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Doctor Brown's Seven Arrows of Time by John S. Davis
Doctor Brown's Seven Arrows of Time by John S. Davis

Did you know physicists can find no scientific law that says it is impossible for time to run backwards? Think about that for a moment. Wouldn’t it be strange to see Marty McFly or Doc Brown grow younger, a broken-down DeLorean reassemble, and have memories of future events as well as the past? It could really give a person a feeling of DejaVu, and in the case of Back to the Future Part II that is a very understandable reaction. Time is an elusive concept. If someone were to ask you the question “What is time?” you could say it’s what your Timex measures. But upon closer examination, this thing we call time becomes a puzzling mystery indeed. It cannot be tasted, heard, or seen, yet time is something we always seem to never have enough of. Even when time hangs heavy, we eventually run out of it. Time is the one thing that affects everyone. We live with it on a day-to-day basis but barely understand it.


Marty McFly Rock'n Roll Againts the Time

Time can be viewed in two different ways. First, there is the contemporary idea that time is linear. If we could take a picture of the linear time we would see a straight line starting from the beginning of time and extending infinitely into the future, with every event ever to take place in the past, present, and future resting somewhere along the time-line. However, in ancient times, mankind viewed time differently. They believed it was cyclic in nature. This concept of cyclic time can be thought of by imagining a circular clock face with the beginning of time being represented by the number one and the end of time by the number twelve. Then, when the hands of the clock reach number one again, time begins anew.


Back to The Future Art Theme

This concept of time led man to believe that historical events were destined to repeat themselves in each new cycle. That would mean there would be another rise and fall of Rome, another civil war between North and South, and even another Hitler. Only recently has mankind come to think of time as linear and even though scientists have yet to fully comprehend the nature of time, they have deduced seven arrows of time which keep things going in the right direction. The first of these arrows are referred to as psychological time. In other words, it’s the only arrow of time that’s all in our minds. Confused? Let’s approach it in another direction, then.


Doctor Emmett Brown's  Mind Reader Gsmes Art
Doctor Emmett Brown's Mind Reader Gsmes Art

Scientists have coined the term “psychological time” to mean that we all perceive time as always moving forward. In Back to the Future Part II, we see Doc and Marty travel from the future to 1985, and back again to 1955, which might lead us to the conclusion that time is running backwards. But this is not so. Although our two-time tinkerers have discovered a way of traveling through time, they always perceive events as moving forward in time, never backward.


Marty McFly Looking His Father George McFly Cafe House 1955 Art
Marty McFly Looking His Father George McFly Cafe House 1955 Art

But in fiction, a writer can give a character the ability to remember future events as well as the past. One such example would be the White Queen in Alice In Wonderland, who tells Alice, “It’s a poor sort of memory that only works backwards.” As strange as that sounds, the queen had a point. Everything, including people, is made up of atoms and molecules that obey the time-reversible rules of Newton and Einstein.





Now, the mathematical equations within the Laws of Physics do not distinguish between past or future, which means there are always two solutions to these equations. One of the solutions sends these atoms and molecules into the future and the other sends them into the past. If this is actually the case, then why don’t we have memories of things yet to come, since all events along the timeline, whether they are in the future or the past, are fixed and unchanging? “Perhaps clairvoyants would claim that dual ability,” states Dr. Tony Rothman in his article.



Hill Valley School Skiing Marty McFly Gothic Art
Hill Valley School Skiing Marty McFly Gothic Art

The Seven Arrows of Time, published in the February 1987 edition of Discover, “but for the rest of us, when memory works at all, it’s sadly — or mercifully — limited to events that have already taken place. That’s the first arrow of time.” Our next arrow is the electromagnetic arrow. A light, X rays, radio waves, and ultraviolet and infrared radiation are all composed of electromagnetic waves that travel into the future, not the past. For example, if we look up at the sun we will see it in the position it occupied just over eight minutes previously because it takes that long for the light to travel from the sun to the earth. If this arrow did not exist it would be possible for somebody from the year 1990 to send radio transmissions into the past and communicate with someone from the year 1955.



Doctor Emmett Brown's Shining Art
Doctor Emmett Brown's Shining Art

We all know that doesn’t happen, and so it seems this second arrow of time would be easily understood. But this is not the case. Physicist James Clark Maxwell successfully described all radiation as a mixture of oscillating electric and magnetic fields in his laws of electrodynamics. As is the case with the basic laws of physics, those of electrodynamics do not distinguish between past or future. Although the mathematics of Maxwell’s theory allows electromagnetic waves to travel into the future or the past, scientists discount the idea of waves going backward in time. Yet scientists don’t disregard this kind of reverse motion because it is impossible, only because it is highly, highly improbable. To illustrate this point, picture a stone being thrown into a pond. As soon as the rock hits the water, ripples are created that expand to the edges of the pond.



