don't think it'll work either
Also neat. This was Christopher Loyds (Doc) his first on screen kiss
I don’t know. I think there was an episode of TAXI where he kissed Danny DeVito (or one of the other male actors) on the lips.
This trilogy has a TON of little details that you pick up on with each rewatch. A recent one that hit me, is why Marty wore a TV cowboy outfit costume. Doc Brown picked his clothes for him. Doc Brown is an old man, in 1955. His view of what a cowboy is, comes from romanticised old TV shows and movies. That's how he dressed Marty. Marty assumes that the Doc is just knowledgeable about a lot of stuff, and goes with it.
Yes, 1955 Doc would have dressed him like Roy Rogers or other actors from Westerns of that era. Marty and 1885 Doc would have been familiar with Westerns starring John Wayne or Clint Eastwood. Without going too far back, you can compare movies like Rustlers Rhapsody or The Three Amigos vs Tombstone or True Grit.
51:40 Eastwood Ravine
Did you notice when Marty came back to 1985, the sign near the track said “Eastwood Ravine”
Emme, if you enjoyed this movie in general and Mary Steenburgen in particular, you ought to see TIME AFTER TIME, a 1979 film in which the same actress plays a woman who falls in love with a time traveller, who happens to be H.G. Wells.
@@robbob5302 Island? What island? That movie takes place in San Francisco. Maybe you are thinking of Gulliver’s Travels.
@@robbob5302 I think you are confusing the movie TIME AFTER TIME (1979) with the TV miniseries GULLIVER’S TRAVELS (1996). Both had Mary Steenburgen. Those two have nothing to do with each other.
@@Ernie_Centofanti My fault.
I was mixing it up with Somewhere in Time. Christopher Reeves movie. Godawful.
Nevermind.
7-11 was a very famous convenient store back in those days. They also had video games, and you could buy groceries, and cigarettes as well as some of them having gas stations. It was just a coincidence that the terrorist attack occurred on that date in time.
A piece of calico is a piece of a heavy, plain-woven, unbleached cotton fabric that is often sold as-is after the final stitch is woven. He was referring to what Claire was wearing.
"What about train on the hoverboard?"😀
Since it was a child's toy in "2015" I doubt it would hold 2 grown adults... let alone a horse! 😅
Did anyone notice that when Marty returned to 1985 the ravine was name 'Clint Eastwood ravine' ❤Loved the trilogy, thanks for videos Emme.
Noticed the sign, but it is next to the train tracks, so mostly Amtrak passengers see the sign, but who reads signs from a train?
The actor who played Needles is the bass player for a band called The Red-Hot Chili Peppers who were really popular in the 90's
Thank you! Finally someone realizing the weirdness of an ancestor on his dad's side looking like his mother! 🤔🤔🤣🤣
Cinemasins mentioned it lol
I think it was only done so they could find a quick and easy way of getting Lea Thompson in the film without having to write a whole sub-plot about Lorraine’s ancestry. But in hindsight it did just seem a bit odd. Maybe all McFly men in history find themselves attracted to similar looking women!😀
11:49 Biff did call George "Irish bug" in the first movie.
In Part 2, when Marty confronts Biff about the Sports Almanac, Biff is in the hot tub watching a Clint Eastwood movie. Clint's character is shown using a "bulletproof vest" before Marty interrupts. Mad Dog Tannen is also shown in Part 2 during Biff's documentary at the lobby when Marty first arrives at the hotel, where the Clocktower would normally have been standing in the Normal 1985 timeline.
These movies only get better with a rewatch because of the layering. Especially for parts 2 and 3 since they were shot simultaneously.
In the days before clean running water, alcohol was more commonly drunk, as the fermentation process also cleaned it and made it safe to drink.
No.
"OK, where's out equivalent of a skateboard in this time?"
Uhh....I think being dragged along by a horse with a lasso might be the closest thing. 😅
It was fun listening to you react. You really anticipated much of what occurred. As always, great reaction.
As we say in Texas; y'all be safe.
I know now where Robert Zemeckis (director) got the idea for his latest film "Here". Hill Valley - same town, 3 different time periods, with the same family lines. Zemeckis just expanded the premise & made it heartwarming & dramatic.
Hey! I'm a new subscriber. I just recently finished the first two reactions. I was wondering where the third one was. So happy! 😂
The three guys in the saloon were hired because they were famous cowboy movie character actors and such. Pat Buttrum, with the funny voice and mustache was originally cowboy actor and singer Gene Autrey's side kick in movies and TV show. Hel became Mr. Haney the con artist salesman on the 1960's show "Green Acres." And many cartoon voices. Harry Carey Jr. worked with John Ford, John Wayne and others in cowboy movies. Dub Taylor appeared in countless cowboy movies and TV Shows, and other TV shows often as a comic relief kind of character. Even the bartender was a cowboy actor. the guy with the Shooting gallery was a cowboy actor and was in Blazing Saddles.
