Back to the Future and the Trap of Nostalgia | Video Essay

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  • Опубліковано 28 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 596

  • @jb888888888
    @jb888888888 6 місяців тому +531

    Let's face it, nostalgia ain't what it used to be.

    • @jonisilk
      @jonisilk 5 місяців тому +24

      .... but it will be again, someday.

    • @grantorino2325
      @grantorino2325 5 місяців тому +5

      RIMSHOT

    • @SandwichGlitch
      @SandwichGlitch 5 місяців тому +28

      ​@@jonisilk😂 let's make nostalgia great again

    • @piratetv1
      @piratetv1 5 місяців тому +5

      Yeah but great memories

    • @thecompareablezombie
      @thecompareablezombie 5 місяців тому +8

      Its still there, sadly it has been corrupted.

  • @pangypirate
    @pangypirate 5 місяців тому +207

    My grandpa used to say people who want to go back to the 50s clearly don't remember the 50s

    • @urkersen5246
      @urkersen5246 4 місяці тому +14

      The 90s were good though. Waaay better than the dystopian semi hell that is the 2020s.

    • @Nyzackon
      @Nyzackon 4 місяці тому +2

      @@urkersen5246Uh. Were they, though?

    • @urkersen5246
      @urkersen5246 4 місяці тому +7

      @@Nyzackon Oh yeah. Hell yeah. Not perfect, no time era is but as I say waaaay better time to live than in the dystopian 2020s.

    • @jameslight4391
      @jameslight4391 4 місяці тому +6

      @@urkersen5246 people in 2030 will be saying that 2020 was way better than the dystopian they live in lol

    • @urkersen5246
      @urkersen5246 4 місяці тому +7

      @@jameslight4391 If the year of 2020 was NOT dystopian; I mean when the enture effing world went on lockdown then I really have NO idea what dystopian means! I certainly hope the year 2030 will not be WORSE than 2020; if so we are in big trouble. Seriously!

  • @sverrg
    @sverrg 5 місяців тому +215

    I grew up in the eighties where evertthing was 50s nostalgia, now people are stuck in 89s and early nineties nostalgia. It's the age of the writers that dictates it

    • @JoJoJoker
      @JoJoJoker 5 місяців тому +23

      Early-2000s are now the thing on any elite college campus. Lots of baggy clothes, Jnco jeans, Birkenstocks & socks. It’s weird to say “I used to dress like that in high school” like my mom said when I was younger.

    • @atomicpunk7109
      @atomicpunk7109 5 місяців тому +5

      @@JoJoJoker I can't think of any aspect of Western culture in the early 2000s (art, music, movies, fashion...) that anyone in their right mind would feel nostalgic about. Maybe the PS2...but the PS2 is not Western, it is Eastern. The 2000s are not as horrible as the 90s but they are second on the list. The 2010s and 2020s are next on the list. 🤢🤮

    • @AnneHathawayRules
      @AnneHathawayRules 5 місяців тому +4

      I can't wait till everything goes back to late 90s early 00s nostalgia so everything that was cool when I was a teenager is cool again 😂

    • @tlaloqq
      @tlaloqq 5 місяців тому +3

      @@atomicpunk7109 i assume you are older, im older gen z (25) and everyone is dressing like late 90's 2000s. I actually am one of the few that stays more goth/librarian mommy lol my skinny pants aren't going anywhere after I worked so hard on these legs!

    • @calebleland8390
      @calebleland8390 5 місяців тому +5

      ​@@AnneHathawayRulesI graduated in 94, and still dress like I did in the grunge era. Not nostalgia, just comfortable. 😆😆

  • @grog3514
    @grog3514 4 місяці тому +28

    I lived through the 80s and i can tell you without a doubt it was incredible. The things that are hardest to describe or put your finger on was the sense of community and the incredible excitement and optimism we had towards the future.

    • @kev3d
      @kev3d 4 місяці тому +6

      Same. I remember them well. The Stagflation of the 70s was over, the Cold War was being won, there was a general good feeling about the time. Being mopey homebody was shunned. Engaging with people at the movies, the arcade, the mall, in parks, etc. was fun and healthy. Your friends were real people you could count on. Nowadays being a shut-in is almost celebrated. "Friends" today are very often parasocial online-only relationships.

    • @bajojohn
      @bajojohn 4 місяці тому +2

      It was only better because you didn’t have any responsibilities and you didn’t realize how complicated life really is.

    • @palmercolson7037
      @palmercolson7037 4 місяці тому

      @@bajojohn Very true. When you hear people being nostalgic about a certain time of their life, you find out they were little kids or maybe teenagers. I look back at my early days and I can find records of bad things going on at the time. If you had asked your parents about the time back then verses when they were young, you'd find that people were much nicer when they were young vs how bad people were in those times you remember.

    • @davidlafleche1142
      @davidlafleche1142 4 місяці тому

      That's what they were saying in 1962.

    • @nunchuckfilms
      @nunchuckfilms 2 місяці тому

      ​@palmercolson7037 maybe that is because it has been on line heading down as time goes by.
      I personally would take a time when children could leave the house and not come home until the street lights came on and social didn't involve ad filled screens.
      Just saying.

  • @tanookiplayer
    @tanookiplayer 11 місяців тому +77

    The Back to the Future trilogy are my favourite films of all time. It's hard to pinpoint which one is my favourite but its probably the first one. Despite being about time travel it is a timeless classic that I think anyone can watch with ease. This was an interesting analysis on the film about nostalgia & repeating past mistakes.

    • @NicheCaesar
      @NicheCaesar  11 місяців тому +14

      Glad you enjoyed it and yeah, I totally agree that the movies are totally timeless. I had a blast doing my yearly rewatch of the trilogy for this video

    • @_OUTATIME_
      @_OUTATIME_ 8 місяців тому

      Facts

    • @chriswest8389
      @chriswest8389 6 місяців тому +1

      The plants, leading of course to the payoffs, are so good that upon rewatching , you can’t believe the writers weren’t telegraphing them. How could you have not seen the hem coming.

    • @MindFist
      @MindFist 6 місяців тому +2

      The first film stood alone for a huge portion of my childhood....and then came the sequels. If you saw the first one in theaters back in '85, you hold the first one separate, regardless of your opinion of part 2 and 3.

    • @sambas9257
      @sambas9257 5 місяців тому +2

      more time will pass more back to the future will be one of the favourite movies for more people. The reason is that there will never a remake until Bob Gale will be alive so it will not be smeared as it happened to all other pop-cultural icon franchises like Star Wars, Star Trek, Ghostbusters, Terminator, Aliens...

  • @NinaFelwitch
    @NinaFelwitch 5 місяців тому +331

    The 80s loved the 50s and the 2010s loved the 80s.

    • @latenightlogic
      @latenightlogic 5 місяців тому +28

      Half truth. The noughties also loved the 80s and were still in that phase now.

    • @SandwichGlitch
      @SandwichGlitch 5 місяців тому +27

      @@latenightlogic I remember the 2010s loved the 90s

    • @anthonysmith3415
      @anthonysmith3415 5 місяців тому +9

      and the 2040s loved the 2010s which oddly was similar to the 80s

    • @DelicateRedRose
      @DelicateRedRose 5 місяців тому +25

      I would argue only a select group of people "loved" the 50s. The rest of us were glad they were over.

