@@CommodoreAvery you're not alone, I've seen this movie in the theater growing up at 9 years old, now 48, just learnt this fact in the past couple of years LOL
Oh hon, I could see you were overwhelmed by emotion at one point and that it wasn’t just the movie. I’m so sorry you lost your parents so young. Today happens to be the anniversary of both my mother’s birthday in 1931 and her passing in 2021 at the age of 90. I was so lucky to have her for a mom, an incredible artist, musician, and expert horsewoman. No matter how old we are, we never stop missing our parents. But, wasn’t this a great movie? I’ll tell you I still remember walking out of that theatre in Banff Alberta, where I lived. My friends and I were walking down Main Street just jabbering about what a fantastic and perfect summer movie that was. Being a Trekkie since 66 I loved the Darth Vader from Vulcan lol. The whole trilogy is wonderful. Looking forward to your next reaction. Take care.
@@bunnytailsREACTS Greetings & Salutations.👋I'd just like to say Ditto the Previous Comments...😎🙏I Really Enjoyed that and thought Your Reaction Resonated there with me and was So Beautiful.🫶🤗BTW, Movies & TV Shows (even Commmercials) will make me Well-Up & Cry🥹....Well i'm somewhat of an Empath, Easily Overwhelmed, Very Emotional & Will Cry at the drop of a Hat. OMG, I kid you Not. LOL.😁I was only 16 yrs old when this movie was released wayback in 1985. I Read the Book First. I''m 55 yrs young Now and Movies/TV Shows (even some Commericals) still will make me get so Teary-eyed. Although I do suspect it's normal that someone can cry after a movie at any age. For as long as I can remember, i've cried like I just got done chopping onions during certain movies. Whether at home or in a theater, I just can't seem to hold back the waterworks when watching certain more powerful, poignant or emotive films. Sometimes you just Resonate & Empathize with the Person on what's being shown because it makes you feel a certain way, and sometimes you don't. When it comes to the former, it often reflects the connection to the characters, storyline, "or something that triggers some.” Your attention is captured and emotions elicited by the movie's story. Empaths can effortlessly step into someone else's shoes, even if they're fictional characters on a screen. This heightened level of empathy means you're likely more attuned to the emotions around you, causing you to be more affected by emotional movie scenes. Even the Music Soundtrack can be too Overwhelming. It could be a Sign of your Emotional Strength. University of Canberra professor of psychology Deborah Rickwood tells Afternoons crying in the movies is a sign that your brain is releasing the hormone oxytocin. And we have All Experienced Loss, Heartbreak, & Traumatic Emotional Situations. I Know that Crying at Movies is a Actually "Sign of Strength!" Now I also think too that Crying in response to a movie reveals High Empathy, Social Awareness & Human Connection - "All Aspects of High Emotional-Intelligence." So in Closing: God Bless, Belated Happy Thanksgiving, Happy Holidays & I Wish You All the Best.🙂🙌
Haha… I stopped the video to say the same thing but you beat me to it . I’m glad other people noticed the cameo. The irony that he thinks the band and his own song are too loud is priceless.
@@giovanniboianelli1260 FYI, Huey Lewis is going deaf and is unable to sing. But the deafness was not caused by loud music. In April 2018, Lewis revealed that he had hearing loss as a result of Ménière's disease.
Hi Bunny, I am 64 and have watched Back to the Future countless time. The whole trilogy was soooooo well done and well written and acted that it is one of the best trilogies EVER. You will love the next two movies.
I think she should watch the other two right away so she doesn't forget details from the first one. Then do the editing whenever she wants. BTTF is basically like one huge movie in 3 parts
No mam. They don't make movies like this anymore. Watching your emotional reaction is exactly how I feel about this movie! Fantastic reaction!! Thank you!
@@bunnytailsREACTSI enjoyed this too Bunny. You asked a question at 45:24 and I think your reaction is a combination of the memories of this movies you had as a kid, and the fact that Hollywood doesn't make this well written, positive feeling movies like this any more. A lot of them are made to be relatable to real life but no one wants this. Many feature nilistic overtones or subtexts, along with trying to fit in forced diversity messages ahead of what's really important - the story. The most extreme contrast and one that has me turning on the tears Star Trek. JJ Abrams and Alex Kurtzman can't get anywhere close to what was produced for old school Star Trek. I well up when I hear those classic theme tunes or watch amazing scenes such as the Spock and Kirk at the end of the OG Wrath of Khan. Or when Spock looks back and remembers Kirk. Good storylines that offer hope. I wish Hollywood could get back to making great movies again.
Yes they do. They make very great future film classic masterpieces regularly these days. You have to keep your eyes open, know where they are and understand how to appreciate them. But they are everywhere, at least 10 top-tier masterpiece films per year. You just have to pay attention.
@@НинадаТарапицца Yes, I think explained what loud meant in the 80's and 90's, but maybe it got scratched. You are absolutely right. It was used to describe something so obnoxiously tasteless that it would stand out in a crowd. Like a neon Hawaiin shirt in a room full of tuxedos
I don't know if I personally feel that this is the best trilogy ever, but if not, it's pretty close. I do, however, DEFINITELY agree with the commonly held belief among film critics that this movie is as close to a perfect film that has ever been made.
The actual moral of this movie is about placing those you love before yourself. George knocked out Biff to save Lorraine, more than any kind of vengeance. His confidence after that enabled him to submit his writings, which is why the family is more well-off 30 years later. Some have said the film's ending promotes materialism, but I say they're not paying attention.
Yes, Chuck Berry was the original artist who sang Johnny B. Goode. It was released in March of 1958, so in this scenario, it would've taken a couple of years to perfect the song.
In 1977, a recording of Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode" was included on a golden disc sent to space with the Voyager mission. The mission continues today. Some day, extraterrestrial life may try to communicate with us with that song.
"Great Scott" was an expression found in comic books of the 1950's and 60's, especially Superman. "Daddy-o was another kind of expression in the 1950's. Like "what time is it? " Quarter past 4." "Thanks, Daddy-o." As a musician and former music teacher, I automatically focus on music. The first song the band plays at the dance is a standard big band song: "Night Train" has a long and complicated history. The piece's opening riff was first recorded in 1940 by a small group led by Duke Ellington sideman Johnny Hodges, under the title "That's the Blues, Old Man". By 1951 the riff you hear was borrowed to write the song Night Train, a twelve-bar blues instrumental standard first recorded by Jimmy Forrest in 1951.
There are many references to movies and TV shows much more subtle than Darth Vader and Vulcan. The first switch on the guitar amp is labeled CRM114. That's from Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove. The farmer's name was Peabody, and he had a son named Sherman, revealed in the credits. On the Rocky & Bullwinkle show there was a dog named Mr. Peabody who had a pet boy named Sherman. They had a time machine called the Wayback Machine. Mr. Peabody was a time travelling dog, and Einstein was a time travelling dog. I'm sure that Christopher Lloyd hanging from the clock had to be an homage to a famous silent film scene of Harold Lloyd hanging from a clock. I'll bet there are more Easter eggs that I haven't found yet.