Delorean Lightning 88 Mph Art
Delorean Lightning 88 Mph Art

Now, if these ripples were to flow in reverse they would first appear at the edges of the pond and then contract inward to the point where the stone hit the water. The reason nobody has ever observed such an event is because it is as improbable as a broken down DeLorean suddenly resembling. That’s our second arrow.




Time Machine Delorean In to the Black Hole
Time Machine Delorean In to the Black Hole

The third arrow of time. Quantum mechanics is the theory that deals with the behavior of matter on the atomic scale. It concerns itself only with predicting what will happen when atomic particles interact. Since these microscopic bits of matter mean little or nothing to most of us, we will have to use an object we are all familiar with to try and illustrate the idea behind this theory.



Doctor Emmett Brown's Flux Compression  Art
Doctor Emmett Brown's Flux Compression Art

Let’s take a coin, for example. If we flip the coin into the air, quantum mechanics states that the coin is fifty percent heads and fifty percent tails until the moment we uncover it, whereupon it becomes wholly heads or wholly tails. Yet if this process worked in reverse of the coin would still be fifty percent heads and fifty percent tails after you uncovered it. In other words, the head and tail of the coin would have merged. The coin would be lying there and we would see both sides of the coin simultaneously. But quantum mechanics provides no way for this reverse behavior to occur. The fact that such things don’t happen gives us time’s third arrow.



Time Machine Delorean's Remote Control Art
Time Machine Delorean's Remote Control Art

Before attempting to explain the fourth arrow of time, it is important to note that nuclear reactions have no time preference. What that means is nuclear reactions don’t distinguish between forward and backward time. It’s kind of like the molecular structure of lead being altered so that it is turned into gold. Well, the same nuclear reaction can work in reverse so the gold can change back into the lead. So if a certain type of nuclear decay is possible, its inverse or opposite will be possible too.




Doctor Emmett Brown is explaining  alternate timeline 1985 Back to The Future
Doctor Emmett Brown is explaining alternate timeline 1985 Back to The Future
Alternate timeline anyone? Not if it's created by a rich punk named Biff Tannen right? In the picture above, Doc Brown attempts to explain how small events in history can create big problems in time. In the years to come, scientists may crack the mysteries associated with the concept of time. But for now, the only thing keeping us from complete bewilderment concerning the nature of time is time's seven arrows which, fortunately, keep all events timely.



Marty McFly is fixing The Time Machine Delorean
Marty McFly is fixing The Time Machine Delorean

A simple way to understand this phenomenon is to look at the number 3. Let’s say that particle 3 is created when we combine particles 1 and 2. Now, according to theoretical law, when particle 3 decays we will again have particles 1 and 2. And this will always be the case. But then we have the kaon, which, like other particles, can be positively or negatively charged or it could be neutral, with no charge at all. Now the problem with the neutral kaon, which is created in the laboratory and does not exist in nature, is that it likes to defy theoretical law. Ninety-nine percent of the time it will obey the law and decay into three particles. Yet one percent of the time this neutral upstart decays into two, proving that it is not time-reversible.



Red Valley, Delorean Marty McFly and the Dog
Red Valley, Delorean Marty McFly and the Dog

In order to examine the next three arrows of time, we must leave the microscopic world and plunge into the world of nature’s grandest phenomena. Next on our agenda is the black hole. It is a massive star that has collapsed into an object possessing an intense gravitational field so strong that even light cannot escape from it. Yet to examine the fifth arrow we also need to bring the black hole’s theoretical counterpart into the picture. And that object is referred to as a white hole. Now, according to theory, a black hole has such an insatiable appetite that anything which enters into its gravitational field gets gobbled up. But its counterpart, the white hole, works in reverse. If this is true, then somewhere out in the universe there is a white hole spitting out everything the black hole has consumed.




Jaws 19  Back To The Future Art
Jaws 19 Back To The Future Art

Now scientists tend to agree that the universe distinguishes between forward and backward time. If it didn’t, though, there would be as many white holes as black. Although a few black holes have been detected, such as the one in the binary star system Cygnus X-1, no one has ever been able to observe a white hole. Black holes, to physicists, are elegant and simple objects, yet, as Dr. Tony Rothman states, “Their opposites are troublesome and incomprehensible —especially because of a feature called the singularity. “The singularity, in a black hole, is the point where all the collapsed matter has fallen, where the density is infinite, and where the known laws of physics break down altogether. Since light cannot escape the black hole, its singularity is hidden from the external world. But everything escapes the white hole, light included, so its singularity is visible to even the most casual spacefarer. And because physical laws have gone haywire at the singularity, time there may go forward or backward; TV sets may pop into existence; so, too, may politicians.



Marty Mcfly as Yellow Vader
Marty Mcfly as Yellow Vader

Scientists have found such behavior so implausible that they have proposed what we might call the Black Power Hypothesis, which forbids white holes altogether. If that hypothesis is correct, then nature provides another arrow of time by allowing black holes to exist but not their time-reversed counterparts.” As we journey now toward time’s sixth arrow, we encounter the expanding universe.



