Thursday, November 5, 2015

Back to the Future Review













Back to the Future


Release Date: 15th August 1985 - Australia


Production Companies
Universal Pictures
Amblin Entertainment
U-Drive Productions (Uncredited)

Distribution
Universal Pictures Australia


Genre: Sci-Fi/Comedy

Rating: PG

Runtime: 116 minutes


Budget: $19,000,000

Box Office Gross: $394,536,790 (Worldwide)


Plot Summary
An average teenager named Marty McFly accidentally travels back to 1955 through a DeLorean "time machine" built by the mildly insane Dr. Emmett Brown. Marty unintentionally jeopardises his existence when he bumps into his parents and has to make sure that they have fallen in love around the same time he goes back to his own time.


Cast
Michael J. Fox - Marty McFly
Christopher Lloyd - Dr. Emmett Brown
Crispin Glover - George McFly
Lea Thompson - Lorraine Baines
Thomas F. Wilson - Biff Tannen
Claudia Wells - Jennifer
James Tolkan - Mr. Strickland
Marc McClure - Dave McFly
Wendie Jo Sperber - Linda McFly
George DiCenzo - Sam Baines
Frances Lee McCain - Stella Baines
J.J. Cohen - Skinhead
Casey Siemaszko - 3-D
Billy Zane - Match
Harry Waters Jr. - Marvin Berry
Donald Fullilove - Goldie Wilson
Lisa Freeman - Babs
Elsa Raven - Clocktower Lady
Will Hare - Pa Peabody
Ivy Bethune - Ma Peabody
Jason Maron - Sherman Peabody
Katherine Briton - Peabody Daughter
Jason Hervey - Milton Baines
Maia Brewton - Sally Baines
Courtney Gains - Dixon
Norman Alden - Lou
Richard L. Duran - Terrorist
Jeff Van Haco - Terrorist Van Driver
Norman Alden - Lou
George 'Buck' Flower - Bum

Crew
Writer/Director - Robert Zemeckis
Writer/Producer - Bob Gale
Executive Producer/Second
Unit Director - Frank Marshall
Executive Producers - Kathleen Kennedy and Steven Spielberg
Producer - Neil Canton
Casting Directors - Jane Feinberg, Mike Fenton and Judy Taylor
Animal Handlers - Robert Weatherwax and Richard Calkins
Consultant: DeLorean Time Travel - Ron Cobb
Production Designer - Lawrence G. Paull
Production Illustrators - Dick Lasley and
Andrew Probert
Art Director - Todd Hallowell
Set Decorator - Hal Gausman
Costume Designer - Deborah Lynn Scott
Makeup Creator - Ken Chase
Director of Photography - Dean Cundey
Camera Operator/Director of Photography:
Second Unit - Raymond Stella
First Assistant Camera - Clyde E. Bryan
Unit Production Managers - Jack Grossberg
and Dennis E. Jones
First Assistant Director - David McGiffert
Stunt Coordinator - Walter Scott
Special Effects Supervisor - Kevin Pike
Supervisor of Visual Effects: ILM - Ken Ralston
(Uncredited)
Camera Operators: ILM - Scott Farrar and
Kim Marks (Uncredited)
Assistant Camera Operators: ILM - Ray Gilberti,
Randy Jonsson and Martin Rosenberg (Uncredited)
Supervising Model Maker: ILM - Steve Gawley
(Uncredited)
Film Editors - Harry Keramidas and
Arthur Schmidt
Sound Designer - Tak Ogawa
Supervising Sound Editors - Charles L. Campbell
and Robert R. Rutledge
Sound Editors - Larry Carow,
Samuel C. Crutcher, Janice Hampton,
Scott Hecker, John A. Larsen, Harry B. Miller,
Chuck Neely, Bruce Richardson,
Fred Stafford and Jerry Stanford
Re-Recording Mixers - Daniel J. Leahy,
B. Tennyson Sebastian II, Robert Thirlwell
and Bill Varney
Foley - John Roesch
Music - Alan Silvestri
Performers: Songs "The Power of Love" and
"Back in Time" - Huey Lewis & The News
Music Supervisor - Bones Howe


Awards

1986 Academy Awards
Best Sound Editing - Charles L. Campbell
and Robert R. Rutledge (Won)
----------------------
Best Original Screenplay - Robert Zemeckis
and Bob Gale (Nominated)
Best Sound - Bill Varney,
B. Tennyson Sebastian II, Robert Thirlwell
and William B. Kaplan (Nominated)
Best Music, Original Song "The Power of Love" -
Chris Hayes, Johnny Colla and Huey Lewis (Nominated)


Review
November 5th, 2015, marks the day Marty McFly first travelled back in time in his DeLorean to 1955. BACK TO THE FUTURE is now on its 30th anniversary. It still leaves a lasting impression of what it would be like to see the hilarious consequences of time travel from 1985 to 1955. It also started a trilogy with two sequels that didn't live up to the first. An original and timeless sci-fi comedy was ahead of its time. It was BACK TO THE FUTURE that reinvented the time travelling concept. There's no one else who would direct such a top-grosser with laughter. And the only one who could do it was Robert Zemeckis. Even its executive producer, Steven Spielberg, should be proud of the film that began a trilogy that would please many generations of sci-fi fans. The writing is superb and packed with references that are only known to people familiar with most of these types of pop culture films, including Star Wars.

The comedic acting is exceptional, with Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd cast in the big leads. Lloyd plays an eccentric scientist, and Fox portrays a youth who becomes the bane of his existence. The supporting talents of Lea Thompson, Crispin Glover and Thomas F. Wilson were commendable for being rocksteady of the other characters. The special effects are likely to behold long-lasting value and didn't age by today's standards of motion capture and CGI standards. Finally, the music complements this feature with Huey Lewis's memorable songs "The Power of Love" and "Back in Time" and Alan Silvestri's brilliant score.

I was enthralled to have seen it again after being busy with the other films and doing so. BACK TO THE FUTURE has top-notch performances, an original story and spontaneous laughter to mark it as one of my all-time favourites. If you have not seen this film, I say, "Great Scott! You don't know what you're missing!"

Star rating: (10/10) Best Movie Ever

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