Very interesting! I would add the Marty’s guitar is played by Eddy Van Halen who was born in 1955. The modern skateboard was invented in the mid 1950s in California. Also, when they attach the camcorder to Doc’s tv in 1955, they are using an RCA plug invented in the mid50s. I could add Chitty Chitty Bang Bang to the iconic car list.
I was an usher in the local theatre in 1985 and saw the movie about 180 times. I still enjoy it and watch reactions. I love your flood of emotion on this one, I get that way when things remind me of my childhood and family. Love your channel, thanks for being genuine!
Fun fact: the original actor who was going to be Marty was Eric Stoltz. The production wanted Michael J. Fox but he was in a contract with the production of the NBC sitcom, Family Ties, and they wouldn't let him out even temporarily to let him make this film. Eric, while being an excellent actor, just didn't get the comedy of the material and was playing Marty too seriously. They filmed with him for several weeks but it wasn't working out. In the meantime, this production company and the series producer came up with a compromise. The film could have Fox but only at night and on weekends when he wasn't on the tv set. So Michael had to transport back and forth between sets on a mattress in the back of a station wagon about 2 hours each way. He survived on very little sleep during the production of this film. But hey, he was barely in his 20's at the time.. lol The only shot kept from anything Eric shot was the punch of Biff in the cafe. Much footage had to be reshot when they let Eric go.
Remember Fox was filming this at same time as doing a TV series going on 4 hrs of sleep a day for a month and a half. Amazing he did this well. AWESOME.
He’s talked about it in interviews about how sleep deprived he was. Sometimes he’d forget which character he’s playing. He’d be at rehearsals for his sitcom calling the actor who plays his dad, “Doc”. 🤣
Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis PARTY ON, MFers!
Thank you for allowing us to be apart of this, for you, a very important and emotional moment. I look forward to your reaction to the rest of the trilogy. I was 8 years old in 1985. Unfortunately I didn’t get to see it until about a year later when you could rent it on VHS.
Notice the name of the mall starts off as "Twin Pines Mall" but at the end the sign reads "Lone Pine Mall" since Marty ran over one of the old man's pine trees!
Fun fact: the ending of the movie was meant to be just a fun and humorous punchline to the film, but Back to the Future was a massive, instant hit, and the studio told Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale that they had to make a sequel. So the ending, of course, became the launching point of the second film, but it was never the original intent.
@@bunnytailsREACTS Likewise and did you know there was yet another actress not Elizabeth Shue who would cast as Jennifer in the sequels but Malora Hardin was also cast as Jennifer when Claudia Wells had to leave the production to work on a tv pilot and then returned when the show wasn't picked up. Most people aren't aware of this LOL! There are photos that prove this.
I think it has been said that they brought back Claudia Wells when Michael J. Fox replaced Eric Stoltz. The other girl was too tall to work as Fox’s girlfriend.
I saw this in theater when it came out in the 80s and I was just a teenager. Funny to see it again with the old Sony Walkman. And I just noticed the judge at the beginning of the movie at the guitar audition is Huey Lewis. It was his bands music at the beginning “Power of Love”…another addendum… I think the Dukes of Hazzard car is the most iconic
THIS!!!! Is why reaction channels are so amazing!!! I experienced this in the theaters and watching your precious reaction just really brought it all back like new!! Thank you so much. I’m so thankful I get to follow along with you and experience just a piece of your perceptions and it’s just a wonderful thing. Thank you so much and I hope you and your family have a very fulfilling Thanksgiving!! ❤
That’s the exact outfit you watched Plato’s Stepchildren in 3 weeks ago. I remember commenting that that top was your color. And I also remember that I forgot to comment on those bottoms. Somewhere out there there’s a zebra saying “Brr… it’s cold out here!”
When this came out I was 12 years old. Huey Lewis and The News were in the middle of a 4 year run as the biggest band in the world and MTV was in its heyday. A great time to be alive. Great reaction as always 👍🏼👏🏼👏🏼
I saw this movie in the theater, along with my soon to be wife. We watched the sequels in the theater and then I bought the movies on DVD and showed my son (who is now 25). This is the benefit of have parents (like me) who are so anxious to share what they love that they share movies with kids who will be too young to remember them. For me, since I'm from an older generation, the most iconic car is James Bond's Aston Martin DB5. I'm happy for you that this brought back memories. The fact that memories can be recovered is like a gift from the past. Happy Thanksgiving. I do hope you watch the other films in the trilogy.... I'll be there.
This reaction is the most heartfelt one I have ever seen. Thank you so much. Beautiful. This is one of my favorite movies. Fun fact, this movie was never planned to be a sequel. Most movie critics back then thought it was destined to bomb in the theaters. After it became a huge hit, the studio pushed to get 2 and 3 made.
One of the best movies ever made!!! Every detail has a set up and payoff later in the script. The whole trilogy is a good one and thank God, Robert Zemeckis is not allowing any sequels, reboots or remakes while he's alive. This is just one of these trilogies that should never be remade.
Yeah, it's surprising the emotional moments in this one, gets me all the time. And the intensity! I remember watching this in the theater and my heart was racing for the last 30 minutes! Great reaction, such a good movie to share!
There's a fantastic blooper from this movie where the prop crew switched out the bottle and filled with actual liquor, Michael J. Fox is hilarious in it. Loved your emotional reaction. I saw this movie in the theater with my mother and she was in high school in 1955 so she was able to explain everything to me that I didn't understand. Great memory.
Bunny, how you felt in this movie is similar to how we feel when we watch Star Trek:TOS with you. I remember seeing my mom in a similar dress as Lorraine and Dad wore George's exact same long white blazer and black bowtie in their prom pictures. I'm just happy for you that you can get such a nostalgic experience now as when we watched it back in 1985. My parents loved it. Please react to the two sequels. We will all enjoy seeing the delight in your face. Great reaction Bunny!
Isn't it great when you haven't seen a movie and can't remember most of it, the feeling you get when it comes back to you. Absolutely loved your reaction. Greatest trilogy ever.
New sub here - FANTASTIC EDITING‼️ Really enjoyed watching this. You give the movie room to breathe while adding fun stuff here and there - we'll done 😺
I saw this in the theater in 1985 and it's still to this day, the best movie watching experience of my life. I remember everyone clapping and cheering to many moments, especially when we realized the car was about to fly.
I think it was really something for you to cry over " Back To the Future "....I don't believe I've ever see someone cry at this particular film but it shows you are a sensitive soul and a sweetheart...love your vids😊
I remember watching it in the movie theater with my brother in 1985 in the old Chinese theater in Hollywood. We loved it and I remember after the credits rolled I looked back at the audience and people were still sitting in their seats with grins from ear to ear. A masterpiece then and now
What I love about this movie on every rewatch I spot something new I missed. There are all these little call backs or things at the start of the movie that gets referenced later.
I saw this movie on opening night in 1985. The audience was reacting to everything in the movie and it made the experience really fun. Thanks for letting us watch it again with you Bunny. 🥰
I was 15 years old when I saw this in the cinema in 1985. I also saw the sequels in the cinema too. The whole trilogy is so well written and paced. You don't see good structure in movies today. The opening credits at Doc's house has so many things that pay off later. Nothing is wasted. I love your heartfelt reaction.
