two things always stuck out to me about second Marty in this scene. One stopping himself for a moment to admire his parents who were once young like him and in love a lot like him and Jennifer. The second being Marty stopping himself again to watch himself on stage and admire his own guitar skills from another perspective and giving himself a nod of approval which I always thought was hilarious.
@@RawiriG69it's looks good I love it so much it's looks like part of power of time travel into most of the world part time past flash back past life look back in time travel would definitely
I wonder, if Biff's henchmen hadn't mistaken Past Marty for Future Marty and Future Marty still had the time to watch his past self's over-the-top Johnny B. Goode guitar solo, what would he have thought?
3:44 I love how the shots of Mr Strickland looking out of the window as Biff pulls Marty out of the car completely line up perfectly, that is some serious attention to detail by the producers
Except Strickland isn't attracted by Biff and Marty; he's drawn by the sound of a car horn playing La Cucaracha - a sound which isn't heard in the original.
It's interesting how he doesn't intervene, even though he sees his two least favorite students starting a fight. I wonder if he had seen Biff assaulting Lorraine, would he have helped then?
@@SuStel Maybe, there was a car horn somewhere else, nearby, that only Strickland could hear, and he was distracted by both: his heavy drink and the car horn in the distance, that he totally missed the fight happening in the parking lot. That's the only explanation I can think of!
@@ashish714 The answer is that (a) sound is being played with so that the audience can hear both the office and the outside, but the characters can't hear all that, and (2) the altercation happening in the car isn't all that loud. The only person being loud is Lorraine, and he voice is muffled, as we hear. All Strickland would observe would be a parked car with maybe someone in it.
@@SuStel 3:50, Strickland opens the blinds for a better view, at the exact moment Biff throws Marty out of the car, and his 3 friends are clearly taking swigs from bottles. Strickland was just giving Biff a hard time about drinking at the dance; he should have responded to the gang causing trouble outside, especially since he had a clear view. Except, he was buzzed from his own drink and totally distracted by the La Cucaracha car horn off in the distance.
to this day i'm still impressive how well they synchronized everything..that's some damn attention of details that not everyone even thinks about, especially in a trilogy this old
That is true. It's amazing how everything from 1955 was duplicated nearly perfectly from part 1. Only a few minor differences here and there, but great production nonetheless. Then again, they had 4 years between parts 1 and 2 which is a lot of time to get everything just right.
Several parts of the movies exist, when the actors have to disappear as the movies are made. It is nice, how these movies are made, filled with love, actors are concurrent to each other, when one approaches slowly, they have to disappear.
I’m not sure if any editing magic on this video is happening or not. I do love that they did take so time to combine the two movies into one timeline. BTTF 2 hooked me, love the brilliance of Gale, Zemeckis and Spielberg.
I punched ones like that. Ones you start getting older you think before wanting to throw punches. It is very compromising. You'd rather go home, eat a good meal, take a warm shower, set your alarm clock, and go to bed.
Oh no I didn't want to know when he is trying to grab the book from the desk is when he's kissing his mother. I won't be able to watch it the same way again. 😭
Thanks for this side-by-side! There is an overlapping part where Marty says "Jesus, you smoke, too?" and that scene has extended conversation with second Marty sliding under the car door. Maybe it doesn't quite line up with the rest of the timings, but I feel that shouldn't have been left out.
In the original Back to the Future, George started to turn against Biff while in Part II, Marty was trying to take back an almanac from Biff! What a troublemaker Biff was!
One huge plot difference is that in Part I, the only time Fox’s character was called Calvin Klein was in a brief scene in Lorraine’s bedroom. After he tells Lorraine that his name is Marty, then in the rest of the movie both Lorraine and George call him Marty. But in Part II in the 1955 scenes, Lorraine and others still refer to him as Calvin Klein. That’s a huge continuity mistake.
He told Lorraine "People usually call me Marty". She responds "Nice to know you, Marty Klein". When he is skateboarding she says "It's Calvin Klein, he is a dream!", so she thinks he is Marty Calvin. She mentioned him as Calvin talking to Biff.
@@Сайтамен But in the end of Part I in 1955 when George and Lorraine say their final goodbyes to Marty on the staircase, Lorraine specifically calls him "Marty".
I love how perfect the producers nailed the timing too! You can see that Strickland looks through the window at Biff pulling Marty out of the car, and you can see both versions of George finding Biff in the car timed perfectly with nearly the exact same movements! Only noticeable delays being Marty running outside after George punches Biff and like a half second delay on Johnny B. Goode.