    • @brian_b_music
      @brian_b_music 5 місяців тому +7

      @@latenightlogicAbsolutely and if you were born at the beginning of the decade you would only be 44 years old. 80’s nostalgia isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.

  • @alcapone6733
    @alcapone6733 5 місяців тому +217

    Sorry to hear about your friend dying

    • @NicheCaesar
      @NicheCaesar  5 місяців тому +91

      Thanks, I appreciate your kind words. I’m sorry your account’s namesake had his brain eaten alive by an undiagnosed case of syphilis. He seemed, uh, really good at bootlegging lol

    • @Angel-Otk
      @Angel-Otk 5 місяців тому +4

      He was thirsting for this comment when he recorded that part🤣

    • @SP-qo3pd
      @SP-qo3pd 5 місяців тому

      @@NicheCaesar Et tu, Brute?

  • @JosephRocco-mi4cm
    @JosephRocco-mi4cm 5 місяців тому +140

    Human nature doesn't change, no matter what decade it is.

    • @SandwichGlitch
      @SandwichGlitch 5 місяців тому +14

      Humans, humans never change.

    • @behindthescenesphotos5133
      @behindthescenesphotos5133 5 місяців тому +6

      The violent crime rate in the US was at an all-time low in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Something changed, and it certainly can't be blamed on weapons that were more easily accessible at the time.

    • @simpleanswer8954
      @simpleanswer8954 5 місяців тому +10

      @@behindthescenesphotos5133 Yes, all time LOW. Meaning it was higher before that. It dipped for a while, then spiked before leveling out to be lower than it was at the turn of the previous century. in 2018 the violent crime rate was almost as low as it was in 1954, and lower than any time prior to 1940.
      People whine about violent crime, and the reported rates of crime are almost as low as ever.
      Plus, you'd have to be pretty ignorant to only look at the last 50 or 60 years when discussing human nature. Humans have been around for thousands of years, our violent tendencies have been on full display all over the world since the beginning. But you go ahead and only consider the part you lived through, and only consider what 'Murica is doing. Cause 'Murica represents all of humanity everywhere, right? No one else counts, only what happens there. Bam, you're an expert on human nature. The last 60 years of American history is all you need... so long as you also cherry pick you statistics to support your nostalgia.... in a video about how nostalgia is a lie. Beautiful irony, it's just hilarious.

    • @garyturner5739
      @garyturner5739 5 місяців тому +2

      That is the message to take from these movies.

    • @foljs5858
      @foljs5858 5 місяців тому +1

      Try visiting 1950s and see how much human nature changed... not necessarily for the better in many ways

  • @ahhamartin
    @ahhamartin 5 місяців тому +24

    I grew up around older individuals who universally considered the Great Depression as better than the (then current) 80's. Only we kids saw the irony of calling the time before our area had electricity (pre 1950) the "good old days", while sitting under the air conditioner.

    • @MatthewTheWanderer
      @MatthewTheWanderer 4 місяці тому +3

      How anyone could think that the Great Depression was the "good old days" is insane!

  • @henrywallacesghost5883
    @henrywallacesghost5883 5 місяців тому +81

    What does it mean when a film about nostalgia has become so nostalgic on it's own😮

    • @TheTillmanSneakerReview
      @TheTillmanSneakerReview 5 місяців тому +10

      Meta

    • @BillLaBrie
      @BillLaBrie 5 місяців тому +3

      We’re trapped in a nostalgia loop.

    • @Moviefan2k4
      @Moviefan2k4 4 місяці тому +3

      Michael said it himself - "Its ironic that a film about time travel is timeless."

  • @WinstonCodesOn
    @WinstonCodesOn 6 місяців тому +46

    It was great to see some analysis on the third film since most people dismiss it, despite it being a great part of the story that gives closure to all of the character arcs.

    • @SandwichGlitch
      @SandwichGlitch 5 місяців тому +1

      @@WinstonCodesOn from what I experienced most people loved the second one the most in the 90s but the mindset altered to dismissing the second and the third one is in second place now

    • @moaningpheromones
      @moaningpheromones 4 місяці тому

      And it had cute Clara in it, and that's all I remember, maybe the car was there again.

  • @joecrackin3783
    @joecrackin3783 5 місяців тому +27

    Nostalgia for me is a time when things just didn't suck. I know the world has always been a messed up place, but I didn't know that as a kid. I had no responsibilities, no one relying on me for anything. I just played with toys, watched cartoons, and had a blast with my friends. I look back fondly on those times.

    • @HerecomestheCalavera
      @HerecomestheCalavera 5 місяців тому +5

      So true, it isn't that it was a better time exactly. It was that we were kids. For example pretty much the only people nostalgic for the 90s are people who grew up in that time. There aren't many people who were 30+ in the 90s who is nostalgic for it like it was the best time. Those people would say 60s and 70s were the best time. Everyone just misses the simple times of being a kid. I remember back in High School talking about how older people say school was the best time of their lives. We said if this is the best times then life must really suck.....we weren't exactly wrong.

    • @JoJoJoker
      @JoJoJoker 5 місяців тому +1

      What I love about the past is I know how it ended. The future is an open book.

    • @ingvar3072
      @ingvar3072 5 місяців тому

      so, it is nostalgia for a childhood in general, not for some exact times

    • @joecrackin3783
      @joecrackin3783 5 місяців тому

      @@ingvar3072 i have nostalgia in both forms.

  • @paulglover6525
    @paulglover6525 5 місяців тому +64

    Like Billy Joel said "The good ole' days weren't always good and tomorrow ain't as bad as it seems".

    • @jasonjerusalem
      @jasonjerusalem 5 місяців тому +1

      Like Chuck Berry once said "How the F do you know my song? I just laid it down last week!"

    • @noobguy9973
      @noobguy9973 28 днів тому

      to be honest with the way the world seems to be going espacially the region of the world like middle-east , east europe, southeast Asia etc. it feels like its simply going to get worse unless you are a specific 10% of smth.

  • @ricardotabone3231
    @ricardotabone3231 Місяць тому

    What an excellent video! You really connected the dots along a narrative that makes total sense! Thanks!

  • @alphs2673
    @alphs2673 3 місяці тому

    This one has become my favorite reading of these amazing movies. Excellent job!

  • @bespectacledheroine7292
    @bespectacledheroine7292 5 місяців тому +38

    Lorraine prude scolding Marty's sister when she was out here wilder than the boys her age is the funniest thing ever to me. One's nostalgia blinds them to their own behavior.

    • @Fenris30
      @Fenris30 5 місяців тому +6

      Or she was ashamed of her actions.

    • @Moviefan2k4
      @Moviefan2k4 4 місяці тому +3

      I never thought the '80s version of Lorraine was a prude. Drunk and depressed, sure - who wouldn't be with a life that far out of whack? But deep down, it seemed she really wanted all her kids to be better than she was. But like many parents (then and now), her main reflex when it came to discussing her own sins was to either avoid the subject, or lie outright. The scene in question strongly implies she knew exactly what George was doing in that tree, but never called him out on it.