Most of this had to be shot at night. They started with another actor, Eric Stoltz as Marty, but he wasn't working out, and was replaced with Michael J Fox, who at the same time was part of a TV sitcom "Family Ties" Most days were rehearsing and taping that show and nights filming Back To The Future. And that field where Marty hides the DeLorean - Chino Hills, CA just before a large housing tract went up :)
In one of Fox’s memoirs he recounts that he saw them filming and learned it was a Spielberg movie and how he’d do anything to do a movie with him… a short while later we know what happened.
Alan Silvestri, who wrote the musical score to this movie, also wrote the musical score to Predator. That's why it's so amazing and intense. You can hear the similarities at times. Great reaction! Cheers!
This movie has a perfect screenplay. It is an absolute classic that anyone can enjoy. One of my favorite movies of all time. I remember seeing it when it came out, not knowing what it was about (this was before trailers gave away the whole movie), and coming out of the theater blown away with how fun and clever it was.
I saw this film opening weekend and dozens of times since I was 16 . I am 56 now . I Adored watching with you . This is one of those films you just never get tired of and can watch again and again . The Nostalgia runs very deep with this film . Takes me back to a very exciting g time to be a teenager . I was about Marty’s age in real life when I saw this . This movie gives me a sense of calm for all of those Nostalgic reasons I feel . Takes me back to a Better time in this World . And exciting time r to be alive .
THAT'S why we watch along!! For an old man, like me, nostalgia is like a time machine. The emotions you felt as you recalled your childhood, I felt too. I was a 25yo, watching for the 1st time again. Keep up the good work. ; )
The drunk at the end was the mayor in 1955, Mayor Red Thomas, "Progress is his middle name." Wben Marty comes back, he says "Red, you look great! Everything looks great!"
I felt and still feel the exact same as you did. This film means a ton to me. In all ways esp my past and nostalgia, with my child life and my passed mom, the 80s. To see you get emotional reminds me and I still feel it. I get choked up and tear still and even watching you do it too. Thank you. You watching this and your love for it and watching Star Trek, sharing and expressing is something for me. I can't wait for you to watch the rest! 🤓🥹🥲🥰
the lone pine mall was the first easter egg I've ever spotted on my own as a kid, i was so proud of myself. these thing really add a lot to the viewing experience.
I saw this multiple times in the theater, and countless times since. It was so perfectly conceived and executed that it is timeless. This one is George's story ultimately. Two is Marty's story, and Three is Doc's. As good as everyone is, the entire trilogy is a showcase for Thomas Wilson's brilliant portrayals of the different Biffs.
I remember when my sister saw this movie and was blown away by it. I eventually saw it at the theater. What I like about this movie is that it's so well made. Meeting your parents when they were both 17 and still in school, etc. This is what Hollywood needs to focus on. Just good stories with good acting.
Bunny, you react exactly as I do watching this film. The laughs, the "hell yeah!"s, the getting emotional... totally on point for me. I love watching your reactions to things i love because I know I'll get out of it what I'm seeking. I love this trilogy, it's one of the best films ever for all the reasons you give and fur sheer enjoyment factor. The music is epic, iconic, and triumphant, really gives you a surge in your chest to listen to it. The acting by everyone is amazing, Christopher Lloyd is an absolute delight, the baddies are boo-hiss and the goodies are stand-up guys and the energy of the film is brilliant. You also make a god point I'd forgotten about he nutty inventors trope; it was such an '80s/'90s staple and I'd kinda forgot about it in the other films you named that I also love. Keep up the great work!
Bunny, I saw this movie when it was first released in 1985 and have watched it again several times since. Recently, a week ago, and your reaction. I am sorry you lost your parents. I know the feeling. My sincere condolences to you. Wishing you and yours a very Happy Thanksgiving.
😎👍 Another movie you would definitely love that also revolves around the "My Dad Is An Eccentric Inventor" trope is "Mr. Peabody & Sherman" (2014). It's easily Dreamworks Animation's most underappreciated masterpiece. 😉
My next door neighbor has a time machine/ DeLorean replica and charges money at car shows to have your picture taken in it. The Delorean may just be more "iconic" because there are a lot of them around, whereas the are only a very few bat-mobiles because they are totally custom built.
BTTF is permanently lodged in my top five movies of all time since first seeing it in 1985. It is a perfect film from the script to the direction to the cast to the FX to the score. Everything is note perfect. The sequels are great too but this truly stands on its own as a perfect piece of cinematic storytelling.
Pepsi Free was a caffeine free version of Pepsi from 1982 to 1987 (it was okay tasting) Tab was a diet soda ( awful tasting) that didn’t exist yet either in 1955. So the humorous confusion of give me a tab (meaning give me the bill) when he hadn’t ordered yet. And though the store owner knew what a Pepsi was he wasn’t gonna give Marty one for free.
When you watch a film once, much can be lost from your memory. Watch it again and you create what's called a 'perceptual set' - a connection with the previous memories, which aren't really lost you just lose the route to them. By watching the film a second time you find the route to those earlier memories triggering a nostalgic effect which is likely why you got so emotional - because it also connects you to the time you saw it first. Perceptual sets are used by advertisers to imprint their product's name in your mind. It's why commercials so often repeat the name of the product/brand over and over again.
I remember the first time I saw this film. It was 86 or 87 and my uncle had recorded it from cable TV. He was helping my parents with a house project and had this movie for me to watch. I remember watching it and running downstairs and telling them "That movie was awesome! It's a To Be Continued, oh wow!" (Earlier prints of the film had To Be Continued at the end.) Decades later, my parents and uncle are gone, as is the house. I miss all of that so much. I can remember the day I watched it and how amazing it made me feel. It's sad and happy, too. I'm crying along with you. Happy Thanksgiving, Bunny and the rest of the community here.
Just thanks 👍 we've been here for your videos almost 6 months. U. Bring fun. VIBE with your words and heart u put info them all.postive energy brings joy and love and respect for all. Sophie and sister Mary today love Marty McFly's movies now, and we appreciate it! 👍 💕
@bunnytaiksREACTS you do so much good for Gladiator we cried at the same places with your reaction practically mirrored the reaction also view my Boyfriend, who saw it while serving in the Army also. Thank you for being a reall friend who's sensitive as about each presentation. Hugs Sophie! 🐇 ❤️
Great reaction to a great movie! Thanks. FYI Chuck Berry is one of a handful of men who invented rock music and probably the primary one. He was the first person inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and was inducted on the day it opened. The fast song at the dance is one he did in 1958 and is called "Johnny B. Goode."
This is such a good movie. I really enjoy watching this movie with you a lot. And I really enjoy your reaction to this movie. The very first time that I have saw this movie was when it came out on VHS. And I really enjoyed it a lot. To this day I still love this movie a lot.
I think one thing I've noticed more and more in this trilogy is the fact that some scenes have really long shots taken and the actors play them out what feels natural. The on screen chemistry just works! I think only one reactor pointed out the long takes they seem to do now and again.
Wow. You watch this movie for the first time, see the Diet Pepsi can, and say, "Wow, look at that Diet Pepsi can. I saw the movie for the first time in 1985, saw the Diet Pepsi can, and thought nothing of it. This is the movie that keeps on giving. It's almost like an unintended easter egg in a movie FULL of easter eggs.