Pink Elephant's Big Touch And Delorean Bing Bang Theory Exit
Pink Elephant's Big Touch And Delorean Bing Bang Theory Exit

When the Big Bang occurred, the initial blast flung matter outward. Eventually, this matter began to cool and resulted in the formation of the galaxies, and their constituent parts, such as stars and planets. However, if the universe progressed backward in time it would also contract until the galaxies collided with one another and everything, including us, fried in a shower of radiation.



End Of Time With Marty Mcfly and the Delorean
End Of Time With Marty Mcfly and the Delorean

Most scientists believe the expansion of the universe will continue indefinitely. Yet others, such as cosmologist John A. Wheeler, feel the expansion will come to an end one day and the universe will collapse, eventually ending in a Big Crunch.



Through The Time With Delorean Back To The Future Art
Through The Time With Delorean Back To The Future Art

The question then, as Dr. Tony Rothman puts it, is, “Will time begin to run backward at the turnaround? Will broken watches reassemble themselves? Will the dead rise? If time runs forward in an expanding universe and backward in a collapsing one, then presumably at the moment of recollapse it runs in both directions at once, with watches shattering and assembling simultaneously.” Because of this paradox, most cosmologists have come to the conclusion that in a collapsing universe, time cannot run backward, thus giving us our sixth arrow of time.




Back to the Future Thematic Cards
Back to the Future Thematic Cards

Finally, we come to our seventh and last arrow of time: entropy. A simple way to approach entropy is to think of it as an increasing state of disorder. Take, for example, a jigsaw puzzle. In its completed state, it is a highly ordered system. Now, if you throw it on the floor, it will scatter into many pieces, bringing disorder to the system, and thus increasing entropy.



Hill Valley Tire Shop ''Your Car's FUTURE Depends On Us!''You may not reed roads, but you need tires!
Hill Valley Tire Shop ''Your Car's FUTURE Depends On Us!''You may not reed roads, but you need tires!

According to the second law of thermodynamics, entropy will always increase. To prove this law. Dr. Tony Rothman gives us this example. “If a gust of wind blows a speaker’s notes away, they will usually fall to the ground out of order. That’s because there’s only one correct order, but many wrong ones — and so chance favors an increase in entropy, or disorder, in all but the entropy reversed world. The fact that entropy always increases in our world,” states Dr. Rothman, “constitutes the seventh arrow of time.”

Marty's Parents were destined to meet in 1955. Until Marty dropped in from the future.
Marty's Parents were destined to meet in 1955. Until Marty dropped in from the future.

Still, confused? Don’t feel too bad. Confusion tends to lead to greater understanding, and in the case of time, your understanding of it is likely greater than you realize, provided you view it as something more than what your Timex measures. Still, the implications of Doc Brown’s seven arrows of time are enough to make anyone’s head spin. Broken watches reassembling, having memories of future events as well as the past, and the backward flow of time are all events that do not in any way transgress the laws of physics but certainly disrupt our own sensibilities. Yet nature as a whole seems to resist this concept of reversible time by throwing a few kinks into the works such as disallowing the black holes time-reversed counterpart, the white hole. So when all is said and done, time travelers Marty McFly and Doc Brown, regardless of their adventures through time, still perceive time as moving forward, which, of course, always leads us Back to the Future.

- Written By John S. Davis -




The Most Frequently Asked Questions from Back to the Future by Bob Gale & Robert Zemeckis
The Most Frequently Asked Questions from Back to the Future by Bob Gale & Robert Zemeckis

Some of these questions are perceptive, some are naive, and some are, well, pretty dumb. Some are from time travel fanatics who ask for explanations about some of the mysteries of the space-time continuum. Some are from children who want us to send them a hoverboard. (Our favorite was from an 8-year-old boy :)


“Please send me a hoverboard, but don’t send me a pink one.”)

Here are some of the most frequently asked questions about all three Back To The Future films — and answers.




In the Darth Vader scene, Marty has a modem hair dryer tucked in his belt, obviously not something they had in 1955. Where did this come from? The hair dryer was in a suitcase that 1985 Doc put into the DeLorean trunk at Twin Pines Mall. There was a scene in which 1955 Doc looks through the contents of that suitcase, picks up the hairdryer, and asks “What’s this?” “A hairdryer,” Marty replies. Doc shakes his head and says, “A hairdryer? Don’t they have towels in the future?” However, the scene was cut from the final film (for the time).


1 - If Griff is Biff's grandson, how come we never meet Biff's son? Actually, it’s never been established whether Biff has a son. Since we don’t know what Griff's last name is. Griff could be the son of Biff’s daughter.



2 - Were the hoverboards real? No. Hoverboards didn't exist. This was the most asked question we got in letters and phone calls. And we still have lots of emails for that reason. Yes, director Robert Zemeckis did give an interview in which he said that hoverboards were real, but his tongue was firmly in cheek. Nevertheless, a lot of people believed it for a long time.