1:50 The "Jesus you smoke too" happens right when 1985A marty is going next to 1955 Marty's car And the "Marty, why are you so nervous" is after Marty gets to the front of the car The "when I have kids I'll let them do whatever I want" is during the cut You can hear them talking
I always wondered Why does Doc isnt annoyed that Marty was doing a song that didnt existed yet (the one who comes from 1985) Obviously he cant do anything about it but he didnt even bother
We don't see either Marty in the moments his hand starts to fade away and I believe it's because both the Marty on stage AND the "inconspicuously" dressed Marty are fading away until George kisses Lorraine.
Question: Is that the alternate Marty in 1955 that grew up with rich parents and has a Toyota pickup truck or the original Marty that rides a skateboard as a mode of transportation?
@@epice6463 That Marty is a hot head that can't stand to be called chicken. I believe our Marty began to change gradually as BTTF 2 moved forward. Poor Marty erased from existence.
If stopping Marty's parents from meeting can slowly change history so he's never born, then changing his father's confidence can slowly turn skateboard-Marty into pickup-truck-Marty. It's my pet theory that this transformation is also responsible for Marty strangely becoming susceptible to bad judgment whenever someone calls him chicken.
When George knocks Biff out, in the first film, Marty arrived to see Biff slide off the car and fall to the floor. In the second film though, the 1st Marty arrives and stops after Biff is splayed on the floor. How does that work?
If I recall correctly, isn't it a prosthetic face of Crispin Glover over the replacement actor's place? Since he didn't return for the second film, it's a different actor
@@epice6463 yeah that is definitely Glover in that flashback clip; you have the same two extras walking behind him, but their timing is different, plus there's a couple of extra extras in one of them. And Glover's movements are slightly different as well. So it's Glover, and shot for use in the first movie, but a different take than they ended up using in the first movie. For some reason
I'm not sure it was right to do this. I mean, you and all of us know George McFly was played by a different actor in each film. How close if a match did you expect to get? It didn't make sense to go for this knowing you'd only get so close, especially when the two films and connections between them are so largely predicated on events that only happened once and the consequences of those events depending upon specific outcomes, especially in a film series about time travel! Come on!
two things always stuck out to me about second Marty in this scene. One stopping himself for a moment to admire his parents who were once young like him and in love a lot like him and Jennifer. The second being Marty stopping himself again to watch himself on stage and admire his own guitar skills from another perspective and giving himself a nod of approval which I always thought was hilarious.
My favourite is when he stops his mother from drinking, and when he comes back to the present, she looks happy 😊
@@RawiriG69it's looks good I love it so much it's looks like part of power of time travel into most of the world part time past flash back past life look back in time travel would definitely
I wonder, if Biff's henchmen hadn't mistaken Past Marty for Future Marty and Future Marty still had the time to watch his past self's over-the-top Johnny B. Goode guitar solo, what would he have thought?
3:44 I love how the shots of Mr Strickland looking out of the window as Biff pulls Marty out of the car completely line up perfectly, that is some serious attention to detail by the producers
Except Strickland isn't attracted by Biff and Marty; he's drawn by the sound of a car horn playing La Cucaracha - a sound which isn't heard in the original.
It's interesting how he doesn't intervene, even though he sees his two least favorite students starting a fight. I wonder if he had seen Biff assaulting Lorraine, would he have helped then?
@@SuStel Maybe, there was a car horn somewhere else, nearby, that only Strickland could hear, and he was distracted by both: his heavy drink and the car horn in the distance, that he totally missed the fight happening in the parking lot. That's the only explanation I can think of!
@@ashish714 The answer is that (a) sound is being played with so that the audience can hear both the office and the outside, but the characters can't hear all that, and (2) the altercation happening in the car isn't all that loud. The only person being loud is Lorraine, and he voice is muffled, as we hear. All Strickland would observe would be a parked car with maybe someone in it.
@@SuStel 3:50, Strickland opens the blinds for a better view, at the exact moment Biff throws Marty out of the car, and his 3 friends are clearly taking swigs from bottles. Strickland was just giving Biff a hard time about drinking at the dance; he should have responded to the gang causing trouble outside, especially since he had a clear view. Except, he was buzzed from his own drink and totally distracted by the La Cucaracha car horn off in the distance.