Fun fact: The teacher with the megaphone at the beginning who says the band is "too loud", is Huey Lewis, the guy whose band created the song Marty is playing; The Power of Love.
That was an awesome reaction. Great job. I’m so glad you had fun but nice memories for you. Yeah I saw five times when I was in the theater. The first time I’ve ever seen a movie multiple times at the theater. My sister was obsessed with it too, we had to see all the parts of the trilogy and you have to too. The funny part. Is that the guy who tells Marty you’re just too loud is huey lewis who is the singer of power of love the song in the movie and back in? Time. He’s a great singer. He can’t anymore though. He has hearing damage now. Can’t even sing anymore. Which is sad. He’s my favorite artist. Musically speaking You back to. The future is considered one of the best movie scripts of all time it’s taught in multiple films schools as one movie closest to perfect written by any movie. Everything about it. It’s perfect that you can get to perfect film. Thanks for the fun until next time.
Something many people miss, when Marty asked up at the end and comes down stairs, need holding his demo tape in an envelope to send off because he gained confidence from his "new' confident father.
It has been a long time since I watched any reaction that made me this happy. Watching your heart practically burst onscreen - that was priceless. BTTF will always be one of my three favorite movies. Like you observed, I love the fact that is written, shot, and edited SO tightly. There's not a wasted frame or line. It is as close as humans can get to a perfect movie. But it isn't just technically great. It has tremendous heart. One really crazy memory I have is when I saw BTTF in 1985 , I was watching it in a theater at a mall that looked EXACTLY like Twin Pines Mall (actually filmed at Puente Hills Mall in SoCal). Our mall too had a JCPenney as the main corner anchor. It felt like if I looked outside, I'd see them driving the DeLorean through the parking lot. I was 19 at the time. It still feels like yesterday.
That was a lovely lovely and very special reaction. Thank you so much for sharing it. Seeing you get so emotional when the score kicks in and Marty and Doc are talking in front of the clock tower as the storm builds was one of the most affirming things I've ever seen and got this 40 year old grey bearded man very teary. That's the power of art, and I think, and especially music. I had a very similar experience a few years ago. I have a very early memory from when I must've been three or four years old, sitting with my (long long gone) grandfather and watching a program about the history of flight called "Reaching For The Skies". My grandfather had been a fighter pilot and watching it with him is one of my most powerful early memories as he explained what I was seeing and that moment made me love flying before I even learned how. The opening theme to that series must've somehow been burned into my subconscious and locked away. I found it here on UA-cam last year, heard it for the first time in almost four decades. The response was visceral and completely uncontrollable. I just broke down listening to it. Every time I've heard it since it's been the same. Hell, I tear up now just remembering that music. I think that's one of the great merits of art, it can link you to a time and place like nothing else. It's appropriate that your experience with it should be in such a lovely movie about travelling in time. I think moments like that are the close to real time travel as we ever get. And on a personal note, those we love are never gone, as long as we remember them. They come back in those magic little moments like this. Once again, thank you for sharing that. It was wonderful.
Great reaction! Loved watching your reaction to my favorite movie of all time. I was 13 when this came out in '85, and have watched it 100's of times in my lifetime. Your comment at 22 minutes in was hilarious---caught me off guard. Loved watching you smile and laugh all through the movie. That's the joy of watching young reactors. Some think they need to talk all though the movie---nope. Just all those small subtle reactions are a pleasure to watch.
Usually I watch this movie ever year on Thanksgiving and finish up the Trilogy by Nov 12th. Didn't have time yesterday, but I watched this with you today and what a fun experience. So Thank you. You're gonna love when Christopher Lloyd shows up in Star Trek later..
You were correct--it was as if you saw the movie for the first time. Thanks for sharing your reactions because watching the movie through your eyes was like watching a new movie.
I don’t remember the first time I watched this, but it had to be some time in the 80’s when it was released to VHS. I was a little kid and loved it. This is one of those movies where the sequels are just as good as the original. Part two is probably my favorite but they’re all super close. I can’t count how many times I’ve watched these, but I still feel like watching it from time to time.
This is movie magic- just the right mix of everything that makes a great movie. It has obviously carried through to today, affecting even the most jaded modern audiences who have never knew movies like this.
It was "Twin Pines Mall" when he left, but he knocked down one of the pine trees in 1955, so it was "Lone Pine Mall" when he returned.
I’ve seen this movie countless times. I can’t believe I never picked up on that before! 🤦
Holy crap, this film just keeps giving! So much attention to detail, I love it! They really don't make films like this any more. *sadge*
@@CommodoreAvery 😮
@@CommodoreAvery you're not alone, I've seen this movie in the theater growing up at 9 years old, now 48, just learnt this fact in the past couple of years LOL
Sadly, the Twin Pines Mall is about to be torn down.
Oh hon, I could see you were overwhelmed by emotion at one point and that it wasn’t just the movie. I’m so sorry you lost your parents so young. Today happens to be the anniversary of both my mother’s birthday in 1931 and her passing in 2021 at the age of 90. I was so lucky to have her for a mom, an incredible artist, musician, and expert horsewoman.
No matter how old we are, we never stop missing our parents.
But, wasn’t this a great movie? I’ll tell you I still remember walking out of that theatre in Banff Alberta, where I lived. My friends and I were walking down Main Street just jabbering about what a fantastic and perfect summer movie that was.
Being a Trekkie since 66 I loved the Darth Vader from Vulcan lol.
The whole trilogy is wonderful.
Looking forward to your next reaction. Take care.
Thank you so very much for sharing your experience as well as your condolences. ❤️
@@bunnytailsREACTS Greetings & Salutations.👋I'd just like to say Ditto the Previous Comments...😎🙏I Really Enjoyed that and thought Your Reaction Resonated there with me and was So Beautiful.🫶🤗BTW, Movies & TV Shows (even Commmercials) will make me Well-Up & Cry🥹....Well i'm somewhat of an Empath, Easily Overwhelmed, Very Emotional & Will Cry at the drop of a Hat. OMG, I kid you Not. LOL.😁I was only 16 yrs old when this movie was released wayback in 1985. I Read the Book First. I''m 55 yrs young Now and Movies/TV Shows (even some Commericals) still will make me get so Teary-eyed. Although I do suspect it's normal that someone can cry after a movie at any age.
For as long as I can remember, i've cried like I just got done chopping onions during certain movies. Whether at home or in a theater, I just can't seem to hold back the waterworks when watching certain more powerful, poignant or emotive films. Sometimes you just Resonate & Empathize with the Person on what's being shown because it makes you feel a certain way, and sometimes you don't. When it comes to the former, it often reflects the connection to the characters, storyline, "or something that triggers some.” Your attention is captured and emotions elicited by the movie's story.
Empaths can effortlessly step into someone else's shoes, even if they're fictional characters on a screen. This heightened level of empathy means you're likely more attuned to the emotions around you, causing you to be more affected by emotional movie scenes. Even the Music Soundtrack can be too Overwhelming.
It could be a Sign of your Emotional Strength. University of Canberra professor of psychology Deborah Rickwood tells Afternoons crying in the movies is a sign that your brain is releasing the hormone oxytocin. And we have All Experienced Loss, Heartbreak, & Traumatic Emotional Situations.