3 - Where can I get a pair of those self-lacing shoes that Marty had? You couldn't find those shoes not until 2015. In 2015, Nike designer, Tinker Hatfield announced the NikeAir MAG (Marty Mcfly's BTTF-2 self-lacing shoe) shoes that exist for the Back to Future's 30th anniversary. And nowadays you can easily find these shoes on the web to buy.




4 - What happened to old Biff when he staggered out of the DeLorean in 2015? Our intention regarding old Biff was that upon his return to 2015, he would be erased from existence because he had changed his entire destiny by giving his younger self the Sports Almanac. (Probably, Lorraine shot him sometime around 1996!). After old Biff clutches his chest and staggers (the same symptoms that Marty exhibited in Part I when he was beginning to be “erased”), we actually filmed him falling onto the street and vanishing, and we previewed the movie this way. However, the vast majority of the audience did not understand it, so we decided to cut it out, leaving the answer ambiguous, and subject to various interpretations — besides the above explanation, you can believe that Old Biff had a heart attack from the shock of time travel of from flying the car, or from something that happened to him in 1955.





5 - When Doc and Marty are in 1955-A, Doc says they can ’t return to the future to stop Biff from stealing the DeLorean, because it would be the wrong future. But if that’s true, how did Old Biff manage to get back to the same future that he left? Shouldn’t he have come back to a different future? As should be clear from the answer to the previous question, we believe Old Biff DID indeed return to a different future — a “2015- A,” which would have transformed around Marty, Doc, Jennifer, and Einstein (just as Doc explains how 1985-A would change into 1 985 and instantly transform around Jennifer and Einstein). This would happen AFTER Old Biff returned with the DeLorean. For this reason, we made sure that Doc had caught Jennifer and exited the McFly Townhouse before Old Biff returned. Thus, by the time Marty and Doc are carrying Jennifer back to the DeLorean, there COULD be other residents in that townhouse — or perhaps the McFlys still live there. It is just as believable that the physicality of the neighborhood did NOT change as it is to believe that it did — so we didn’t change it. We decided not to make anything of this idea because this is one of those difficult time travel concepts that general audiences have a real hard time understanding. (try to explain this stuff to your mother and you’ll see what we mean.) A detailed explanation of it would have slowed down the story, and most of the audience doesn’t even think about it. That’s why we made certain things ambiguous and left various things open for interpretation in hopes that the possibility of at least 1 Or 2 explanations would be better than a “definitive” explanation that you could find holes in. Let’s face it, time travel is fantasy, so there’s no way to “prove” anything. As filmmakers, we try to create a set of rules for our stories and stick by them, and stay consistent within the little “universe” that we’ve created.




6 - When Doc and Marty leave 2015 to go back to 1985, the time displays show that the “last time departed” is November 12, 1955, 6:38 P.M. which must be the time that Old Biff left 1955. But since he gives himself the Almanac much earlier in the day, what was Old Biff doing for all of that time? The “extra hours” were designed into the time display for a simple production reason; at the time we filmed the sequence when Doc, Marty, and Jennifer leave the future, we still weren’t sure whether the scene when Old Biff gave Young Biff the almanac would be day or night. We left room on the time displays so that we’d be covered if the scene took place at night. Our thinking as to what Old Biff might have been doing for those extra hours included two very believable possibilities: 1) Old Biff, having never traveled through time, decided to do a little additional nostalgic sightseeing before returning to the future; 2). Depending on where Old Biff hid the DeLorean, he may have had to wait for it to get dark before he could leave, for example, to avoid being spotted by the police who could have shot at him.




7 - Doc says that if Jennifer sees her older self it could create a time paradox that might destroy the universe. Please explain. First of all, let’s define TIME PARADOX. A Time Paradox is a situation in which the effect of an incident contradicts or eliminates the cause of that same incident. As an example, imagine that in 1990, 40-year old John Smith goes back in time 30 years and finds his younger self, aged 10, in 1960. Suppose 40-year-old Smith pulled a gun and murdered his 10-year-old self. Then 10-year-old Smith would never grow up to become the 40-year-old Smith. How then could 40-year-old Smith go back in time to murder “himself’? Thus, the effect of the incident (the murder of 10-year-old Smith) eliminated the cause (the existence of the murderer). A paradox, by definition, is impossible.



