Marty was pursued by Biff's bodyguard his 1955 gang of Match, Skinhead, and 3-D and later by Biff himself. After Marty ran away, Biff started shooting at him. 'Go ahead kid, jump Suicide'll be nice and neat.' Biff Tannen. A man of fervent but private faith his whole life, the last few years have been interesting, with hundreds of invitations to speak at conferences and. Marty is cornered by a gun-wielding Biff on the roof of Biff Tannen's Pleasure Palace. It's personal." Back to the Future Part II plays off this: the tagline for Jaws 19 is "This Time It's REALLY REALLY Personal." According to the marquee, the movie is directed by Max Spielberg, Steven's oldest son. Tom Wilson is a creative artist whose professional career has explored almost every imaginable artistic discipline, blending them into a unique and very individual declaration of a life in the arts. The subsequent three sequels were less successful, including 1987's Jaws: The Revenge, which had the tagline "This time. Also in the window are Jaws and Jaws 2 VHS tapes: executive producer Steven Spielberg directed the first movie to great acclaim in 1975. Zemeckis directed Who Framed Roger Rabbit in 1988 - the year before Back to the Future Part II came out - which also starred Christopher Lloyd. Look for the Roger Rabbit toy in the antiques store window. The second movie has even more references. (By the way, the driver of the Jeep is not Steven Spielberg or Harrison Ford: Gale and Zemeckis confirmed in the DVD commentary that it's the film's stunt coordinator, Walter Scott.) Former diner employee-turned mayor Goldie Wilson (Donald Fullilove) passed his political aspirations to the next generation: a campaign poster in 2015 reads "Re-elect Mayor Wilson Jr." Meanwhile, the third Wilson generation took a different career path: Fullilove plays Goldie Wilson III in a hologram ad for a service that turns your boring old road car into one that flies.įor example, when Marty hitches a ride to school on the back of a Jeep in the first movie, he skates past a sign that reads "Used Cars," the title of a 1980 movie by Gale and Zemeckis. There's one more family that's had an impact on Hill Valley throughout the decades. In 1885, Honest Joe Statler buys and sells horses, and in 1955, the family has a Studebaker dealership in the town square (they have a billboard at the drive-in theater in Back to the Future Part III.) The first dialogue in the trilogy is an ad played over a clock radio for the Statler Toyota dealership in downtown Hill Valley: the one selling the 4X4 Marty eventually gets. George makes gasping noises and smiles goofily for a few minutes, realizing that he does indeed have the potential to be courageous. When Biff turns to face him, George punches Biff in the face, knocking him out cold. In an FAQ answering some of the most commonly asked Back to the Future questions, Zemeckis and Gale wrote that people should look for references to the Statlers' various transportation businesses. George, seeing Biff tormenting Lorraine, begins to shake with fury.
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