I Know that Crying at Movies is a Actually "Sign of Strength!" Now I also think too that Crying in response to a movie reveals High Empathy, Social Awareness & Human Connection - "All Aspects of High Emotional-Intelligence."
So in Closing: God Bless, Belated Happy Thanksgiving, Happy Holidays & I Wish You All the Best.🙂🙌
That pinhead teacher with the bullhorn is Huey Lewis... the guy who wrote and sang most of the songs for this movie..... thats the power of love...
Haha… I stopped the video to say the same thing but you beat me to it . I’m glad other people noticed the cameo. The irony that he thinks the band and his own song are too loud is priceless.
@@giovanniboianelli1260 FYI, Huey Lewis is going deaf and is unable to sing. But the deafness was not caused by loud music. In April 2018, Lewis revealed that he had hearing loss as a result of Ménière's disease.
@@itubeutubewealltube1 oh, I didn't know that was Huey Lewis.... never cared for his music but interesting info
True but I think she was calling Strickland a pinhead, not the music judge.
@itubeutubewealltube1 isn't it just one song?
Hi Bunny,
I am 64 and have watched Back to the Future countless time. The whole trilogy was soooooo well done and well written and acted that it is one of the best trilogies EVER. You will love the next two movies.
I think she should watch the other two right away so she doesn't forget details from the first one. Then do the editing whenever she wants. BTTF is basically like one huge movie in 3 parts
No mam. They don't make movies like this anymore.
Watching your emotional reaction is exactly how I feel about this movie!
Fantastic reaction!! Thank you!
My pleasure!
@@bunnytailsREACTSI enjoyed this too Bunny. You asked a question at 45:24 and I think your reaction is a combination of the memories of this movies you had as a kid, and the fact that Hollywood doesn't make this well written, positive feeling movies like this any more. A lot of them are made to be relatable to real life but no one wants this. Many feature nilistic overtones or subtexts, along with trying to fit in forced diversity messages ahead of what's really important - the story. The most extreme contrast and one that has me turning on the tears Star Trek. JJ Abrams and Alex Kurtzman can't get anywhere close to what was produced for old school Star Trek. I well up when I hear those classic theme tunes or watch amazing scenes such as the Spock and Kirk at the end of the OG Wrath of Khan. Or when Spock looks back and remembers Kirk. Good storylines that offer hope. I wish Hollywood could get back to making great movies again.
Yes they do. They make very great future film classic masterpieces regularly these days. You have to keep your eyes open, know where they are and understand how to appreciate them. But they are everywhere, at least 10 top-tier masterpiece films per year. You just have to pay attention.
@@teruienages962 Name one.
@ what are your top 3 of 2024?
That part still cracks me up. Hewey Lewis criticizing his own song lol " Its too damn loud"
And the fact that most young reactors have NO CLUE who he is.😂They just say like "What a mean guy, don't get it..."
Not really. Loudness has to do with the volume not the quality of the music. 🤗
While Huey is wearing a very loud suit jacket
@@giovangciccareli1829 YES lmao
@@НинадаТарапицца Yes, I think explained what loud meant in the 80's and 90's, but maybe it got scratched. You are absolutely right. It was used to describe something so obnoxiously tasteless that it would stand out in a crowd. Like a neon Hawaiin shirt in a room full of tuxedos
BEST.TRILOGY.EVER.
I was surprised when I heard the other 2 were just as good as the first. That's really rare! I'm excited to watch the others.
@@bunnytailsREACTSThe writing is absolutely astonishing, Miss Bunny. Enjoy all 3, absolutely worth your time.
I don't know if I personally feel that this is the best trilogy ever, but if not, it's pretty close. I do, however, DEFINITELY agree with the commonly held belief among film critics that this movie is as close to a perfect film that has ever been made.
The next two films are pretty bland, so no
@Ben, I strongly disagree, but to each their own.
The actual moral of this movie is about placing those you love before yourself. George knocked out Biff to save Lorraine, more than any kind of vengeance. His confidence after that enabled him to submit his writings, which is why the family is more well-off 30 years later. Some have said the film's ending promotes materialism, but I say they're not paying attention.
Yes, Chuck Berry was the original artist who sang Johnny B. Goode. It was released in March of 1958, so in this scenario, it would've taken a couple of years to perfect the song.
In 1977, a recording of Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode" was included on a golden disc sent to space with the Voyager mission. The mission continues today. Some day, extraterrestrial life may try to communicate with us with that song.
"Great Scott" was an expression found in comic books of the 1950's and 60's, especially Superman. "Daddy-o was another kind of expression in the 1950's. Like "what time is it? " Quarter past 4." "Thanks, Daddy-o." As a musician and former music teacher, I automatically focus on music. The first song the band plays at the dance is a standard big band song: "Night Train" has a long and complicated history. The piece's opening riff was first recorded in 1940 by a small group led by Duke Ellington sideman Johnny Hodges, under the title "That's the Blues, Old Man". By 1951 the riff you hear was borrowed to write the song Night Train, a twelve-bar blues instrumental standard first recorded by Jimmy Forrest in 1951.
There are many references to movies and TV shows much more subtle than Darth Vader and Vulcan.
The first switch on the guitar amp is labeled CRM114. That's from Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove.
The farmer's name was Peabody, and he had a son named Sherman, revealed in the credits. On the Rocky & Bullwinkle show there was a dog named Mr. Peabody who had a pet boy named Sherman. They had a time machine called the Wayback Machine.
Mr. Peabody was a time travelling dog, and Einstein was a time travelling dog.
I'm sure that Christopher Lloyd hanging from the clock had to be an homage to a famous silent film scene of Harold Lloyd hanging from a clock.
I'll bet there are more Easter eggs that I haven't found yet.
Very interesting! I would add the Marty’s guitar is played by Eddy Van Halen who was born in 1955. The modern skateboard was invented in the mid 1950s in California. Also, when they attach the camcorder to Doc’s tv in 1955, they are using an RCA plug invented in the mid50s. I could add Chitty Chitty Bang Bang to the iconic car list.
I was an usher in the local theatre in 1985 and saw the movie about 180 times. I still enjoy it and watch reactions. I love your flood of emotion on this one, I get that way when things remind me of my childhood and family. Love your channel, thanks for being genuine!
I'm glad you understand ❤️
"The most iconic car..."
It's almost as if you've never taken a shadowy flight into the dangerous world of a man who does not exist.
Don't forget about "them Dukes!"
Fun fact: the original actor who was going to be Marty was Eric Stoltz. The production wanted Michael J. Fox but he was in a contract with the production of the NBC sitcom, Family Ties, and they wouldn't let him out even temporarily to let him make this film. Eric, while being an excellent actor, just didn't get the comedy of the material and was playing Marty too seriously. They filmed with him for several weeks but it wasn't working out. In the meantime, this production company and the series producer came up with a compromise. The film could have Fox but only at night and on weekends when he wasn't on the tv set. So Michael had to transport back and forth between sets on a mattress in the back of a station wagon about 2 hours each way. He survived on very little sleep during the production of this film. But hey, he was barely in his 20's at the time.. lol
The only shot kept from anything Eric shot was the punch of Biff in the cafe. Much footage had to be reshot when they let Eric go.
you are now officially in the Back to the future trilogy. ❤
Probably one of the best trilogies ever made.
