Clock Tower Back To The Future
Honorbound mm. Each MRT coordinator met with Christian Unity NCOM board Liaison, Louie Nobs to discuss a plan of action.
Back to the Future: The Ride was a simulator ride at Universal Studios theme parks.It was based on and inspired by the Back to the Future film series and is a mini-sequel to 1990's Back to the Future Part III.It was located at Universal Studios Florida and Universal Studios Hollywood, where it was replaced by The Simpsons Ride, and at Universal Studios Japan, where it was replaced.
Back to the Future SummaryMarty McFly. All-American boy. He has small-town dreams of being a rock star, gets in just enough trouble at school (okay, maybe a little too much), spends as much time as he can with his girlfriend, Jennifer, and spends whatever time is left with his family.But he also pals around with the town nutso, Dr. Emmett Brown. Who knows how or why this odd couple found one another but they did. And now Doc has roped Marty into helping him test out his greatest invention—a working time machine made out of a DeLorean.
And oh yeah—it runs on plutonium. That he stole from a bunch of Libyan nationalists. Thank goodness nothing could possibly go wrong.Except that the Libyans show up.
They shoot Doc (apparently to death) and then go after Marty, who escapes in the DeLorean to 1955. Suddenly, his town is different, the people are different heck, in this place you can't even get a Pepsi Free. Scene 1. We open on a blue screen. There is a white box and some wordsoh, hold up.
This is the MPAA rating. Totally not part of the movie. Here we go.
The screen is dark. There is a ticking sound though, so either we're in a roomful of clocks, or else we're going to have to diffuse a bomb. Thank goodness—clocks.
A lot of clocks. There are also radios, coffee machines and televisions coming on all by themselves. Marty (our hero) arrives.
He's got a skateboard, so we can assume he's pretty cool, because a skateboard is always a surefire sign of coolness. Sunglasses, denim jacket.
Perfectly feathered hair. He's cool all right. He calls out for some 'Doc' person, who isn't home. After mortally wounding some of his friend's audio equipment, the phone rings and it's Doc.
Something about Marty meeting him at Twin Pines Mall at 1:15 am. Shady, but okay. Scene 2. Scene 3. Busted. Strickland, the school principal, gives Marty a hard time about hanging out with Dr. Emmett Brown, a.k.a.
Sounds like this Dr. Brown doesn't have the best reputation around town. Strickland then tells Marty he's a slacker, and compares him to his slacker father then tops it all off by telling Marty that his band doesn't have a chance of making it through the audition for the school dance, and he shouldn't waste his time. This guy has inspiration and motivation oozing out of his pores. We can see why he became an educator. Scene 10.
Marty meets up with Doc, your typical mad scientist type, his dog Einstein, and a car. A DeLorean, specifically. The camera starts rolling, and Marty records Doc explaining that he's built a time machine. He proves it by sending Einstein one minute into the future. Doc shows Marty how it works, and introduces him to the 'flux capacitor,' which is what makes time travel possible. But here's the kicker. The thing runs on plutonium.
How did Doc get a hold of such a thing, you ask? Eh, he ripped it off a group of Libyan nationalists. We can't see a down side. Oh: here's that down side.
The Libyans show up, pepper Doc with bullets, and nearly do the same to Marty but he luckily escapes via the DeLorean. Out of the frying pan and into the fire. Scene 11. Scene 21. Back at Doc's swanky pad, they hook up the video camera to the TV (incredibly, the 1985 cords are still compatible with 1955 electronic equipment). Doc watches his older self in amazement and delight but goes a bit ballistic when he gets to the part about the 1.21 'jigowatts' of electricity.
If it had been us, we think our threshold for shock would have been lowered after hearing someone say, 'I'm from the future.' .
Since the procurement of plutonium is not really an option in 1955, they stumble upon the ingenious and oh-so-fortunate idea of using a bolt of lightning—the one that is due to screw up the clock tower in about a week—to generate the power needed to send Marty back to 1985. So he's got a week to chillbut unfortunately, it's not going to be much of a relaxing vacation. Because he bumped into his parents and threw the course of history all out of whack, Doc informs Marty that he's got to figure out a way to get mom and pop back together, or there won't be a Marty McFly to send back to the future.
Scene 23. Once inside the school, Marty points out his father. Yep, the guy with the 'Kick me' sign on his back. Hey, it's Strickland! Apparently, this guy lives to get up in the McFlys' faces. As George is down on the ground, picking up his books following his latest bullying encounter Marty reintroduces himself, reminds him that he saved his freakin' life, and plants the seed that there's someone he wants him to meet. George, meet Lorraine.
Super mario 3d land world 1 music. Except Lorraine is way more interested in her new crush than she is in the dweeby guy with glasses and a haircut only a mother could love. So: new plan. The Enchantment Under the Sea dance is coming up, and the idea is to get George and Lorraine to go together, come hell or high water.
Scene 24. Scene 30. Back at Doc's place, Marty tries to warn him about the Libyans, but Doc is having none of it. There's also this super-intricate and detailed model of Hill Valley that would normally take a dozen model artists about three weeks to make, but somehow Doc has put this thing together himself in less than one.
Maybe he has a second time machine somewhere he's not telling us about?. Anyway, he demonstrates how the lightning thing is going work. In what is a bit of a stalkerish move, Lorraine has followed Marty to Doc's place, and sheasks him to the dance. Marty's caught off guard, so he says yes.
Scene 38. We're back to the car, and Lorraine plants one on Marty. Needless to say Marty is not into it. Once again, here's Biff to rescue someone from an uncomfortable situation. What a sweet, thoughtful guy. He grabs Marty out of the car and vows to make him regret the $300 worth of damage to his car from the manure incident. Then, after passing him off to his goons, he hops into the driver's seat and starts to take advantage of a scantily dressed Lorraine.
Things are spiraling out of control in a hurry. Scene 39. Scene 45. And suddenly, it's Marvin Berry, Marty McFly and the Starlighters. Marty has a little difficulty because his hand starts to disappear (because his body fades when it seems as though George and Lorraine won't get together) but George gives Lorraine the kiss of true love just in the nick of time. So now Marty has a one-time only chance to get back to 1985 but he has a hard time turning down requests. He ends up staying to perform a rousing rendition of Johnny B.
Goode which gets the attention of Marvin's cousin Chuck. Scene 47. The music's picking up, so it must be just about lightning time. Doc gives Marty the rundown (they couldn't have gone over this stuff earlier?) and then they hug and say their good-byes. What a time to check your jacket pocket. Doc discovers the note Marty left there, and rips it up in front of him. Oops.
A perfectly-timed-for-maximum-dramatic-effect tree branch breaks and falls, landing directly on one of Doc's wires and unplugs something or other at the top of the clock tower. Doc runs up to the top of the tower, throws a rope down to Marty, and is able to pull up the wires, but they're losing valuable minutes. After sliding across the hood of the DeLorean, Marty jumps inside and hightails it out of there.
Scene 48.
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