1:20 Mr. Strickland is talking to Biff about liquor at the same time Lorraine drinks booze,wow that is good attention to detail.
to this day i'm still impressive how well they synchronized everything..that's some damn attention of details that not everyone even thinks about, especially in a trilogy this old
That is true. It's amazing how everything from 1955 was duplicated nearly perfectly from part 1. Only a few minor differences here and there, but great production nonetheless. Then again, they had 4 years between parts 1 and 2 which is a lot of time to get everything just right.
@@s.hocker9222While meanwhile parts 2 and 3 were shot at nearly exactly the same time
@DittoGTI That's because Bob and Bob had originally wanted one big sequel initially
Thats the fun part about Time Travel, retracing your steps.
be careful where you step.
@@2013venjixme too Derek Llewellyn feel like flash back past life look back
Several parts of the movies exist, when the actors have to disappear as the movies are made. It is nice, how these movies are made, filled with love, actors are concurrent to each other, when one approaches slowly, they have to disappear.
someday I would love to watch the back to the future saga edited chronologically, it would be fun and a really confusing movie for first time watchers
Someone needs to make that
I once used to try that with my talent that I memorize all three movies by hard and merged from the first to the second and to the third
@@isaacheres1354 With how many times I watched this movies, I should be able to do that too
You’d have to start with the third movie, and the future segments of the second movie would be mutually incompatible
I shall do that. Mmm hmm.
imagine being friend of your dad with the same age each other, beautiful
Ikr but he doesn't know you're his own future son
If he knew he will be like wtf
I’m not sure if any editing magic on this video is happening or not. I do love that they did take so time to combine the two movies into one timeline. BTTF 2 hooked me, love the brilliance of Gale, Zemeckis and Spielberg.
I didn’t do any real editing on this video. I just put the clips side by side
@@epice6463 , great comparison video! Thanks for doing it!✌🏻
@@evhwannabe6590 thanks!
I punched ones like that. Ones you start getting older you think before wanting to throw punches. It is very compromising. You'd rather go home, eat a good meal, take a warm shower, set your alarm clock, and go to bed.
Oh no I didn't want to know when he is trying to grab the book from the desk is when he's kissing his mother. I won't be able to watch it the same way again. 😭
Strickland looks out the window as soon as Biff pulls Marty out of the car
Avengers Endgame time heist scenes are definitely inspired from BTTF2.
Damn... i never thought of that before in that way..
Thanks for this side-by-side!
There is an overlapping part where Marty says "Jesus, you smoke, too?" and that scene has extended conversation with second Marty sliding under the car door. Maybe it doesn't quite line up with the rest of the timings, but I feel that shouldn't have been left out.
In the original Back to the Future, George started to turn against Biff while in Part II, Marty was trying to take back an almanac from Biff! What a troublemaker Biff was!
One huge plot difference is that in Part I, the only time Fox’s character was called Calvin Klein was in a brief scene in Lorraine’s bedroom. After he tells Lorraine that his name is Marty, then in the rest of the movie both Lorraine and George call him Marty. But in Part II in the 1955 scenes, Lorraine and others still refer to him as Calvin Klein. That’s a huge continuity mistake.
He told Lorraine "People usually call me Marty". She responds "Nice to know you, Marty Klein". When he is skateboarding she says "It's Calvin Klein, he is a dream!", so she thinks he is Marty Calvin. She mentioned him as Calvin talking to Biff.
@@Сайтамен But in the end of Part I in 1955 when George and Lorraine say their final goodbyes to Marty on the staircase, Lorraine specifically calls him "Marty".
@@bluemountain555 Yes, it's a double name for her.
@@bluemountain555 She thinks: his legal name is "Calvin Klein", and "Marty" is only his nickname or maybe his middle name at best.
I love how perfect the producers nailed the timing too!
You can see that Strickland looks through the window at Biff pulling Marty out of the car, and you can see both versions of George finding Biff in the car timed perfectly with nearly the exact same movements!
Only noticeable delays being Marty running outside after George punches Biff and like a half second delay on Johnny B. Goode.
I love these types of videos where two events from different parts of the story make up the same time line, great job friend 👌💯
Feel like set up for Derek Llewellyn feel like flash back past life look back in time travel would
@@derekllewellyn6663What?
@@derekllewellyn6663What?
8:15 I love it when he asks "How'd he change his clothes so fast?"
Thanks for stitching them together. After having watched them, I was interested to watch both scenes side by side.
God tier editing.