😎 If it's of interest, in the scene at 32:40 when he says, "You Talkin' To Me?" he's quoting Robert De Niro from the 1976 movie, "Taxi Driver." After that, when he says "Go Ahead, Make My Day," he's quoting Clint Eastwood from the 1983 movie, "Sudden Impact." 😉👍
"Put the train on the hoverboard"... hold that thought.
Emme : 34:05 John Wayne said “a man's got to do what a man's got to do” in the 1939 western Stagecoach.
It was Michael J Fox idea to set the 3rd movie as a western because he always wanted to do a western movie.
The first gasoline pump was invented and sold on September 5 1885 in Indiana, but not gasoline for cars but mainly used for lamps and stoves.The gasoline pump pre-dates gas engine driven cars that was made January 29th 1886 but released in July 1886 by Carl Benz, didnt look anything like that cars we have today, they looked more a horse-drawn carriage but without the horses.
Funny you mentioned The Polar Express. The Polar Express has the flux capacitor in the train conductor’s cab. Robert Zemekis directed both movies and put the Easter egg into the movie. This explains how the Polar Express defies the space time continuum.
53:58 when you know a manual transmission you see it coming before he actually reverses because it shows him shifting into reverse.
It's hard to believe he really thought that horses could run 88mph
LOL emme! Horse on a hoverboard! I can't un-see that! 😂
A steam locomotive burns fuel to boil water and create steam. The two commonest fuels are coal or wood; hence the dangerous logs that keep tripping Clara. Normally a "fire man" throws logs or shovels coal into the fire box. Doc devised "pesto" logs to burn hotter (and more dangerous.)
7:50 Remember the Pair-o-Docs scene in Part II?
12:20 Only Buford notices the resemblance, and nothing comes of it.
53:40 I wish that Marty hadn't thrust backwards. That's comparably dangerous, from his perspective.
Hi Emme, always enjoy your reactions. If you are after any suggestions here they are;
Krull, 1983, fantasy/sci Fi
The Thing, 1982, horror
The Dead Zone, 1983, horror/tragedy
Close Encounters of the 3rd Kind, 1977, sci Fi
Spirited Away, 2001, Anime
My Neighbour Totoro, 1988, Anime
Kiki's Delivery Service, 1989, Anime
Princess Mononoke, 1997, Anime
Firefly TV series (only made one season), and the follow up movie Serenity, 2005, Sci Fi
Flash Gordon, 1980, sci fi
The Untouchables, 1987, Gangster
Yes to all!
Thank you for saying Native Americans! Myself and all other indigenous people are fans of you for that
“It’s ok to be a yellow turd” had me rolling 😂
I think doctors would disagree 😂
@ 😂
Easy fix for the gasoline problem.
There's a DeLorean in the mine, stored there for Marty and Doc to uncover in 1955. Syphon the gas out of _that_ car, then leave the empty car in the mine. When Marty and Doc collect it in 1955, they can fill it with gas to allow Marty to travel to 1885 in the first place.
Use the syphoned gas to fill the other Delorean so Marty can return to 1985 from 1885. No train pushing necessary.
No, there's no gas in it to even siphon.
@@michaeljacyna1973 There should be. It was struck by lightning and sent back with Doc. This shorted out some circuits but why would it be out of gas? The _other_ one is out of gas because of the arrow, not the one in the mine.
@weescotspaul It's common practice and common wisdom to drain a car of the fluids, even for seasonal storage. Gas will go bad in just a couple of months and ruin the tank. Its corrosive. Doc prepped the car for SEVENTY YEAR storage. OF COURSE he drained the tank. Docs not dumb. Not only that, 55 Doc even says he had to fill it.
The Gas that was there is long gone by the time Marty needs it.
@@michaeljacyna1973 Ah, I didn't think of that! Fair point. Oh well, it seemed like a good idea at the time... Thanks for showing me why it's not!
Obviously, the young dog in 1955 called Copernicus could not be the same dog 30 years later in 1985 called Einstein. The writers probably didn’t think about it in the first movie when they showed the little puppy. It seems logical for “Doc’s dog” to be smaller in the past. People subconsciously got the idea without thinking that it was a young Einstein. By the time of the third movie, people had realized that couldn’t be, and so the little routine about “Einstein” being “what you call your dog in 1985” was written in. Something of a retcon, I suppose.