    • @bespectacledheroine7292
      @bespectacledheroine7292 2 місяці тому

      @@Moviefan2k4 Sorry for replying late, only saw now. I don't think you have to be a prude as a whole to say prudish things to be clear. Lorraine did do the things she did as a teenager after all, a true prude would never. It's only, what she said is textbook conservative purity culture at work. That being said, unlike George who was completely checked out, she was trying her best. And she raised decent kids, Marty didn't just pop into existence so friendly.
      Although I WAS disgusted by the hypocrisy, my heart went out to her for settling for a creepy peeper and seemingly forgiving his faults that anyone with eyes can see.

  • @Drawkcabi
    @Drawkcabi 5 місяців тому +26

    The key is keeping alive the memories of things that made us feel good, sharing that with others but not imposing it on them.

  • @garyturner5739
    @garyturner5739 5 місяців тому +43

    Nostalgia will always be with us because every generation looks back in fondness to last one.

    • @ROBYNMARKOW
      @ROBYNMARKOW 5 місяців тому

      My parents would wax nostalgic about the 1940's bcuz they were young & the movies were classic awa the music & fashions but I'd always remind them that there was a WORLD WAR going on. Then my dad would reveal his fears about being drafted if it dragged on( he was 16 when it ended) & my mom would talk about having to draw a line on the back of her legs bcuz stockings & many other goods were being rationed & the Black Stars in neighbor's windows when they lost a family member who was fighting overseas. Anyway ,I just had to dig a bit deeper .

    • @Groffili
      @Groffili 5 місяців тому +2

      That's not quite correct. Every generation looks back in fondness _to themselves, when they were younger._
      True, this may include glorifying "the last one"... but it's usually from the view of a child admiring their parents.

  • @whichgodofthousandsmeansno5306
    @whichgodofthousandsmeansno5306 5 місяців тому +8

    As a kid in the late 60's early 70's I did romanticize the 50's by being into the music and dressing like a greaser and driving old hot rods etc. Heck even as a teen in the late 70's we went to the movie "American Graffiti" like a dozen times in the theatre. It pissed off my dad so bad who used to tell me the 50's sucked and was nothing like we were portraying.
    I have to wonder if he was correct or perhaps it was just that the 50's were bad for him for whatever reason. Of course I was only seeing it through the eyes of a middle/working class white kid but that is also what my dad was in the 1950's. I guess maybe it is human nature to look back assuming better times because so often the future seems bleak. And never in my lifetime has the future seemed bleaker then it does now.
    That said, when I hear "Make America Great Again" I see nothing wrong with striving for a great America but it is the "again" part that needs consideration. I mean was it really that great for everyone? After WW2 the slogan was "Never Again". Food for thought.

  • @bryanbeach2572
    @bryanbeach2572 5 місяців тому +66

    I don't have anything against nostalgia. I miss the 1990s.

    • @whichgodofthousandsmeansno5306
      @whichgodofthousandsmeansno5306 5 місяців тому +2

      I would assume we all miss the best years of our lives which coincide with the decade. I mean it would make no sense to miss any decades that sucked for us.

    • @whichgodofthousandsmeansno5306
      @whichgodofthousandsmeansno5306 5 місяців тому +3

      Should add... some might miss decades they were not even alive during and/or too young to remember but just going off perception, which can certainly be subjective.

    • @sinnsage
      @sinnsage 5 місяців тому +2

      totally, but the critique of nostalgia is a critique of make America great again. sure things looked good back in some imagined past, minorities were treated as second and third class citizens, women couldn’t vote or have a credit card, didn’t have bodily autonomy, couldn’t leave an abusive partner, etc. so the point is that the past is often gazed upon with rose colored glasses, and that is problematic because it ignores or previous injustices. example, 90’s music and media was awesome! but queer ppl lived in contestant fear of being outed, couldn’t marry, it was the beginning stages of politics turning into dramatic entertainment instead of working for the people, etc.

    • @slimjimpui
      @slimjimpui 5 місяців тому +6

      I miss the days before smartphones and social media

    • @kpusa1981uk
      @kpusa1981uk 5 місяців тому +2

      ​@@sinnsage He does not want ti go back to the 1950s maybe bring back manufacreing ro rhe usa so that 90-99% of is not made in China or ar least nor overseaa

  • @lancebaylis3169
    @lancebaylis3169 8 місяців тому +21

    This reminds me of a conversation I had with my dad a little while ago. He told me he'd finally watched the second movie - for years he'd seen Part 1 and Part 3, but apparently never the movie in the middle. Quite apart from the fact this shows us that in some ways Part 2 is maybe the least essential - he managed to pick up a lot of the plot beats in 3 without ever needing to see 2 - his main other observation was that 2 wasn't tonally in complete step with the others, and that the whole thing felt a bit messy and self indulgent. I love all three movies, but I can't deny that his critiques do hold up. Parts of 2 are a bit silly and stretch credibility to its breaking point - I don't think it crosses that line, but it does skirt it a bit.

    • @RobKMusic
      @RobKMusic 4 місяці тому

      Love those movies! But the problem I have with 2 is that you can't jump to the future and visit yourself. You have to leave the present and jump over the intervening years to get there. By leaving the present you "skew into a tangent" future where you don't exist.You can visit anyone else, just not yourself.

    • @moaningpheromones
      @moaningpheromones 4 місяці тому

      yeah but when you watch part two, now you can feel like the people in 1955 relating to 1985. Now we'd need part four - set in 2055. Hey, there's an idea.

    • @Moviefan2k4
      @Moviefan2k4 4 місяці тому

      @@RobKMusic It depends on what "rules" you're using, for the nature of the story. In the films, the end of Part 3 takes place on October 27th of 1985, just two days after the beginning of Part 1. With that in mind, the older Marty seen in 2015 is an alternate extrapolation of a former timeline, where Needles wins the car accident and Marty breaks his hand in the crash. But the ending of Part 3 shows Marty having gained a new confidence not defined by others, so Doc's words to he and Jennifer are perfect: "Your future is whatever you make it, so make it a good one."

    • @RobKMusic
      @RobKMusic 4 місяці тому

      @@Moviefan2k4 Let's assume that "Prime Marty" was the initial catalyst of all this. At the end of Part 1 when he jumps to the future, it's a future where he, Jennifer and Doc disappeared without a trace 30yrs ago. Then he goes to alternate 1985. Then to alternate 1955. Then to 1885. Then to 4 times alternate 1985 where he chooses NOT to race Needles. The only way what I said in my last post isn't true is if we assume the "rules" are nobody has any free will and all of this was just pre-determined to happen. Nothing anybody did ever made any difference at all.
      I go by the rules as Doc explained them. When you jump to the past you automatically create a new tangential future. When you jump to the future, you leave the present and skip over the intervening time to get the to future. Doc LITERALLY says this when explaining Einstein's trip in the first movie. Einstein was GONE from the present in the minute he skipped over.

  • @MrPivotRPG
    @MrPivotRPG 5 місяців тому +20

    Man.. the 2050s were so much better than the 2020s

    • @MatthewTheWanderer
      @MatthewTheWanderer 4 місяці тому +1

      Nice! I see what you did there.

    • @Fatih_M177
      @Fatih_M177 4 місяці тому

      Doc, please tell me, do the 2050s have any flying cars?

    • @MatthewTheWanderer
      @MatthewTheWanderer 4 місяці тому +2

      @@Fatih_M177 No, and neither do the 2100s.

