Back to the Future Part II
After watching the heartbreaking Michael J. Fox documentary Still, I was motivated to finally finish this trilogy which I've avoided for a long time because I've heard bad things about the other two films, but I am pleased to report that 1989's Back to the Future Part II flourishes from "Sequel-itis", something that kills most sequels, but it works here thanks to the genius that is Robert Zemeckis.

For those who saw the first film, the final five minutes are recreated in which we learn Marty (Michael J Fox) has to go back to the future because something has to be done about his kids. Unexpectedly, that part of the story wraps pretty quickly, but a visit to the future forces Marty to stay a little longer because he learns his father's old bully, Biff Tannen (Thomas F Wilson) is Hillsdale's wealthiest citizen, now married to his mom, Lorraine (Lea Thompson), thanks to an act of thievery by Biff that Marty and Doc Brown (Christopher Brown) can only stop by, once again, returning to 1955 and the Enchantment Under the Sea Dance.

Bouquets to Zemeckis and his writing partner Bob Gale for coming up with a richly complex screenplay that does require the viewer to have seen the first film and incorporates most of the events that happened in that film into this one. The connections to the first film are not random and contrived and affect the outcome of everything that happens in this film. Initially, it's a little confusing, but I found myself getting caught up in the confusion and being part of it, and I think a lot of that has to do with the way what happened in the first film is integral to what happens in the second film without rehashing the first film. This story also required the principals to play basically three different versions of their characters.

I won't lie, there are minor problems with the story that provided unintended giggles but didn't deter from my enjoyment of what I was watching. Of course, I couldn't help but be amused by the fact that the film was set eight years ago and yet Hillsdale now looked like a Jetsons cartoon complete with flying cars, hover boards, and giant movie holograms that attack people on the street. And it may seem like a nitpick, but I found it hard to swallow that the scores of every major sporting event from 1950-2000 fit inside a book about the size of a comic book. It was also kind of annoying that when Doc originally shows up to get Marty, he explains the urgency, but tells him he can't talk to anybody, touch anything, change anything, or even be seen by his 2015 self...how can he save his children or anything else if he can't do anything/

Needless to say, the movie is a technical wonder. The production design is insane and the Visual Effects actually earned an Oscar nomination. Even with all the technical wizardry present, Zemeckis gets terrific performances from the cast, all required to triple the work they did in the first film, with a special shout out to Thomas F Wilson, who recreates three very distinct characters in 2015 Biff, 2015 Griff, and 1955 Biff. One of the best surprises I've had at the movies in a long time, a sequel that stands up proudly to its predecessor. Hope the third one is as good.
After watching the heartbreaking Michael J. Fox documentary Still, I was motivated to finally finish this trilogy which I've avoided for a long time because I've heard bad things about the other two films, but I am pleased to report that 1989's Back to the Future Part II flourishes from "Sequel-itis", something that kills most sequels, but it works here thanks to the genius that is Robert Zemeckis.

For those who saw the first film, the final five minutes are recreated in which we learn Marty (Michael J Fox) has to go back to the future because something has to be done about his kids. Unexpectedly, that part of the story wraps pretty quickly, but a visit to the future forces Marty to stay a little longer because he learns his father's old bully, Biff Tannen (Thomas F Wilson) is Hillsdale's wealthiest citizen, now married to his mom, Lorraine (Lea Thompson), thanks to an act of thievery by Biff that Marty and Doc Brown (Christopher Brown) can only stop by, once again, returning to 1955 and the Enchantment Under the Sea Dance.

Bouquets to Zemeckis and his writing partner Bob Gale for coming up with a richly complex screenplay that does require the viewer to have seen the first film and incorporates most of the events that happened in that film into this one. The connections to the first film are not random and contrived and affect the outcome of everything that happens in this film. Initially, it's a little confusing, but I found myself getting caught up in the confusion and being part of it, and I think a lot of that has to do with the way what happened in the first film is integral to what happens in the second film without rehashing the first film. This story also required the principals to play basically three different versions of their characters.

I won't lie, there are minor problems with the story that provided unintended giggles but didn't deter from my enjoyment of what I was watching. Of course, I couldn't help but be amused by the fact that the film was set eight years ago and yet Hillsdale now looked like a Jetsons cartoon complete with flying cars, hover boards, and giant movie holograms that attack people on the street. And it may seem like a nitpick, but I found it hard to swallow that the scores of every major sporting event from 1950-2000 fit inside a book about the size of a comic book. It was also kind of annoying that when Doc originally shows up to get Marty, he explains the urgency, but tells him he can't talk to anybody, touch anything, change anything, or even be seen by his 2015 self...how can he save his children or anything else if he can't do anything/

Needless to say, the movie is a technical wonder. The production design is insane and the Visual Effects actually earned an Oscar nomination. Even with all the technical wizardry present, Zemeckis gets terrific performances from the cast, all required to triple the work they did in the first film, with a special shout out to Thomas F Wilson, who recreates three very distinct characters in 2015 Biff, 2015 Griff, and 1955 Biff. One of the best surprises I've had at the movies in a long time, a sequel that stands up proudly to its predecessor. Hope the third one is as good.
Last edited by Gideon58; 05-14-24 at 04:56 PM.