8 - In the case of Jennifer, the shock of seeing herself old causes her to faint. But what if young Jennifer had hit her head on a cement stair, suffered brain damage and died? Then, she would never grow up to marry Marty, they would never have kids, and Doc would never have had reason to bring them to the future in the first place. And if Jennifer never goes to the future, how can she die in the future? (Also, in Part I, if Marty had actually been erased from existence by never having been born, he would have never existed to grow up, go back in time, and interfere with George being hit by the car!) For the record, many scientists use the time paradox concept as an argument as to why time travel has to be impossible. Since time travel allows the possibility of a paradox, and since a paradox is impossible, time travel itself must be impossible. However, in the Back To The Future films, time travel DOES exist. Thus, Doc Brown surmises that if a paradox were indeed to occur, the result could be a cataclysm of some sort. On the other hand, since a time paradox never truly does take place in the films, it could mean that there’s some sort of “self-preservation” mechanism in the cosmos which prevents a paradox from ever happening. Perhaps then, this is the reason that both Jennifer's faint — to prevent a potential paradox!


9 - When Doc takes Marty and Jennifer out of 1985 and brings them to the future, how can Old Marty and Old Jennifer (and their family) even be in the future? Wouldn’t their disappearance from 1985 instantaneously erase their future? To be honest, yes, it very well should erase their existence from the future. This is, in fact, the ultimate paradox of BTTF-Part II. We really thought about this one for a long time, but we finally decided that after the set-up of Doc saying “Something’s gotta be done about your kids,” the audience would feel cheated if we went to the future and found out they didn’t exist.


You could, however, argue that the existence of Old Marty, Old Jennifer and their kids in the future automatically proves that young Marty and Jennifer will eventually get back to 1985. The flaw in this reasoning is that Doc repeatedly tells us that the future isn’t written, so why would this part of the future be “written?” Ah, but Part III may contain the answer to this question after all. When Doc spots the tombstone in 1885 and sees that the name on the photograph of the tombstone has vanished but the date remains, he says “We know this photograph represents what will happen if the events of today continue to run their course into tomorrow.” That’s a pretty big “if.” And it suggests that time travel to the future always takes you to a future based on the events of the time you left — a logical extrapolation of what the future of that moment holds. Of course, the existence of free will allows for the possibility of infinite futures, which is what Doc says at the end of Part III: “Your future is whatever you make it.” But time travel into the future takes you to the most likely future of the moment you left.



10 - Why is it that Jennifer faints when she sees her future self, but Biff has no problem when he meets his older self? Jennifer definitely realizes she is seeing herself 30 years older and that puts her into shock. Young Biff, however, has no idea who old Biff really is — he thinks it’s just “some old codger with a cane.”




11- What is the significance of the pair of "backwards 9‘s” of fire left behind when the DeLorean is struck by lightning?

When the big bolt of lightning hits the DeLorean, it sends the flying vehicle spinning on its axis. As we already know, the DeLorean leaves fire trails behind it when it travels through time. Since in this case, the car was spinning, the fire trails are left behind as spirals instead of the usual straight lines left behind when the car is moving straight ahead.

Lightning Strike: The hover-converted DeLorean with Doc on board, gets unexpectedly struck by lightning just outside Lyon Estates and sent back to January 1, 1885 due to an on-board malfunction Doc neglected to correct.


12 - How could the DeLorean travel through time when it gets struck by lightning if it isn't going 88 miles per hour?

The sudden rotation of the DeLorean from the lightning hit accelerates it to 88 miles per hour when it spins.


13 - Lea Thompson plays Maggie McFly, Marty’s great-great-grandmother, as well as Lorraine, Marty’s mom But Lorraine’s family name is ‘Baines. ’’ Why did Lea play Marty’s paternal great-great-grandmother, when she’s really not part of that family? Is there something kinky going on in the history of the McFly family?


Lea plays Maggie because we didn’t want to make a Part III without having Lea in it, especially in a “Mom is that you” scene! Of course, we thought about whether it made any sense — obviously, Maggie McFly and Lorraine Baines can- not be blood relatives. But we did come up with a satisfactory answer: It’s a well-known adage that “men are attracted to women who remind them of their mothers.” Clearly then, when Seamus married Maggie, that insured that the McFly men would have a genetic trait that attracted them to women who bear a resemblance to Maggie or Lea Thompson (even Jennifer is the same physical type!)




14 - How could Clara have erected the tombstone for Doc after September 7, 1885, if she was supposed to have gone over the cliff on September 4th?

- AND...? ( 14th and the 15th questions are RELATED) -


15 - At the beginning of Part III, would the name of the ravine be “Clayton,” "Shonash” or “Eastwood?”


Version #1 — ’’Original History” The “Original History” occurred before Doc Brown was ever born or invented the time machine. This is how things would have been written in the history books in Back To The Future — Part I, and in most of Part II August 29, 1885. Hill Valley Town Meeting. No one volunteers to meet the new school teacher at the station. September 4, 1885 Clara arrives at the train station. Since no one is there to meet her, she rents a buckboard. While heading out to the schoolhouse, a snake spooks the horses, they run wild, the buckboard goes out of control, and over the edge of Shonash Ravine. Clara is killed. September 9, 1885 After a memorial service for Clara Clayton, the city fathers decide to name the ravine in her memory. Thus, “Shonash Ravine” becomes “Clayton Ravine.” Again, Version #1 is the history of Hill Valley that happened BEFORE the beginning of Back To The Future I. At the conclusion of Back To The Future 2, Doc is zapped back to January 1, 1885. He settles in Hill Valley as a blacksmith and the above events are altered because of his presence, as follows: Version #2 — Doc in 1885, without Marty August 29, 1885 Hill Valley Town Meeting. Doc Brown volunteers to meet the school teacher at the train station.