Can't agree more! And I know Hollywood is just chomping at the bit to remake/reboot/reimagine this series and I hope they never do.
@@LeftoverBeefcakeRobert Zemeckis once said that, until he lives, nobody will be allowed to do a remake or a sequel of these movies.
Remember Fox was filming this at same time as doing a TV series going on 4 hrs of sleep a day for a month and a half. Amazing he did this well. AWESOME.
That's something I never would have been able to do. I can't function at all without enough sleep.
He’s talked about it in interviews about how sleep deprived he was. Sometimes he’d forget which character he’s playing. He’d be at rehearsals for his sitcom calling the actor who plays his dad, “Doc”. 🤣
Every time I spend time looking at your reactions I always end up feeling good, happy and energize is there a bottle version of you we can buy.
Wow, one of the best compliments I have ever received! I am so happy to hear that. ❤️
Drink every time somebody tells you "Huey Lewis" 😂
Just as often as Viggo kicking.....
Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis Huey Lewis
PARTY ON, MFers!
When Huey Lewis kicked the helmet, he broke his toe, so the scream he lets out when he kicks the Santa sled in the front yard was real.
Thank you for allowing us to be apart of this, for you, a very important and emotional moment. I look forward to your reaction to the rest of the trilogy.
I was 8 years old in 1985. Unfortunately I didn’t get to see it until about a year later when you could rent it on VHS.
That TOO DARN LOUD guy was Huey Lewis who wrote and sang the music to this movie
Christopher Lloyd's breakout role was on Taxi. Look it up. Lots of his greatest scenes are on UA-cam. BRILLIANT!!!
Danny Devito Christopher Lloyd, Tony Danza. Among others in that amazing ensemble cast. Loved Taxi as much as I loved Family Ties
Notice the name of the mall starts off as "Twin Pines Mall" but at the end the sign reads "Lone Pine Mall" since Marty ran over one of the old man's pine trees!
Fun fact: the ending of the movie was meant to be just a fun and humorous punchline to the film, but Back to the Future was a massive, instant hit, and the studio told Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale that they had to make a sequel. So the ending, of course, became the launching point of the second film, but it was never the original intent.
From what I've heard, the "to be continued" wasn't tacked on at the end until it came out on VHS
Yes, Chuck Berry wrote the song Marty plays. Johnny B Goode. Some say that Chuck gave birth to Rock with songs like this and Roll Over Beethoven.🙂
This is my favorite movie ever. I'm so glad you watched it! Happy Thanksgiving!
Happy Thanksgiving to you, too!
@@bunnytailsREACTS Likewise and did you know there was yet another actress not Elizabeth Shue who would cast as Jennifer in the sequels but Malora Hardin was also cast as Jennifer when Claudia Wells had to leave the production to work on a tv pilot and then returned when the show wasn't picked up. Most people aren't aware of this LOL! There are photos that prove this.
I think it has been said that they brought back Claudia Wells when Michael J. Fox replaced Eric Stoltz. The other girl was too tall to work as Fox’s girlfriend.
I saw this in theater when it came out in the 80s and I was just a teenager. Funny to see it again with the old Sony Walkman. And I just noticed the judge at the beginning of the movie at the guitar audition is Huey Lewis. It was his bands music at the beginning “Power of Love”…another addendum… I think the Dukes of Hazzard car is the most iconic
Happy Thanksgiving to you and your Wonderful family.
Same to you!
THIS!!!! Is why reaction channels are so amazing!!! I experienced this in the theaters and watching your precious reaction just really brought it all back like new!! Thank you so much. I’m so thankful I get to follow along with you and experience just a piece of your perceptions and it’s just a wonderful thing. Thank you so much and I hope you and your family have a very fulfilling Thanksgiving!! ❤
That’s the exact outfit you watched Plato’s Stepchildren in 3 weeks ago. I remember commenting that that top was your color. And I also remember that I forgot to comment on those bottoms. Somewhere out there there’s a zebra saying “Brr… it’s cold out here!”
I must have watched them on the same day 🙂
@ your eyes are gonna fall out of your head!
When this came out I was 12 years old. Huey Lewis and The News were in the middle of a 4 year run as the biggest band in the world and MTV was in its heyday. A great time to be alive. Great reaction as always 👍🏼👏🏼👏🏼
I saw this movie in the theater, along with my soon to be wife. We watched the sequels in the theater and then I bought the movies on DVD and showed my son (who is now 25). This is the benefit of have parents (like me) who are so anxious to share what they love that they share movies with kids who will be too young to remember them. For me, since I'm from an older generation, the most iconic car is James Bond's Aston Martin DB5. I'm happy for you that this brought back memories. The fact that memories can be recovered is like a gift from the past. Happy Thanksgiving. I do hope you watch the other films in the trilogy.... I'll be there.
This reaction is the most heartfelt one I have ever seen. Thank you so much. Beautiful.
This is one of my favorite movies. Fun fact, this movie was never planned to be a sequel. Most movie critics back then thought it was destined to bomb in the theaters. After it became a huge hit, the studio pushed to get 2 and 3 made.
The script is so good. You could write volumes on it, without ever having to explain any inconsistencies in the story.
One of the best movies ever made!!! Every detail has a set up and payoff later in the script. The whole trilogy is a good one and thank God, Robert Zemeckis is not allowing any sequels, reboots or remakes while he's alive. This is just one of these trilogies that should never be remade.
The guy with the megaphone is the same guy who sings 'The Power of Love' Huey Lewis and The News. 1985.
Yeah, it's surprising the emotional moments in this one, gets me all the time. And the intensity! I remember watching this in the theater and my heart was racing for the last 30 minutes!
Great reaction, such a good movie to share!
There's a fantastic blooper from this movie where the prop crew switched out the bottle and filled with actual liquor, Michael J. Fox is hilarious in it.
Loved your emotional reaction. I saw this movie in the theater with my mother and she was in high school in 1955 so she was able to explain everything to me that I didn't understand. Great memory.
Bunny, how you felt in this movie is similar to how we feel when we watch Star Trek:TOS with you. I remember seeing my mom in a similar dress as Lorraine and Dad wore George's exact same long white blazer and black bowtie in their prom pictures. I'm just happy for you that you can get such a nostalgic experience now as when we watched it back in 1985. My parents loved it. Please react to the two sequels. We will all enjoy seeing the delight in your face. Great reaction Bunny!
Isn't it great when you haven't seen a movie and can't remember most of it, the feeling you get when it comes back to you. Absolutely loved your reaction. Greatest trilogy ever.
New sub here - FANTASTIC EDITING‼️ Really enjoyed watching this. You give the movie room to breathe while adding fun stuff here and there - we'll done 😺
Thank you so much 😁
Your emotional reactions are the best!!! From the heart. ❤
Also, nothing moves the soul like music.
I saw this in the theater in 1985 and it's still to this day, the best movie watching experience of my life. I remember everyone clapping and cheering to many moments, especially when we realized the car was about to fly.
I think it was really something for you to cry over " Back To the Future "....I don't believe I've ever see someone cry at this particular film but it shows you are a sensitive soul and a sweetheart...love your vids😊
Nostalgia is a hell of a drug!