    • @Fatih_M177
      @Fatih_M177 4 місяці тому

      ​@@MatthewTheWanderer Great Scott! The future sure does suck!

    • @MatthewTheWanderer
      @MatthewTheWanderer 4 місяці тому +1

      @@Fatih_M177 No, the future is awesome! Flying cars are stupid.

  • @uzetaab
    @uzetaab 5 місяців тому +35

    I appreciate that you had something different to say about Back To The Future. I don't think you even mentioned that the actor who played Marty was recast. Bravo.

    • @FragginWagon76
      @FragginWagon76 5 місяців тому +1

      Ah, but did you know that it was... Eric Stoltz???

    • @iwanttocomplain
      @iwanttocomplain 5 місяців тому

      @@FragginWagon76 serious, strange, Eric. His role as his dad was still pretty strange and compelling. He wanted to play Marty as haunted and fraught but they changed him to childlike instead.

    • @FragginWagon76
      @FragginWagon76 5 місяців тому +1

      @@iwanttocomplain Probably for the best.

    • @iwanttocomplain
      @iwanttocomplain 5 місяців тому

      @@FragginWagon76 yeah he's quite a serious actor. He was in Dead Man with Johnny Depp. That's a really horrible monochrome film about sad things that haunts me. By Jim Jarmusch. It's a masterpiece. Jarmusch is spookier than Tim Burton.

    • @teresamckeown5594
      @teresamckeown5594 5 місяців тому

      That is still INSANE to me.

  • @Redballoon_Cartoons
    @Redballoon_Cartoons Місяць тому

    No nostalgia required - nostalgia is remembering how something was with rose tinted glasses - I watch back to the future today - AND ITS AWESOME

  • @BudStudmuffin
    @BudStudmuffin 4 місяці тому

    Glad i found this channel, good stuff. Subbed

  • @rollingfog1
    @rollingfog1 4 місяці тому

    This was very well done
    Thank you for your hard work

  • @mr.mysterious7940
    @mr.mysterious7940 4 місяці тому +1

    It seems so crazy that in 1985 they thought that in 30 years cars would be flying.

  • @sverrg
    @sverrg 5 місяців тому +34

    People in their forties run Hollywood, late thirties write the scripts. That's why nostalgia is always in that range reversed

    • @behindthescenesphotos5133
      @behindthescenesphotos5133 5 місяців тому +11

      So long as there's an audience for it. In the 1930s and 40s, there were a lot of movies set at the turn of the century, Multiple TV shows about 1920s gangsters in the 1950s, WWII in the 60s, Happy Days in the 70s, Wonder Years in the 80s, That 70s Show in the 90s, etc...

    • @krystiankrysti1396
      @krystiankrysti1396 5 місяців тому

      thefuck are you talking abouyt?! There was hardly any shit from 50s or 70s in 80s or 2000s !!! Theres practically nothing besides BTTF, ocassionally they do it when it fits the story.

  • @TheStardustConspiracy
    @TheStardustConspiracy 4 місяці тому +2

    It’s incredible how back to the future has managed to avoid being picked by modern Hollywood for a remake or unnecessary sequel, better to leave nostalgia as it is.

    • @moaningpheromones
      @moaningpheromones 4 місяці тому

      You turned a Tesla into a time machine? And it runs on recycled vegetable cooking oil? And now it only needs to hit 8.8 mph?

    • @fernthaisetthawatkul5569
      @fernthaisetthawatkul5569 7 днів тому

      lets hope zemeckis and gale live very very long lives, once they pass away the hollywood vulture will swoop down to claim their ip

  • @tronam
    @tronam 5 місяців тому +20

    I love the reference to Midnight In Paris. It nailed the allure and inherent trap of nostalgia so well.

    • @aisle_of_view
      @aisle_of_view 5 місяців тому

      Agreed. Anyone living in the now has no idea how this moment will be looked upon in the future. People will claim they do but they don't.

  • @RaeganSmashOfficial
    @RaeganSmashOfficial 4 місяці тому

    Great take, great production quality. This Ytber has a future on this platform.

  • @chriswest8389
    @chriswest8389 6 місяців тому +18

    The seventy’s also loved the 50s. The 80s, to an extent, the 60s and the 90s, the 70s.

    • @BullittOutdoors
      @BullittOutdoors 5 місяців тому +2

      We didn’t give a shit about the 70s in the 90s

    • @danielstockley5631
      @danielstockley5631 5 місяців тому +9

      The 90s seemed more about boomers reminiscing on the 60s. Movies like Forrest Gump, Apollo 13 and Austin Powers were loaded with nostalgia and there was even that Brady Bunch movie.

    • @chriswest8389
      @chriswest8389 5 місяців тому

      @@coreym162 Ta for you lengthy response. “ Verrry Interesting”. Get the reference?👍

    • @chriswest8389
      @chriswest8389 5 місяців тому

      @@coreym162 Oh. Your welcome.
      I don’t know where it was but it said, skip X decade, get nostalgic for decade prior to that.
      70s for 50s I think. 80s for 50s too?
      What yr did ‘ that 70s show premiere?🙂

    • @fatherlucid4995
      @fatherlucid4995 5 місяців тому +6

      The 90s loved the 60s. It was reflected in the music of the 90s

  • @churchking2527
    @churchking2527 5 місяців тому +6

    I thought the title "Back to the Future" was a reference to him being stuck in the past and trying to get back to his present time (the future in perspective).

    • @NicheCaesar
      @NicheCaesar  5 місяців тому +6

      It is - the line I said about it never being about going to the future was a half-thought out non sequitur to transition from one thought to another. It’s just poorly worded sentence: I was saying that the movie was never about Marty going back to 1985, but rather about him learning about the past/his family history.

  • @Ken-fh4jc
    @Ken-fh4jc 3 місяці тому +1

    “Ronald Reagan? The actor?!” Might be one of my all time favorite movie lines.

  • @DavidBrigham42
    @DavidBrigham42 4 місяці тому

    Great analysis and very relevant to today. Thank you

  • @Droppedpocket-987
    @Droppedpocket-987 5 місяців тому +2

    Nostalgia ceases to exist when you attempt to recreate it.

  • @ClellBiggs
    @ClellBiggs 6 місяців тому +37

    I'd still go back to the 80s or 90s if I were given the option. lol

    • @HouseofVenesianberg
      @HouseofVenesianberg 5 місяців тому +6

      Stop lying, You wouldn’t last a day without today’s necessities

    • @mattwolf7698
      @mattwolf7698 5 місяців тому +8

      ​@@HouseofVenesianbergFor the 90's it actually wouldn't be that difficult. The internet was getting common by the mid 90's, cable was a thing and honestly better as there were barely any reality shows. You could rent movies at Blockbuster, basic cellphones existed, there were plenty of good video games out. The 80's would be pretty much the same thing, just with slightly more primitive tech and basically no Internet or affordable cell phones. I'm not saying that I would personally want to go back to those eras but it wouldn't be terrible. I definitely wouldn't want the 50's though, just way too primitive from a tech stand point and too many backwards values.
      If I went back to the 90's the technology I would miss the most would be always having the Internet and camera with me as well as GPS but it wasn't the dark ages.