Thanks
1:50
The "Jesus you smoke too" happens right when 1985A marty is going next to 1955 Marty's car
And the "Marty, why are you so nervous" is after Marty gets to the front of the car
The "when I have kids I'll let them do whatever I want" is during the cut
You can hear them talking
4:15 this aint No Peep Show! Lol, in The German dub, Biff Just Said, this aint No Show🤣
Clever. What a brilliant idea well done
Thanks!
@@epice6463 you’re welcome
I always wondered
Why does Doc isnt annoyed that Marty was doing a song that didnt existed yet (the one who comes from 1985) Obviously he cant do anything about it but he didnt even bother
Maybe he didn’t know 🤔
You might wanna edit your comment
I wondered that too
5:38 I wish if i was mcfly
Back to the future part 2 (1989) - back to 1985
The dedication to this video is so amazing! You put 22 minutes in!
Thanks it took a while to make
@@epice6463 I respect you a lot, I wanted to watch this so much that I used my mobile data because I was in the car
We don't see either Marty in the moments his hand starts to fade away and I believe it's because both the Marty on stage AND the "inconspicuously" dressed Marty are fading away until George kisses Lorraine.
Back to the Future(1985-1990)
Music:Alan Silvestri(1985-1990)
Lyrics:Glen Ballard
@@jimmymccartney2049 one of the best movie soundtracks
The hand left is good
Question: Is that the alternate Marty in 1955 that grew up with rich parents and has a Toyota pickup truck or the original Marty that rides a skateboard as a mode of transportation?
I always figured that when Marty and doc go back in time to 1955 in the second movie they were watching the Marty that grew with the rich family
@@epice6463 That Marty is a hot head that can't stand to be called chicken. I believe our Marty began to change gradually as BTTF 2 moved forward. Poor Marty erased from existence.
@@Maxxroad it’s a good thing he finally gets past that “chicken” problem in the third movie
If stopping Marty's parents from meeting can slowly change history so he's never born, then changing his father's confidence can slowly turn skateboard-Marty into pickup-truck-Marty.
It's my pet theory that this transformation is also responsible for Marty strangely becoming susceptible to bad judgment whenever someone calls him chicken.
@@SuStel I always thought that too
I think he took his wallet.
🤣🤣🤣
6:36😂
The "doctor" punched Biff, and stole his wallet
I always felt so bad for Crispin. All these years later he still has hatred in his heart for Bob Gale doing this illegal activity in the film.
Huh
He worked with gale again on a different film later after bttf 2 so I think they are even
He shouldn’t have been a sore loser just take his money and move on that’s life in Hollywood. It he doesn’t like it then he shouldn’t be an actor.
Do you mean punching him
Never mess with George Mcfly (punching Biff scene)
When George knocks Biff out, in the first film, Marty arrived to see Biff slide off the car and fall to the floor. In the second film though, the 1st Marty arrives and stops after Biff is splayed on the floor. How does that work?
Wait, did they use different takes for the clip of George dancing infront of Neptune? How strange
I honestly don’t know because that looks a lot like Crispin Glover to me
If I recall correctly, isn't it a prosthetic face of Crispin Glover over the replacement actor's place? Since he didn't return for the second film, it's a different actor
@@epice6463 yeah that is definitely Glover in that flashback clip; you have the same two extras walking behind him, but their timing is different, plus there's a couple of extra extras in one of them. And Glover's movements are slightly different as well. So it's Glover, and shot for use in the first movie, but a different take than they ended up using in the first movie. For some reason
@@GroovingPict I wonder why they used a different take
@@shareefmartin9320 yeah, but it’s pretty easy to tell if it’s the other actor wearing Crispin’s prosthetics.
This is really cool.
Thanks
cool video!
The first time I uploaded it, it was taken down. So I had to trim a little bit and thankfully this time it was only copyright claimed.
lo bien hecha que está 😮
I am glad to see this
9:16 look at the bottom of the screen
pidetmam
SAM E CAT 1
SAM E CAT 2
SAM E CAT FREDNIAD
JADE RODDE 1
SAM E CAT FREDNIAD
JADE RODDE 2
SAM e. CATJOSHUA
ChavesSAM e CAT
I'm not sure it was right to do this. I mean, you and all of us know George McFly was played by a different actor in each film. How close if a match did you expect to get? It didn't make sense to go for this knowing you'd only get so close, especially when the two films and connections between them are so largely predicated on events that only happened once and the consequences of those events depending upon specific outcomes, especially in a film series about time travel! Come on!
If Glover didn’t leave he wouldn’t played Seamus Mcfly in the third movie
um verdadeiro clássico de todos os tempos
Aye yoo 💀💀 9:21