Product Description
-------------------
DVD Special Features:
Disc 1:
Back To the Future movie
"The Making of Back to the Future" -- a rare behind the scenes
look
"Making the Trilogy: Chapter 1" -- retrospective look featuring
cast and crew
All new feature commentary with Director/Writer Robert Zemeckis
& Producer/Writer Bob Gale
Hilarious outtakes
Deleted Scenes
Original make-up tests
"Did you know that? Universal's animated anecdotes" -- watch the
movie and learn more interesting facts
Production Archive -- photographs, original storyboards & props.
Storyboards to final feature comparisons
Theatrical trailer.
Disc 2:
Back to the Future II movie
Back to the Future II featurette -- a rare behind the scenes
look
"Making the Trilogy: Chapter 2" -- a retrospective look
featuring cast and crew
Hilarious outtakes
Deleted Scenes
Hover Board test on location
Production Archive -- photographs, original storyboards & props
Storyboards to final feature comparisons
Theatrical trailer.
Disc 3:
Back to the Future III movie
"Making the Trilogy: Chapter 3" -- a retrospective look
featuring cast and crew
Hilarious outtakes
Deleted Scenes
ZZ Top music video "Doubleback"
Production Archive -- photographs, original storyboards & props
Storyboards to final feature comparisons
Theatrical trailer.
.co.uk Review
-------------
Before he grew up and started to become a serious filmmaker,
Robert Zemeckis created arguably the most unashamedly
entertaining film trilogy ever with his Back to the Future
series. It's here that Zemeckis came closest to emulating his
mentor Steven Spielberg, and here, too, that he showed his own
talent for combining flashy visual effects and knock-about
comedy. The vivacious screenplays, cowritten with Bob Gale, are
chock full of forwards and backwards-looking jokes, 1950s
nostalgia and wry nods to other movies. Michael J Fox and
Christopher Lloyd, both alumni of successful small-screen sitcoms
(Family Ties and Taxi respectively), bring a frenetic energy to
their roles, but also the warmth and likability needed to carry
the audience with them through time.
Don't try and unravel the time-travel thread running throughout,
as that way lie paradoxes ( /exec/obidos/tg/feature/-/272795/${0}
): just accept its inherent absurdity and enjoy the ride. Marty
McFly travels from 1985 to 1955 in a souped-up DeLorean sports
car (Back to the Future), then forward in time to 2015 and back
to 1955 again (Back to the Future II), before going all the way
back to the Old West of 1885 (Back to the Future III). Matters
become progressively more complicated as actions in the past have
repercussions for the future, and vice versa. Marty learns
life-lessons and Doc finds love at last; the joyful,
helter-skelter pace never slackens for an instant. --Mark Walker
On the DVD: Back to the Future travels through time to the DVD
era with a three-disc set charting the much-loved trilogy in
full, along with an abundance of special features. The real joy
in this box set is the "Making of the Trilogy" featurette, which
spans the three discs and offers a wealth of information on the
films. The deleted scenes have not faired well with age, with the
visuals and sound suffering immensely. On Disc One the anecdotes
can be played along with the film as subtitles, which is more
than can be said for the commentary with Robert Zemeckis and Bob
Gale recorded at the California University, which is simply a Q &
A session--not played along with the movie--and would have been
stronger as a filmed special feature. But all in all as
three-disc sets go it doesn't get much better than this--and you
won't need 1.21 gigawatts of electricity to enjoy it. --Nikki
Disney