    • @godhimself1128
      @godhimself1128 5 місяців тому +1

      Time only moves forward and you'd only realize how empty your life is reliving through the same era

    • @ClellBiggs
      @ClellBiggs 5 місяців тому +10

      @@HouseofVenesianberg That's an odd thing to say. I did fine the first time, I think I would do fine the second. I get the feeling you didn't actually live through those decades and don't know what they were actually like. What do we have now that we didn't have then in some form, smart phones and the internet? I've never even owned a smart phone so I know I wouldn't miss that, and we did have cell phones and a very simple and slow form of the internet in the 90s which I used quite a lot. I would make due and likely be very wealthy with the knowledge I'd have of the future. The thing I'd miss the most is probably ordering things online and having them delivered in 2 days. Truth is my daily life now is not very different from how it was then. The world has not changed that much.

    • @HouseofVenesianberg
      @HouseofVenesianberg 5 місяців тому

      @@ClellBiggs I was born in 1981 so I should know. Can’t say the same for you though

  • @thewewguy8t88
    @thewewguy8t88 4 місяці тому

    What's amazing about this movie is it's still just as relivent after nearly 40 years and still worth watching and talking about and even just discovering.

  • @mitchelmodine9197
    @mitchelmodine9197 5 місяців тому +12

    Perhaps you’ll find this interesting: the Bible of all things has a line burying nostalgic thinking: Do not say, “Why were the former days better than these?” For it is not from wisdom that you ask this”
    (Ecclesiastes 7:10 NRSVue).

    • @ChrisJones-ij3xp
      @ChrisJones-ij3xp 5 місяців тому

      That's very good, actually. I should go look that up and then go by that wisdom.

    • @fratertzadkiel2863
      @fratertzadkiel2863 4 місяці тому

      Nostalgia is a temporal version of, "The grass always looks greener on the other side", roughly what Isaiah 40:8 says. Most people misquote it as, "The grass IS always greener on the other side", which only further proves the point.

    • @Biff_Tannen1955
      @Biff_Tannen1955 2 місяці тому

      Ecc. 1:9 …there is no new thing under the sun.

  • @bungalowlogic7676
    @bungalowlogic7676 5 місяців тому +2

    Question: are those who respect and honor their parents more likely to indulge in wistful nostalgia than those who don't have that sentiment?

  • @ajw4782
    @ajw4782 5 місяців тому +4

    The 50's were guilded as hell but damn did they make some cool looking cars

  • @trevormarca8866
    @trevormarca8866 4 місяці тому

    Brilliant analysis. Thank you.

  • @behindthescenesphotos5133
    @behindthescenesphotos5133 5 місяців тому +5

    In the original script, the present was 1982 (reflecting when it was written) and Marty went to 1952. The creators said they made the 50s look like the 40s because the 50s looked too recent. 50s nostalgia wasn't a consideration. It's evident when you watch the movie. The theater's playing Cattle Queen of Montana, a traditional western, not something "current" like Blackboard Jungle or Rebel Without a Cause. When Marty passes the record store you hear Tennessee Ernie Ford, not Fats Domino or Bill Haley. Biff drives a car from 1946, and you don't see a greaser, leather jacket, or hot rod anywhere. They don't even have any rock n' roll music until the dance. 1955 was intentionally as old-fashioned as possible.
    A similar idea was done with Hangin' Out With Cici, a 1977 YA novel where a teenage girl having issues relating to her mother goes back in time and meets her as a teenager. It was made into an ABC Afterschool Special called My Mother Was Never a Kid in 1981.

    • @emsleywyatt3400
      @emsleywyatt3400 5 місяців тому +3

      Biff's a kid, he would drive an old car.

    • @behindthescenesphotos5133
      @behindthescenesphotos5133 5 місяців тому

      If nostalgia were a consideration, they'd have given him something more "1950s-ish." Some teenagers also have relatively new cars. The V8 shown at the service station was from 1940.

    • @belstar1128
      @belstar1128 5 місяців тому +1

      but while i am not sure what the 50s were truly like i think if its anything like later decades you had a lot of older stuff still hanging around like in the 90s you still had a lot of junk from the 80s being used .even now i am using a bunch of things from the 2010s like my pc and monitor are from 2017 my keyboard is even older i have no idea how old my desk is its at least 30 but could be from the 1950s for all i know

    • @hufficag
      @hufficag 4 місяці тому

      @@belstar1128 Yeah my PC I built in 2010 and my 3 HD 22 inch monitors also bought in 2011, my 40 inch 4K monitor I think from 2018, and my IKEA desk is from 2010. The house is from 2015.

    • @behindthescenesphotos5133
      @behindthescenesphotos5133 4 місяці тому

      @@belstar1128 The point wasn't that things from the 1940s were present, it was the lack of things associated with the 1950s. Comparatively, Kingdom of the Crystal Skull hits you with rock 'n' roll and racing teens in the first minute, a switchblade wielding character is dressed like Brando from The Wild One, Howdy Doody's on TV, Indy utters, "I like Ike," there's a nuclear test, a rumble with greasers in a diner, students protesting communism, and more than a few newer cars from the era.
      Lorraine's family getting their first TV is one of the few things associated with 50s nostalgia in Back to the Future, along with the music at the dance (Night Train and Earth Angel). They obviously weren't indulging in 50s nostalgia. Imagine Marty arriving in the town from American Graffiti, THAT would be embracing nostalgia

  • @dakotanorth1640
    @dakotanorth1640 4 місяці тому +2

    I was born in 1967 so my land of nostalgia is the 1970s. I listen to 1970s music all the time.

    • @Bubbleguts1964
      @Bubbleguts1964 4 місяці тому +3

      I was born in 1967 too, apart from the music the 70’s sucked. Mainly because I lost my dad,grandma and grandpa, and my great grandma. And my mom went through breast cancer but survived. So I saw the 70’s as a dark time. But the 90’s were my favorite decade. I got a great job in 1989 and everything started falling into place and I met my wife and got married in 96’. And the music was amazing too.

  • @MK-of7qw
    @MK-of7qw 5 місяців тому +5

    What do we want?
    TIME TRAVEL!
    When do we want it?
    IT'S IRRELEVANT!

  • @ever-openingflower8737
    @ever-openingflower8737 7 днів тому

    Speaking of nostalgia, I hear and read this most often when it comes to music. How great it must have been when x artist just came out with their new release of an album or song. And how great it must have been to see them live. While I do understand that seeing an artist perform live is a special thing that cannot be replicated EXACTLY like that ever again. I'll concede that point. But all the other things related to music appreciation that relate to nostalgia are stupid. What I mean by this, sure, seeing an artist in their prime perform live, yeah, I already conceded that point. That is special. But so many people long with nostalgic eyes to be alive at a time when a song or an album just came out and to me, the time itself is not important at all.
    Because today we have technology that allows me and everyone else to check out music from ANY TIME PERIOD. So when I look up music from the 80's, people in the comments be like "I wish I was living in the 80's right now" and when I look up music from the 60's or from the 70's, it's the same thing. Or heck, even music from the 2010's right now. I don't think it would be better if I lived in the 60's, 70's or 80's right now for myself to be able to listen to music from any of those eras. I can go on living in the present and check out music from any of those decades and from any other time period, too.

