Dialogue
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[2015 Jennifer and 1985 Jennifer see each other; they gasp in unison]
1985 Jennifer: I'm old!
2015 Jennifer: I'm young!
[they faint] Partager la citation sur facebook
Marty: So we go back to the future, and we stop Biff from stealing the time machine.
Doc: We can't, because if we travel into the future from
this point in time, it will be the future of this reality
[indicates the alternate reality on a blackboard, 1985A], in which Biff is corrupt, powerful, and married to your mother, and in which this has happened to me!
[holds up a newspaper; the headline reads: "EMMETT BROWN COMMITTED"] No. Our only chance to repair the present is in the past, at the point where the timeline skewed into this tangent. In order to put the universe back as we remember it and get back to our reality, we have to find out the exact date and specific circumstances of how, when, and where young Biff got his hands on that sports almanac.
Marty: I'll ask him.
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Old Biff:
[about the copy of "Grey's Sports Almanac" from the future] The information in here is worth millions. And I'm giving it to you.
Young Biff:
[sarcastically] That's very nice. Thank you very much. Now, why don't you make like a tree and get outta here?
Old Biff:
[smacks his younger self] It's "leave", you idiot! "Make like a tree, and
leave"! You sound like a damn fool when you say it wrong!
Young Biff: All right, then
leave! And take your book with you!
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[after Marty has gone back to 1985, the Marty that came from the alternate 1985 suddenly shows up from down the street and runs to the unsuspecting 1955 Doc]
Marty: Doc, Doc!
[grabs Doc, who shouts in shock] Okay. Okay! Relax, Doc! It's me! It's Marty!
Doc: No! It can't be! I just sent you back to the future.
Marty: I know. You did send me back to the future, but I'm back. I'm back
from the future.
Doc: Great Scott!
[faints] Taglines
About
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Once the film came out and was this huge success, the studio very quickly said, "We must have a sequel!" But because the second one was such a long script, and they couldn't find any way to shorten it, they decided to make it as two films. I'm surprised the second one wasn't marketed as "part two of three". A lot of people found it less rewarding because it didn't have the fun and lightness of the first one, but then the third one makes sense of the second – it all connects up. I think the first film resonates so well with audiences because of the element of wish-fulfilment at its heart. We've all said to ourselves, "I wish I could go back in time and change something" or, "If only I could do that over again."