September 4, 1885 Doc meets Clara at the train station and they fall in love at first sight. September 5, 1885 Doc takes Clara to the festival. Buford shows up and shoots Doc in the back with the derringer. Despite Clara’s efforts at nursing him. Doc dies two days later from internal bleeding as a result of the gunshot wound. September 9, 1885 Clara dedicates Doc’s tombstone, “In loving memory from his beloved Clara.” In this sequence, the name of the ravine remains “Shonash Ravine.” This history ripples into the future AFTER Doc is struck by lightning at the end of Part 11. Marty, however, retains his knowledge and memory of the original history because he has come from a point in the space-time continuum in which the original history applied. If Marty were to go to the ravine in 1955 at the beginning of Part III (on his way to the Pohatchee Drive-In, for example), he would discover that the ravine is called “Shonash Ravine.” In BTTF Part III, Marty’s trip to September 2, 1885, alters Version #2 as follows:



Version #3 — Doc and Marty both in 1885 August 29, 1885 Exactly the same as in version #2: Doc volunteers to meet the school teacher. September 3, 1885 As seen in Part III, Marty shows Doc the photo of the Tombstone. Doc decides NOT to meet Clara at the station. September 4, 1885 Clara arrives at the station. No one is there to meet her, so she rents a buckboard, as in Version #1. Similarly, on her journey to the schoolhouse, the snake spooks the horses and they run wild toward the ravine. As seen in the film. Doc rescues her from going over into the ravine. They meet and fall in love at first sight. September 5, 1885 At the festival. Doc’s behavior is now different due to his knowledge that Buford is going to shoot him in the back (which is why Doc keeps facing front to Buford). Because Buford never does shoot him at the festival, and due to Marty’s interference, the name on the tombstone photo vanishes. September 7, 1885 “Clint Eastwood” is apparently killed when the runaway locomotive plunges into the ravine. In honor of his heroic action against Buford Tannen, the city fathers decide to name the ravine after him. (Incidentally, there is an alternative scenario that may have occurred in Version #2: On September 15, 1885, Clara, distraught over Doc’s death, commits suicide by jumping into the ravine. As a gesture of sympathy, the people of Hill Valley decide to name the ravine in her in memory, thus putting the space-time continuum back into a similar situation as in Version #1. We will remain ambiguous about whether this suicide incident actually happened in Version #2 so that the viewer may choose whichever scenario fits into his own theories about time travel.)




16 - Doc Brown of 1955 learns a lot about the future from Marty. Shouldn’t the Doc of 1985 remember all of those things that happened in 1955? 3 possible answers, all credible. I ) The “Ripple Effect” of time travel (which caused all of the photographs to change) does not affect human memory. II) The 1955 Doc suffered a memory loss sometime after his adventures with Marty (maybe it was from the drugs he took in the 60’s as Reverend Jim!). III) Doc actually did remember everything, but he still did all the same things he “remembered” because he didn’t want to risk disrupting the space-time continuum. There’s a 4th possibility which depends on your view of time travel. There’s a theory (we like to call it the “Self-Preservation Instinct of the Space-Time Continuum Theory”) that says that the continuum is always trying to keep itself “on course,” and when things happen to change it, it always tries to correct itself. It is much like a river, which tries to keep its overall course. Although earthquakes, fallen trees, floods, or other circumstances might disrupt it at points, the river would cut a new channel so that it would end up back at the same place. Thus, the overall physics (or metaphysics) of the space-time continuum would ensure that any of Doc’s memories of events that might create paradoxes would become hazy — or be erased.



17 - In 1885, when Marty tells Doc they’re out of gas, why don’t they just go to the Delgado Mine, dig up the DeLorean where Doc hid it, and get the gas out of it?