  • @erinelizabethmsw5137
    @erinelizabethmsw5137 4 місяці тому

    Fabulous video. BTTF is/are three of my favorite movies ever. I saw the musical in NYC this spring and it was super cute. I LOVE your take on nostalgia and will definitely be rewatching. I also adore the third movie. They could’ve phoned it in and they gave it the love and time it deserved. ❤

    • @NicheCaesar
      @NicheCaesar  4 місяці тому +1

      Ahh so jealous you saw the show. I’m hoping to catch it sometime this month!

  • @otakubullfrog1665
    @otakubullfrog1665 5 місяців тому +2

    The older you get, the easier it is to see how the present will become the past in the future. Nostalgia for the current decade will probably focus heavily on its second half while the first half will be glossed over except for certain pop culture highlights (works going for realism will include the pandemic, inflation, etc., but even those will likely avoid dwelling on them).

  • @MonkeyPunchZPoker
    @MonkeyPunchZPoker 5 місяців тому +5

    I've been thinking that future nostalgia is dead because as a society we've reached a kind of a cultural singularity. If you think about last century there's a profound difference in scientific, industrial, and cultural advancements and evolutions between the 1910's and 1920's,, and between the 1920s and 1930s, and on and on. But there really isn't that much different in that regard between the 2010s and 2020s. Cell phones have about as much utility today as they did 10 years ago. You could say maybe that smartwatches are a thing that wasn't around 10 years ago but those types of things are insignificant gadgets. There's going to be no more meaniful advancment in anything, the 2030's will be just as indistinguishable from the 2020s as it is from the 2050s and 2080s. Unless we ever run out of oil then billions will starve and within 50 years we'll be back to the 1800s, then nostalgia will kick back in.

    • @belstar1128
      @belstar1128 5 місяців тому +1

      don't worry new things are coming i see way more drones now until recently i thought the 2000s were recent. but i found some pictures of my room in the 2000s and 2011 and it looks so old i had to check the dates to be sure they were not from the 90s

    • @moaningpheromones
      @moaningpheromones 4 місяці тому

      They got them phone screens that bend in half. mmm - lots of people to support is a bubble waiting to burst. half of them don't have much now and never did, too many to look after.

  • @BlackoutsBox
    @BlackoutsBox 5 місяців тому +3

    I like part 2 the best because it's meta & contains the 1st movie in it. If you watch the first one closely you can see the 2nd Marty sneaking around.

  • @PaulAtreidesMuadDib
    @PaulAtreidesMuadDib 4 місяці тому

    I really Appreciate the Analysis. Great Vid Makes you think!

  • @Glassandcandy
    @Glassandcandy 2 місяці тому

    Nostalgia was originally considered a painful illness by the Greeks. It was when one was mentally afflicted with a painful longing of an idealized and mostly fictional past. It’s only recently in English that the term has developed a positive connotation

  • @JustinProper
    @JustinProper 5 місяців тому

    For some reason, this video came back in my recommended feed. This is one of my favorite videos essays on my favorite movie of all time!

  • @AnneHathawayRules
    @AnneHathawayRules 5 місяців тому +1

    The thing about back to the future is this: if you came up for a reason for the "present day" of the film to still be set in the 80s, you could STILL film that film today shot for shot and it would still be a box office smash.

  • @dumdumchord
    @dumdumchord 8 місяців тому +4

    This is going to be interesting because, while I saw these movies years ago I didn't think anything special about them (but enjoyed them), around 2009 or so I started hearing about it being held in such massively high regard.

    • @moaningpheromones
      @moaningpheromones 4 місяці тому

      right up there with ghostbusters pal, now learn some respect. ok, part three sucked - let's just say it.

  • @angelagokool9514
    @angelagokool9514 5 місяців тому +2

    I'd only seen a couple of episodes on the DVD special features, but Back to the Future's animated series had continued Doc's and Marty's adventures, with Clara, Jules, and Vern along for the ride. It was pretty cute. Another movie that involved time travel and romance was 2001's Kate and Leopold, from Miramax Films. Liev Schreiber's character, Stuart, found himself in 1876, via time travel, and had discovered an inventor, the titular Leopold, played by Hugh Jackman. The only exception was that Stuart didn't need a machine but had uncovered a portal in the fabric of time. When Leopold had followed Stuart back to the 21st century, he met Kate, played by Meg Ryan, and her brother, Charlie, played by Breckin Meyer. I won't reveal any more details, for those who haven't seen it.
    The best Back to the Future movie for me is probably the original, although I also enjoy the sequels. I love how much George learns from Marty about perseverance, whether it involved pursuing his dreams of becoming an author, or finding the love of his life, Lorraine, or both. I love that George quotes Marty back to him at the end, when he tells him that if he puts his mind to it, then he can accomplish anything. I suppose the message of part 2 is that greed doesn't pay. But part 3 brings it full circle: The future is whatever we want it to be, so it better be a good one!

  • @lankanainen
    @lankanainen 5 місяців тому +4

    Even though I academically agree that the first film is superior, my personal favourite is the second film. It’s the one that I happened to see the most as a child, and I love the ridiculous future and dystopian 1985. The car scene in the tunnel is boring for me, though.
    My favourite moment from the whole trilogy is the moment when the delorian gets struck by lightning and Doc is sent back to 1885.

  • @jpavlik04
    @jpavlik04 4 місяці тому +2

    The people that made the movie grew up in the 50s and made what they knew? Stop the presses.

  • @DynomitePunch
    @DynomitePunch 4 місяці тому +1

    ok, so here's the thing about nostalgia, is it's all about naivety, things WHERE simpler, things WHERE easier, things DID make more sense, FOR YOU, BECAUSE YOU WHERE A NAIVE KID! their are two core reasons you have a nostalgic view of a place, time, or object (game, movie, etc) the first is, you where younger and where dealing with way less problems on your plate, and therefore, compared to now when you gotta worry about bills, job, economic issues, personal things, etc, the childhood or young adulthood, looks WAY better in comparison, this is doubly true for objects, because they REMIND you of a time when you had less real life problems, and therefore make you feel happy for a while because their taking you back, and then theirs the fact that you pulled through those times largely unscathed, realizing that you already conquered that time in your life and so now it seems less daunting than the current time, like how a lot of people look back on the good times in high school and not the bad, if they had more good than bad going for them, in fact the opposite can be said for people who suffered in their childhood, they'll usually latch on to something specific that represents and time when things weren't so bad, this can cause those people to be EVEN MORE nostalgic of a thing or place, than others because they had a lot more bad layered on top than the rest of us.

  • @BillLaBrie
    @BillLaBrie 5 місяців тому +7

    BTTF is a special case of nostalgia: the 80’s were a whole decade of looking back at the 50s and reliving them in real life. The movie is a document of a time when culture in the US tried to reclaim the strength and innocence people liked to selectively remember from 30 years before. It posits “what if we had changed one little thing back then?” It’s one of the factors making it a perfect movie of sorts.

  • @DJSpaceRetrotunes
    @DJSpaceRetrotunes 3 місяці тому

    80s nostalgia in 2010s (nostalgia that keeps going in the 2020s) is the best prediction BTTF has ever made.

  • @luketj
    @luketj 3 місяці тому +1

    the people saying the 80s were actually the best clearly didn't actually watch the video. here's the truth guys: the present is always the best time to be alive. I promise you

  • @Disthron
    @Disthron 4 місяці тому

    I think this is a valid interpretation, and I suspect it was an aspect of the righting. Someone once pointed out to me that each of the 3 films focuses on one character and their relationship to time travel. 1 was about Marty, 2 was about Biff and 3 was about Doc Brown.

