Wait a minute, Doc. Are you telling me it's 8:25? Are you telling me that you made a time machine out of a delorean? Are you telling me this thing is nuclear? Are you telling me that my mother has a crush on me? Damn Doc, this is too strong!
Hello, ("knock knock") Mc Fly, Is there anybody at home? Your shoe has been unbuttoned!
If you put your mind to it, you can get it all. Well, what if they say no? I couldn't bear a failure like that... Hey you! get your hands off him pig! I hate manure!
Nobody.... calls me..... hen! (Well, this last one is from the second part but try to think in four dimensions)
All the phrases of this film have already remained forever in the fucking Quixotera. The film that begins what, along with "Indiana Jones", is one of the best adventure triologies ever made. I much prefer it to the "Star Wars" or "Lord of the Rings" triologies which are more pretentious and with less sense of humor.
The film leaves us wondering: Where did the theme "Johnny B. Good" come from? Since apparently Chuck Berry took it from Marty, but Marty took it from Chuck Berry (adding a more typical Jimmy Hendrix ending that "your children will love"). But the protagonist is not enough to revolutionize the music and also invents the skateboard by the way.
His mother falls in love with him for a time. Won't he fall in love with his father until she sees him give Mr. Biff a good right hand, a feat that results in the disconcerting invitation of other students to appear as a delegate? They say, "Hey George, I heard you took down Biff, have you thought about running for delegate?" Apparently there, the one who ends up attending the teachers' meetings is the one who best deals the blow
I love all the characters, but without a doubt the best is the eccentric Dr. Emmet Brown. How curious that the dog is called Einstein and the scientist is called Doc (from doctor I suppose). We may be talking about the best over acting of all time, so good that you really believe that such a character could exist.
If for some incomprehensible reason you try to seriously analyze the film, you will see that it has some flaw or inconsistency, for example:
The main mistake that the film has is that when the protagonist returns to 1985 he finds that some things have changed, BUT he also finds that many others have not been modified and this does not make sense.
It is assumed that with that trip Marty changed his parents' life forever and also that of Doc. But even so when he returns he finds himself with the Libyan scene exactly as he lived it (only this time Doc is wearing a bulletproof vest).
And on the other hand, his parents have changed radically, but coincidentally they still have had the same number of children with the same ages.
And on top of that, Marty still has that date planned with his girlfriend. His whole family history has changed and yet he still has that same date at the lake on the same day.
In short, an ideal film for all audiences, especially for teenagers, that is not childish and that wonderfully mixes fantasy, comedy and adventure as well as being a benchmark in 80s cinema.
THE BEST: the script. The interpretations. The soundtrack.
THE WORST: I can't think of it.