There are two logical answers to this one... I ) The car mechanic’s answer: As anyone who has stored an automobile for a long period of time can tell you, you always drain all of the fluids out of the car before putting it into storage. Doc most certainly would have drained the gas out of the DeLorean if he was going to leave it hidden for 70 years. At the 1955 drive-in. Doc specifically says “I put gas in the tank” indicating that the DMC must have had an empty tank when they found it in the mine. II ) The time travel theory answer; Even if Doc had not drained the tank, he still would not have gone back into the mine for fear of creating a time paradox by accidentally damaging the DeLorean, the mine, or who knows what. After all, since Marty is now back in 1885, Doc’s plan obviously worked and worked perfectly. But what if Doc were to go back into the mine and accidentally cause a cave-in that causes even more damage to the DeLorean? What happens to the future of that DeLorean, when it’s unearthed in 1955? And what might that do to Marty and the undamaged future DeLorean now in 1885? As an analogy, imagine a time traveler going back in time, finding himself as a child, and cutting off that child’s hand with a meat cleaver. What happens to the adult time-traveler’s hand? That would definitely risk a time paradox, and we know that Doc would never go out of his way to risk such a thing for fear of (in the worst-case scenario) unraveling the fabric of the space-time continuum and destroying the entire universe. In Partin, Doc smirks when he learns that his future dog is named Einstein. Yet in part I, Marty videotapes Doc’s time Pavel experiment with Einstein, and the 1955 Doc watches the tape. Since Doc’s reaction to Einstein in Part HI indicates he did not know about the dog, we can only assume that Doc never watched that portion of the tape — or didn’t pay much attention to it.




What are some of the details to look for on repeated viewings? As fans of the films know, all three films contain lots of details, some of which are not evident until you see the movie more than once. Here are only a few things you may not have noticed:


- In Part II, very difficult to read, is a sign in front of the Biff Tannen Museum that says “Smoking Required.”



- In Part III, Doc’s bandana is made out of the shirt he was wearing in Part II when he got sent back to 1885.


- In 1885, “Honest” Joe Statler, dealt in buying, selling and trading of horses in Hill Valley. In Back To The Future Part I, the name of the Toyota dealership is Statler Toyota. (And in 1955, the Studebaker dealer was Statler Motors, which can be seen on a billboard at the Drive-In in Back To The Future Part III.) Obviously, the Statler family has been in the transportation business for a long time!



- In Part III, at the Drive-In, the three films playing, listed on the marquee, are all sequels and all Universal films.

- In Part III, when Marty and Doc are at the train station looking at the map of Shonash Ravine, Clara is standing in the background, with her back to us, waiting for someone to pick her up.


Is there going to be a BACK TO THE FUTURE — PART IV? We have no plans or desires to make a Part IV. We think we’ve taken Doc and Marty through an odyssey that’s rounded them both out as complete characters and which also suggests they’ll both have fine futures; we’ve developed and executed almost every time travel idea that’s ever interested us, and we feel that another Back To The Future would only get stale and hackneyed. Plus Michael J Fox isn't in the shape to do a movie, and nobody wants to see Marty McFly having Parkinson's disease, and nobody wants to see another actor playing Marty McFly if it's supposed to be a continuation. "We've already seen the Star Wars films and Luke Skywalker is an old guy. That may be a little bit painful, right? "We learn from the fact that so many studios have gone back to the well on some of their franchise properties too many times, and the audiences are disappointed and say, 'Oh my God, they ruined my childhood. ''' Nevertheless, the original Back to the Future movie has been made into a musical that is currently playing in Manchester ahead of a move to the West End later this season.



"We don't want to ruin anybody's childhood, and doing a musical was the perfect way to give the public more Back to the Future without messing up what has gone before."

Back in 2015, Robert Zemeckis confirmed that Back to the Future Part IV or a reboot is impossible until they both die (he means the producer and writer Bob Gale and as himself).



Copyright materials and Original Source from : https://www.backtothefuture.com



Back To The Future Series: Hidden Timelines by John S. Davis
Back To The Future Series: Hidden Timelines by John S. Davis

Welcome to The Daily Strange! In the years to follow, we’ll be taking you on an exclusive and personal behind the scenes trip to the sets of Back To The Future Part II and Part III We’ll be talking to those people behind the camera (like Bob Gale, Robert Zemeckis, and Neil Canton on this article) whose imaginations gave birth to the trilogy of movies we all love as well as the talented actors who bring the filmmakers' visions of the past, present and future to life. In addition, we’ll have regular features on various aspects of the Back To The Future movies, including articles on the remarkable special effects that George Lucas’ Industrial Light and Magic have created for the films, as well as informative articles on the creation and design of the time-periods Marty and Doc visit.


We also encourage you, for our new visitors, to write your comments and opinions about the Back To The Future movies, comics, books, emulator games, and BTTF upcoming events. This will be your opportunity to make your feelings known not only to other ’'Back To Future” general concepts but also the cast and crew as well. Thanks to Back To The Future Fan Club, ''Daily Strange'' will continue to add new Back To The Future products as they become available.


HERE ARE THE MAIN CHEMICALS AND UNIQUE COMBINATIONS

OF THE BACK TO THE FUTURE SERIES


I - MARTY AND THE DOC


It's never explained why a normal teenager of average intelligence would hang around with a scientist old enough to be his granddad yet you never question the relationship at the center of the movie. They're one of the 1980s cinema's great double acts, each supported by a sparkling script unafraid to let dialogue overshadow visual pyrotechnics. And even with the hindsight that comes from watching the movie 50-something times. Marty's failed attempts, to warn the Doc of his impending death at the hands of Libyans are genuinely heartbreaking.