  • @serwinzzalot9989
    @serwinzzalot9989 5 місяців тому +4

    the 90s have a hard time coming back because black culture and grunge were prominent in that time.

  • @garyturner5739
    @garyturner5739 5 місяців тому +2

    Nostalgia is such lucrative industry. You'd be putting hell of lot of people out of work if you abolished it.

  • @davidstarsky6435
    @davidstarsky6435 5 місяців тому +4

    It is fun movies! Nostalgia is great! And the 80ies weren´t so terrible. Plutonium is hard to get even in 2024. Some things are nearly the same in 2015 because it's a in movie joke without a deeper meaning

  • @IAmMajor101
    @IAmMajor101 4 місяці тому +1

    '71 GEN X-er here... yeah, we had problems in the '80's, but I still look back with longing...We had the best Music, TV shows, Video Games and Pop Culture in general. We weren't naive by any means, but there was an underlying Innocence that pervaded that decade all the same. This began to erode during the '90's, but it was nowhere near as bad as it is today. It is that Innocence, Joy, and Fun that I miss. Yes, things weren't perfect in the '80's but the scales were more balanced then. Like most of my fellow GEN X-ers, I am homesick for a decade the likes of which will never happen again...😎

    • @atarkus8
      @atarkus8 3 місяці тому

      I think that's true for the later half of the 80s, once the nuclear war hysteria had subsided a bit. I recall a certain optimism, the belief in a positive future, that the rapidly developing technology was going to make our lives better. And it felt like the world was getting smaller, that people were being brought closer together. That kind of optimism disappeared a long time ago.

  • @genghisgahan9623
    @genghisgahan9623 3 місяці тому

    Im nearly 50 and i have seen enough decades to realise that people are more ornless the same, just with cultural differences - but the basics are kind of the same.
    Values are changing - and much like throughout history, some things improve, while other things get worse.
    What the 80's did have, was a great understanding of cinema and stories.
    Music was fantastic, fashion was frightful lol.
    There is a trade-off between progress and loss.
    I will say that the current era is a low point in culture, society and progress - but the generation of children now in school will change things.
    Im hopeful for the future, things always go round in roundabouts.

  • @jasonjerusalem
    @jasonjerusalem 5 місяців тому +1

    Well said about successful Biff from the vol. 2: the dude just can't let it go and grow the hell up. So he spends the rest of his life on achieving teenage jock's values and goals, like having the hottest girl and the biggest toys. Even killing his school rival.
    What a rich development of character following a flawless story and a masterpiece film.

  • @JoeyChilango
    @JoeyChilango 4 місяці тому +1

    Nostalgia is not a bad thing when taken in moderation.

  • @thewewguy8t88
    @thewewguy8t88 4 місяці тому

    Hey fun fact thanks to Picard and even being able to re-watch every single scene of tng I have been able to recreate new context for the show that I don't think the writers intended to happen or realize was happening but just flows so naturally. I say this because I can totally understand the idea of giving new context to something that decades old that not even the writers were aware was happening.( Same thing for star wars there is random throw away shot in return of the Jedi which now makes hardcore fans get so excited to watch.( It's basically the equivalent of discovering wolferine was helping the avengers this whole time but off screen and random throw away shot conforms that lol)

  • @radicalizeme
    @radicalizeme 6 місяців тому +6

    Really interesting take on BTTF. It’s also my favorite and has been since I was really young, and this is an interpretation I haven’t heard before. It’s good to see a fellow up and comer making good sh*t. Keep it up!

  • @fightrudyfight5799
    @fightrudyfight5799 8 місяців тому +3

    I rarely ever give part 3 a full watch if it’s even on. Now 1 and 2 I’ve watched so many times. It gives me memories of rainy days and not going anywhere so it was always a good watch on TBS. They played them so much as a kid.

    • @mungosmungo8694
      @mungosmungo8694 5 місяців тому +1

      What hurts 3 is that I changes the perspective of character.
      1 and 2 are very much about Marty, and it's from Marty's perspective.
      3 is about Doc, and Marty is there, so we have a reason to be there.
      It's this pivot that makes 3 the weaker movie. Especially since we know Marty is trying to save doc, but we have this whole shoot out thing that really doesn't hold the weight it should...cause the movie is about Doc.
      Not a bad thing, it just falls into less interesting content with the focal change.

  • @videokilledaradiosta
    @videokilledaradiosta 4 місяці тому

    Thank goodness, finally someone telling it like it is about Nostalga.

  • @D-Fens_1632
    @D-Fens_1632 5 місяців тому +3

    And I think we give Goldie Wilson way too big of a pass. I dunno if it's because he was the first black mayor or what (technically we don't know he was the first but it's assumed), but we kinda overlook that Hill Valley has gone to hell under his governance. I mean he let the theater in the town square turn into a peep show, had terrorist activity happening, the schools had graffiti on them, homeless alcoholics sleeping on park benches, etc. This wasn't stuff you saw in small, Everytown USA in the 1980s. That came a little later, sooner for others depending on where they live. I say DON'T re-elect Goldie Wilson. He couldn't even fix a clock that had been broken for 30 years, you think he cares about you?

    • @Fenris30
      @Fenris30 5 місяців тому

      The homeless guy was the Mayor in the 50's. The reason downtown has changed is cause of the Mall being built. It's the 80's their deep into Reagonomics so the citizens have been sold a bill of goods that stuff like that would revitalize Hill Valley but as you can see in 2015 Hill Valley has gotten better. Goldy the third even praises his Grandfather for being the start of that change. Nice try though loser.

    • @chandlerburse
      @chandlerburse 5 місяців тому +2

      He didn’t have terrorist activity happening that was Doc who caused that
      Also what was he suppose to do? Predict that Doc Brown would piss off some terrorists?

  • @dan6442
    @dan6442 3 місяці тому

    People don't change. Their desires don't change. The environment around them changes. Comfort level changes. Sometimes better, sometimes not.

  • @remelin75
    @remelin75 5 місяців тому +1

    It never stops to amaze me how great American movies and music were during the 80's. Both large and small productions were done with passion, and that shows.
    But each era has its own stuff where people's passion shines through. Videos on UA-cam are incredible today, and indi games are fantastic.
    And who knows what the next era will show us. I think AI will be incredible at visualizing our imagination, rather than just doing something similar to what we asked for as it does today. And a whole new world will open up when VR finally becomes more comfortable with higher quality than a monitor.

  • @alptigin5438
    @alptigin5438 4 місяці тому

    Let's acknowledge that a massive part of these films' quality is the triple-S-rank acting clinic being put on by Thomas Wilson.

  • @g.davidturnblom5751
    @g.davidturnblom5751 4 місяці тому

    All three films are great, but Back to the Future part 2 has certain lessons in it that, while harsh and sometimes poorly portrayed, are essential to understanding the trilogy as a whole, in my opinion.