Copernicus actually got his name as early as the 1985 novelization of the first movie:
"While [Doc] studied himself in the mirror, wearing the brain-wave analyzer, wondering whether to continue work for the day, Copernicus started barking. The dog, third in a line of pets named after famous scientists, raced from the kitchen into the living room, arriving there just as the rap at the door sounded." (page 114 of the novel)
Yet still probably after the movie came out, and only then the issue was spotted.
I love your reactions to these iconic movies that i saw/loved/marvelled at in my youth !! ❤
You are so cute and fuuny to watch your reactions ... 🥰 😉 😊
October 26, 2024
Thank you Emme for the reaction video of Back to the Future Part III
11:11 you're the actual first reactor I've seen who's noticed that oddity. 😂
@39:45 That probably would have been the earliest invention of Bloody Mary cocktail.
Of course you can't leave Marty alone to make all of his own decisions, he's only 16-17 years old, everyone keeps forgetting that.
Funny that you mentioned the Polar Express, which is another one of Robert Zemeckis' movies. I thoroughly enjoyed this reaction video, Emme. Happy New Year! Greetings from the Philippines.
I'm so glad these films haven't been ruined by a terrible re-boot or re-make. It's great that you have now experienced all three films, truly a unique and entertaining trilogy with a beautiful message at the end.
Because Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis have said it will never happen while they're alive. Once they die, someone at Universal will probably begin the process.
@@megafan2000 It's great those gentlemen made that decision.
@@silvernova354 absolutely. If it's already perfect, there's no need to revisit or mess with it. The musical I think is the most you'll ever see. And even the minor story changes made to it rubbed me the wrong way just a bit.
Reboots and remakes don't ruin anything. They're bad on their own and the originals are exactly as they were before.
Some people will whine about anything.
@@megafan2000 Yes, and original ideas seem almost extinct now. I just wish the kids could grow up with new ideas for films and stories the way I did and not have decades old IPs offered up to them all the time, endless sequels and prequels combined with character spin-offs and streaming shows.
Keeping the motor electric after the first experiment would have avoided some trouble 😂
The fact that Marty’s ancestors look like him and his mom isn’t technically wrong. Both faces could be passed down from his mom’s side of the family. What doesn’t make sense is their name being McFly. If this is his dad’s side of the family, his face could be there, but not his mom’s. Does that make sense? 😂🤷♀️
Interesting fact: Michael J fox was actually hung in the scene and his gagging is real luckily he was okay but he did pass out for a minute afterwards. 😬
Film critic Roger Ebert said this movie's portral of the late 19th century is unrealistic. It's a 'movie' version of the 'Old West', he stated.
There is an animated series that continues the story of the movies with Doc's family and ociasionally Marty. Also Telltale has a "Back to the Future" game.
I recommend watching a video of the Telltale game - it’s quite a good story!
Great reaction Emme like always. this trilogy is best love every single movie, there are some fun facts about this one. During the scene where Mad Dog Tannen and his cronies are attempting to hang Marty after their disagreement in the saloon, Michael J Fox accidentally got hanged for real for a short time, making him pass out for a few moments.
The producers asked Clint Eastwood for permission to use his name and he was happy and thrilled to say yes. And the set of the Old West Hill Valley was used 4 years earlier for Pale Rider a western starring none other than Clint Eastwood, which hit cinemas in 1985.
The band ZZ Top were hanging around on the set of the film, and ended up portraying the band at the town party. There were some technical issues whilst filming and, whilst repairs were taking place to get them fixed, ZZ Top took requests from the cast and crew and gave a small concert.
Thomas F Wilson, who plays Mad Dog Tannen, did all of his own horse riding and horse stunts during the film. Not only that, but he also lassoed Marty. Marty learned the "bulletproof" trick from the movie "A fistful of Dollars", with Clint Eastwood, which Biff is watching while Marty walks in and cut the movie before throwing the remote in the bath where Biff is in the second part. Clint Eastwood doing the exact same thing Marty did in the short clip we can see in background.
When Marty arrives back in 1985, the Delorean is quickly destroyed by a freight train. When it came to arranging the scene to be filmed, the producers asked the driver of the freight train whether hitting the car would derail the train, as they didn’t want to cause too much carnage. The driver shrugged it off, saying, ‘I’ve been waiting my whole life to do this. Keep up the good work.
The old-timers in the saloon when Marty arrives in Hill Valley Are all Veterans of Western movies and TV shows
Check out the movies Honey, I Shrunk the Kids(1989), The Goonies(1985), Men in Black(1997), and The Karate Kid Part lll(1989).