The moment Doc, saw the photo he realised they could change the future without being drastic at all that's why he gave the letter a chance.
Yeah , because he knew that when George punched Biff , History was already been changed .
I remember watching it in the movie theater with my brother in 1985 in the old Chinese theater in Hollywood. We loved it and I remember after the credits rolled I looked back at the audience and people were still sitting in their seats with grins from ear to ear. A masterpiece then and now
What I love about this movie on every rewatch I spot something new I missed. There are all these little call backs or things at the start of the movie that gets referenced later.
Rushing back to you:
Really effective movie. The original audiences, including me, were emotionally moved as much as you are, today.
I saw this movie on opening night in 1985. The audience was reacting to everything in the movie and it made the experience really fun. Thanks for letting us watch it again with you Bunny. 🥰
First saw this in the theaters in 1985. What an atmosphere it created in there back then. Keep 'em coming.
I was 15 years old when I saw this in the cinema in 1985. I also saw the sequels in the cinema too. The whole trilogy is so well written and paced. You don't see good structure in movies today. The opening credits at Doc's house has so many things that pay off later. Nothing is wasted. I love your heartfelt reaction.
Most of this had to be shot at night. They started with another actor, Eric Stoltz as Marty, but he wasn't working out, and was replaced with Michael J Fox, who at the same time was part of a TV sitcom "Family Ties" Most days were rehearsing and taping that show and nights filming Back To The Future. And that field where Marty hides the DeLorean - Chino Hills, CA just before a large housing tract went up :)
In one of Fox’s memoirs he recounts that he saw them filming and learned it was a Spielberg movie and how he’d do anything to do a movie with him… a short while later we know what happened.
Alan Silvestri, who wrote the musical score to this movie, also wrote the musical score to Predator. That's why it's so amazing and intense. You can hear the similarities at times. Great reaction! Cheers!
This movie has a perfect screenplay. It is an absolute classic that anyone can enjoy. One of my favorite movies of all time. I remember seeing it when it came out, not knowing what it was about (this was before trailers gave away the whole movie), and coming out of the theater blown away with how fun and clever it was.
Pepsi Free was what they named their caffeine free Pepsi in the early 80s. Regular and diet versions.
what a very sweet reaction, really enjoyed it 👍☺
Thank you so much 😁
The story is done so right its taught in film school as the perfect trilogy showing set up and delivery
Happy Thanksgiving! Also you're gonna love THIS movie trilogy!
Happy Thanksgiving!
@bunnytailsREACTS 😉👍🏿
Great! Welcome into this awsome trilogy!
It is the gold standard of 80’s films. Sorry Amadeus and Breakfast Club.
Oh, I love Amadeus so much!
@@bunnytailsREACTS🎹🎥🎬🎞
I saw this film opening weekend and dozens of times since I was 16 . I am 56 now . I Adored watching with you . This is one of those films you just never get tired of and can watch again and again . The Nostalgia runs very deep with this film . Takes me back to a very exciting g time to be a teenager . I was about Marty’s age in real life when I saw this . This movie gives me a sense of calm for all of those Nostalgic reasons I feel . Takes me back to a Better time in this World . And exciting time r to be alive .
I never thought you would get so emotional with this film! What an amazing reaction i really enjoyed it
OMG, you made me tear up when you mentioned your parents! So sorry. Hugs
THAT'S why we watch along!! For an old man, like me, nostalgia is like a time machine. The emotions you felt as you recalled your childhood, I felt too. I was a 25yo, watching for the 1st time again. Keep up the good work. ; )
One of the best trilogies in the history of film.
This is one of those rare, perfect movies 😭😭🔥🔥
The drunk at the end was the mayor in 1955, Mayor Red Thomas, "Progress is his middle name." Wben Marty comes back, he says "Red, you look great! Everything looks great!"
Even if it's not the most iconic car, it's bound to be the most recognizable one.
I felt and still feel the exact same as you did. This film means a ton to me. In all ways esp my past and nostalgia, with my child life and my passed mom, the 80s. To see you get emotional reminds me and I still feel it. I get choked up and tear still and even watching you do it too. Thank you. You watching this and your love for it and watching Star Trek, sharing and expressing is something for me. I can't wait for you to watch the rest! 🤓🥹🥲🥰
the lone pine mall was the first easter egg I've ever spotted on my own as a kid, i was so proud of myself.
these thing really add a lot to the viewing experience.
I saw this multiple times in the theater, and countless times since. It was so perfectly conceived and executed that it is timeless.
This one is George's story ultimately. Two is Marty's story, and Three is Doc's.
As good as everyone is, the entire trilogy is a showcase for Thomas Wilson's brilliant portrayals of the different Biffs.
10:28 "Wonder why it gets... _icy."_
Because when traveling through time, it leaves _heat_ behind. That's where the _fire_ trails come from.
I remember when my sister saw this movie and was blown away by it. I eventually saw it at the theater. What I like about this movie is that it's so well made. Meeting your parents when they were both 17 and still in school, etc. This is what Hollywood needs to focus on. Just good stories with good acting.
This has been one of my best favorite reactions to this movie so far on UA-cam!!😎❤️ this movie is so awesome😊😍
Wow, thank you!
Bunny, you react exactly as I do watching this film. The laughs, the "hell yeah!"s, the getting emotional... totally on point for me. I love watching your reactions to things i love because I know I'll get out of it what I'm seeking.
I love this trilogy, it's one of the best films ever for all the reasons you give and fur sheer enjoyment factor. The music is epic, iconic, and triumphant, really gives you a surge in your chest to listen to it. The acting by everyone is amazing, Christopher Lloyd is an absolute delight, the baddies are boo-hiss and the goodies are stand-up guys and the energy of the film is brilliant.
You also make a god point I'd forgotten about he nutty inventors trope; it was such an '80s/'90s staple and I'd kinda forgot about it in the other films you named that I also love.
Keep up the great work!
Bunny, I saw this movie when it was first released in 1985 and have watched it again several times since. Recently, a week ago, and your reaction. I am sorry you lost your parents. I know the feeling. My sincere condolences to you. Wishing you and yours a very Happy Thanksgiving.
😎👍 Another movie you would definitely love that also revolves around the "My Dad Is An Eccentric Inventor" trope is "Mr. Peabody & Sherman" (2014). It's easily Dreamworks Animation's most underappreciated masterpiece. 😉
It's a lame insult to the far superior original cartoon.
My next door neighbor has a time machine/ DeLorean replica and charges money at car shows to have your picture taken in it. The Delorean may just be more "iconic" because there are a lot of them around, whereas the are only a very few bat-mobiles because they are totally custom built.
BTTF is permanently lodged in my top five movies of all time since first seeing it in 1985. It is a perfect film from the script to the direction to the cast to the FX to the score. Everything is note perfect. The sequels are great too but this truly stands on its own as a perfect piece of cinematic storytelling.
Definitely the most iconic car. They have been shoving the "Bat Mobile "in our faces since 1989. The DeLorean only needed this one scene ❤
Pepsi Free was a caffeine free version of Pepsi from 1982 to 1987 (it was okay tasting) Tab was a diet soda ( awful tasting) that didn’t exist yet either in 1955. So the humorous confusion of give me a tab (meaning give me the bill) when he hadn’t ordered yet. And though the store owner knew what a Pepsi was he wasn’t gonna give Marty one for free.