  • @benadams3569
    @benadams3569 5 місяців тому +25

    I've observed that people don't actually miss an era/decade as much as they miss being young. In most cases., they miss being young enough where they didn't have responsibilities, hadn't seen the real world to know that it's not "getting worse!!!!" It's always been like this, but thanks to 24/7 media, and internet lies (lol), people BELIEVE it's "worse now than it's ever been!!"
    😂

    • @HarrisProPerformanc
      @HarrisProPerformanc 5 місяців тому +6

      There are some objective ways to measure a time being worse though. Example suicide rates, divorce rates, murder and crime rates, etc. are they improving or getting worse?

    • @ingvar3072
      @ingvar3072 5 місяців тому +5

      @@HarrisProPerformanc they are not so objective, especially divorce rates. For example, in more conservative society diverse rates could be lower because it is considered inappropriate or even almost impossible to do, not because people happily live together

    • @laartwork
      @laartwork 5 місяців тому +5

      ​@@HarrisProPerformancfun fact: crime and murder rate today is way down than it was in the 1980's. It peaked in the 90's and has declined ever since. But the news reports crime more than before. So perception is different than reality.

    • @hufficag
      @hufficag 4 місяці тому +2

      Some things do get worse, like community or employment prospects or how easy it is to afford education.

  • @deepdrag8131
    @deepdrag8131 5 місяців тому +4

    It’s not the Four Aces. It’s the Chordettes’ version of Mr. Sandman we hear when Marty first arrives in 1955.

    • @NicheCaesar
      @NicheCaesar  5 місяців тому

      Not that it really matters, but it is in fact The Four Aces cover that plays in the movie. You can pull clips of it up on UA-cam or on the wiki for the soundtrack or even The Aces’ cover itself.

    • @deepdrag8131
      @deepdrag8131 5 місяців тому

      @@NicheCaesar As you suggested, I pulled a clip.
      ua-cam.com/video/3zgdZZmX7r8/v-deo.htmlsi=8BA_1aNFjFlzwMNY
      And you, of course, are right. How could I have possibly gotten it wrong?
      Must be the Mandela Effect! 😉

    • @NicheCaesar
      @NicheCaesar  5 місяців тому

      lol no worries, happens to all of us. I actually thought it was the Chordettes version for a while too, likely because someone had marked a download of the song as that back in the Limewire days

  • @dudermcdudeface3674
    @dudermcdudeface3674 5 місяців тому +2

    Nostalgia itself isn't a lie (see: Almost Famous, The Sandlot, etc.), but liars love faking nostalgia as a product to sell. I sincerely dislike Robert Zemeckis movies for this reason, even though BTTF reaches a place of honor by other means.

  • @ridethelapras
    @ridethelapras 4 місяці тому

    My drama teacher (in 2005ish) said to us, "People think that in the '50s it was just like _Happy Days._ Really, it was the same as it is now, only more boring."

  • @michaelfasher
    @michaelfasher 5 місяців тому +1

    I saw it at the movies in 1985. It was the first movie that matched the Star Wars trilogy. I saw the original Star Wars in the late seventies and everyone else had a hard time competing.

  • @bobdrago69657
    @bobdrago69657 5 місяців тому +6

    My parents arrived in the USA in the 1920’s. They built a life and the kids and grandchildren did very well professionally and financially. However, the legal and institutional racism during the era of the 20’s-50’s was pretty bad. Stuff like redlining, sundown towns, segregation, voting rights, you know, overt racism. Mom and Dad fought through that and “model minoritied” themselves to relative success. Not true for many minorities and women.

    • @NicheCaesar
      @NicheCaesar  5 місяців тому

      Oof yeah. Dont get me started on the model minority stereotype. Been likened to that in the past and it’s brutal.

    • @michaellovell8352
      @michaellovell8352 5 місяців тому

      Please don't reproduce. Ever

    • @hufficag
      @hufficag 4 місяці тому

      And now that the West has corporations not hiring recent grads in 2010 and people's houses are being foreclosed on, me and my peers moved to China which everyone says is booming. Same story but in Asia.

  • @UndeadAbomination
    @UndeadAbomination 5 місяців тому

    An incredibly nice analysis, gr8 watch, thank you for the effort

  • @kunserndsittizen2655
    @kunserndsittizen2655 5 місяців тому +10

    My life currently SUCKS. It’s not nostalgia. If I could QUANTUM LEAP back to 1993 then I’d be overjoyed. Only thing is that after everything horrible that has happened...I probably would be scarred and not enjoy it.

  • @volt8ge
    @volt8ge 5 місяців тому

    Being a massive BTTF fan as well… the film is the reason why I picked up the guitar in 8th grade and why I wanted to do something in the film industry. I believe the Bob’s would whole heartedly agree with this video.

  • @CreativeMicrowave
    @CreativeMicrowave 4 місяці тому

    You know, I made a time machine car commercial featuring the DeLorean.

  • @alexanderwood5999
    @alexanderwood5999 5 місяців тому +1

    The current 90s nostalgia is as strong as I remember the 50s nostalgia being. The rising 2000s nostalgia is the strangest of all though. That decade was pretty awful, symbolized most by Heath Ledger’s Joker. But not as bad as the next two Trump decades. In truth, every time period sucks. I honestly don’t feel nostalgia for anything. It all sucked.

  • @carvedouttastone
    @carvedouttastone 4 місяці тому

    Brilliant. So well done

  • @jenniferpearce1052
    @jenniferpearce1052 11 місяців тому +1

    I never thought so deeply about these movies but your take makes a lot of sense! I love the first and saw the next 2 in the theater and never rewatched them. I didn't like the second one. Dystopias are not my thing! The third was more fun. I still remember the glass of nice clear well water! I really need to watch the whole series again. Thanks!

    • @NicheCaesar
      @NicheCaesar  11 місяців тому +2

      Glad you enjoyed the video and thanks for sharing your memories of the series! Back to the Future II was actually my favorite one as a kid but, after decades of rewatching it, I actually think it’s the weakest by a long shot! The third one has a lot of great jokes though (like the water gag you mentioned, or Marty noticing some buckshot in his dinner!)

  • @cflisthebest
    @cflisthebest 5 місяців тому

    which lense worked best?

  • @PanhandleFrank
    @PanhandleFrank 5 місяців тому

    "Ghoulardi hates nostalgia. Ghoulardi knows nostalgia ain't what it used to be." ~ Ghoulardi

  • @TheStarTrekApologist
    @TheStarTrekApologist 5 місяців тому +1

    I saw Back to the Future when it was one movie, ad ended with "To Be Continued...". I was wondering if they would ever make a second one.

    • @moaningpheromones
      @moaningpheromones 4 місяці тому

      I would make a film called To Be Continued. Or Trilogy. Then it's getting made 100%

  • @briansinger5258
    @briansinger5258 5 місяців тому +1

    An un-ironic discourse on Manifest Destiny in three films.

  • @EPYCpeacemakers
    @EPYCpeacemakers 4 місяці тому

    I’m so sorry you lost your best friend. I know that pain.

  • @hawaiiman33
    @hawaiiman33 4 місяці тому

    I just realized that the bum red is the red Tomas on the poster on that black car

  • @CrisisActorJonsiri
    @CrisisActorJonsiri 4 місяці тому

    Marty is the actor symbol of The Walk (2015)? Director: Robert Zemeckis

  • @Chase.h.hillenberg
    @Chase.h.hillenberg Місяць тому

    19:04 doc was living the life though lol