II - CHUCK BERRY & ROCK'N ROLL


The super-efficient Back To The Future script should be held up as an example to all aspiring screenwriters. Nearly every scene advances the narrative, whether it's sneaking in a crafty glimpse at the sights and sounds of 1985-Hill Valley courtesy of Marty's skateboard voyages, or the woman collecting money for the ''Save the Clocktower'' campaign - surely the most important Chugger in cinema history. The only exception is Marty's slightly indulgent rendition of ''Johnny B. Goode'', and that's an excuse that helped Chuck Berry invent rock and roll.




III - UNIQUE CHARACTERS AND ALTERNATIVE VARIATONS


Lea Thompson, Crispin Glover and Thomas F. Wilson probably didn't relish the hours they spent in the make-up chair to play the 47-year-old versions of their characters, but their sacrifice was well worth it. Zemeckis could easily have hired middle-aged look-alikes to play the older Lorraine, George and Biff, but would have had to waste precious screen time establishing they're the same girl, nerd, and jock 30 years on - and lost the comedy potential of the comb-over, overweight nobody Biff has become.




IV - SENSE OF HUMOUR

Few films pull of the self-referential gag quite as well or as often as Back To The Future, and it's not all blatantly obvious jokes like Marty being named after his Calvin Klein underwear, or Doc Brown getting flummoxed by the prospect of jobbing actor Ronald Reagan becoming President of the USA. Some are genuinely subtle: for example, only the truly eagle-eyed will spot that Twin Pines Mall has become Lone Pine Mall come the end of the movie, thanks to Marty's unintentional demolition of Old Man Peabody's evergreen-breeding program.





V - MAGICAL CHOICE OF A TIME MACHINE

If Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis had stuck with their original idea of building a time machine into a fridge - executive producer Steven Spielberg was worried about copycat kids climbing inside electrical appliances - it's unlikely we would be writing this now. Using a DeLorean with the optional extra of a Flux Capacitor is motivated and it's not just about that stainless steel exterior (although the gullwing doors do allow for a flying saucer gag when Marty first arrives in 1955). The innards are perfectly realized also, from the ludicrously called Flux Capacitor, branded with suitably lo-fi Dymo tape, to all those digital destination boards. If you grew up in the 1980s, this is the vehicle you want in your garage.




VI - FAMILY TOOLS


Examine Back To The Future's time travel too closely and you'll come up with three decades of questions. However, it's the liberties that Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale take with logic that make the movie hang together. So while it seems unlikely that the space-time continuum would see fit to gradually erase a picture of Marty's brother and sister, you've got to admit it's one hell of a plot device. As for the convenience of Marty traveling back to 30 years to the time when his parents were exactly the age he is now... Well, it does make all the maths a whole lot easier.




VII - A DELIGHTFUL ENDING

''Roads? Where we're going we don't need roads.'' It's one of the best set-up for a sequel in history, but it wouldn't matter if Parts II and III had never been made. Back To The Future belongs to a select band of movies (the original Star Wars, The Matrix) that manage to keep a clear beginning, middle and end, while opening the door to a wider universe. All summer blockbusters should take note.






VIII -CREATIVE SET DESIGN

The Hill Valley of 1955 may be a rose-tinted slice of apple-pie Americana that never really existed, but thanks to some clever set design, you completely buy that it'll turn into the slightly rundown town Marty calls home 30 years later. Filmed on the Universal backlot set that also played host to Gremlins, recurring landmarks like the all-important Clocktower help highlight the differences elsewhere - the diner turned fitness boutique and the changing face of the petrol station to ensure that while the when changes, the where stays very much the same.



IX - GOTHIC AMBIENCE

JUMP INTO A LIGHTING SCENE WITH THREE UNFORGETTABLE COMBINATIONS;

A - CLOCK TOWER: A nod to silent Harold Lloyd, as Doc Brown rocks around the Clocktower - scientist and daredevil rolled into one.



B - AMAZING THEME: Alan Silvestri's classic theme tune gets the adrenaline flowing as Doc Brown whizzes down a zip line to fix a short circuit.


C - ELEGANT & SUPERFAST TIME TRAVEL: The car hits 88mph and Marty heads back to the future. A scene so good they chose to include it in all three Back To The Future Movies.



X- A SCIENTIST HAS AN ORIGINAL STYLE

Don't be such a scientist!


Friendly, mad, and curious Doc Brown with a sense of humor combination gets all of us affected in a good way.



And we loved those lines ;





Marty: ''Wait a minute, Doc. You're telling me you built a time machine. Out of a DeLorean?

Doc: ''The way I see it, if you're going to build a time machine into a car, why not do it with some style. Besides, the stainless steel construction made, the flux dispersal...'' (Doc is interrupted by the DeLorean reappearing from one minute earlier)



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