I remember trying Tab when it first came out. HORRIBLE!! 😱
When you watch a film once, much can be lost from your memory. Watch it again and you create what's called a 'perceptual set' - a connection with the previous memories, which aren't really lost you just lose the route to them. By watching the film a second time you find the route to those earlier memories triggering a nostalgic effect which is likely why you got so emotional - because it also connects you to the time you saw it first.
Perceptual sets are used by advertisers to imprint their product's name in your mind. It's why commercials so often repeat the name of the product/brand over and over again.
I remember the first time I saw this film. It was 86 or 87 and my uncle had recorded it from cable TV. He was helping my parents with a house project and had this movie for me to watch. I remember watching it and running downstairs and telling them "That movie was awesome! It's a To Be Continued, oh wow!" (Earlier prints of the film had To Be Continued at the end.)
Decades later, my parents and uncle are gone, as is the house. I miss all of that so much. I can remember the day I watched it and how amazing it made me feel. It's sad and happy, too. I'm crying along with you.
Happy Thanksgiving, Bunny and the rest of the community here.
Just thanks 👍 we've been here for your videos almost 6 months. U. Bring fun. VIBE with your words and heart u put info them all.postive energy brings joy and love and respect for all. Sophie and sister Mary today love Marty McFly's movies now, and we appreciate it! 👍 💕
I appreciate that!
@bunnytaiksREACTS you do so much good for Gladiator we cried at the same places with your reaction practically mirrored the reaction also view my Boyfriend, who saw it while serving in the Army also.
Thank you for being a reall friend who's sensitive as about each presentation.
Hugs Sophie! 🐇 ❤️
Great reaction to a great movie! Thanks.
FYI Chuck Berry is one of a handful of men who invented rock music and probably the primary one. He was the first person inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and was inducted on the day it opened. The fast song at the dance is one he did in 1958 and is called "Johnny B. Goode."
This is such a good movie. I really enjoy watching this movie with you a lot. And I really enjoy your reaction to this movie. The very first time that I have saw this movie was when it came out on VHS. And I really enjoyed it a lot. To this day I still love this movie a lot.
I think one thing I've noticed more and more in this trilogy is the fact that some scenes have really long shots taken and the actors play them out what feels natural. The on screen chemistry just works! I think only one reactor pointed out the long takes they seem to do now and again.
Wow. You watch this movie for the first time, see the Diet Pepsi can, and say, "Wow, look at that Diet Pepsi can. I saw the movie for the first time in 1985, saw the Diet Pepsi can, and thought nothing of it. This is the movie that keeps on giving. It's almost like an unintended easter egg in a movie FULL of easter eggs.
Fun fact: The teacher with the megaphone at the beginning who says the band is "too loud", is Huey Lewis, the guy whose band created the song Marty is playing; The Power of Love.
the spit take in the parked car was not in the script the cast actually put liquor in the bottle without michael knowing it.😂
That was an awesome reaction. Great job. I’m so glad you had fun but nice memories for you. Yeah I saw five times when I was in the theater. The first time I’ve ever seen a movie multiple times at the theater. My sister was obsessed with it too, we had to see all the parts of the trilogy and you have to too. The funny part. Is that the guy who tells Marty you’re just too loud is huey lewis who is the singer of power of love the song in the movie and back in? Time. He’s a great singer. He can’t anymore though. He has hearing damage now. Can’t even sing anymore. Which is sad. He’s my favorite artist. Musically speaking You back to. The future is considered one of the best movie scripts of all time it’s taught in multiple films schools as one movie closest to perfect written by any movie. Everything about it. It’s perfect that you can get to perfect film. Thanks for the fun until next time.
I got the feeling that *many* of the cuts in this video were for you to regain composure. Thanks for sharing from the heart even if it wasn't easy.
Did you notice that the "Twin pines Mall" Became the "Lone Pine Mall" after Marty came back.
Something many people miss, when Marty asked up at the end and comes down stairs, need holding his demo tape in an envelope to send off because he gained confidence from his "new' confident father.
Thanks! I didn't catch that
It has been a long time since I watched any reaction that made me this happy. Watching your heart practically burst onscreen - that was priceless. BTTF will always be one of my three favorite movies. Like you observed, I love the fact that is written, shot, and edited SO tightly. There's not a wasted frame or line. It is as close as humans can get to a perfect movie. But it isn't just technically great. It has tremendous heart.
One really crazy memory I have is when I saw BTTF in 1985 , I was watching it in a theater at a mall that looked EXACTLY like Twin Pines Mall (actually filmed at Puente Hills Mall in SoCal). Our mall too had a JCPenney as the main corner anchor. It felt like if I looked outside, I'd see them driving the DeLorean through the parking lot. I was 19 at the time. It still feels like yesterday.
That was a lovely lovely and very special reaction. Thank you so much for sharing it. Seeing you get so emotional when the score kicks in and Marty and Doc are talking in front of the clock tower as the storm builds was one of the most affirming things I've ever seen and got this 40 year old grey bearded man very teary.
That's the power of art, and I think, and especially music. I had a very similar experience a few years ago. I have a very early memory from when I must've been three or four years old, sitting with my (long long gone) grandfather and watching a program about the history of flight called "Reaching For The Skies". My grandfather had been a fighter pilot and watching it with him is one of my most powerful early memories as he explained what I was seeing and that moment made me love flying before I even learned how. The opening theme to that series must've somehow been burned into my subconscious and locked away.
I found it here on UA-cam last year, heard it for the first time in almost four decades. The response was visceral and completely uncontrollable. I just broke down listening to it. Every time I've heard it since it's been the same. Hell, I tear up now just remembering that music.
I think that's one of the great merits of art, it can link you to a time and place like nothing else. It's appropriate that your experience with it should be in such a lovely movie about travelling in time. I think moments like that are the close to real time travel as we ever get.
And on a personal note, those we love are never gone, as long as we remember them. They come back in those magic little moments like this.
Once again, thank you for sharing that. It was wonderful.
Great reaction! Loved watching your reaction to my favorite movie of all time. I was 13 when this came out in '85, and have watched it 100's of times in my lifetime. Your comment at 22 minutes in was hilarious---caught me off guard. Loved watching you smile and laugh all through the movie. That's the joy of watching young reactors. Some think they need to talk all though the movie---nope. Just all those small subtle reactions are a pleasure to watch.
Usually I watch this movie ever year on Thanksgiving and finish up the Trilogy by Nov 12th. Didn't have time yesterday, but I watched this with you today and what a fun experience. So Thank you. You're gonna love when Christopher Lloyd shows up in Star Trek later..
You were correct--it was as if you saw the movie for the first time. Thanks for sharing your reactions because watching the movie through your eyes was like watching a new movie.
I don’t remember the first time I watched this, but it had to be some time in the 80’s when it was released to VHS. I was a little kid and loved it. This is one of those movies where the sequels are just as good as the original. Part two is probably my favorite but they’re all super close. I can’t count how many times I’ve watched these, but I still feel like watching it from time to time.
This is movie magic- just the right mix of everything that makes a great movie. It has obviously carried through to today, affecting even the most jaded modern audiences who have never knew movies like this.