Back to the Future: 25th Anniversary Trilogy [7 Discs]Back to the Future: 25th Anniversary Trilogy [7 Discs]

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  • Aspect Ratio:
    Widescreen
  • Rating:
     PG
  • Language:
      Eng
  • Studio:
      Universal Studios
  • UPC:
      025192068171
  • Year of Release:
      2010
  • Item Number:
      MCA006817
  • Release Date:
      10/26/2010
  • Genre:
     

    Sci-Fi Adventure

    Sci-Fi Comedy

    Science Fiction

  • Format:
     

    DVD

MOVIE DESCRIPTION:

    Join Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox), Doc Brown (Christopher Lloyd) and a time traveling DeLorean for fun, thrilling and fantastic adventures!

DVD FEATURES:
  • Region: 1
  • Number of Discs: 4
  • Screen: Enhanced Wide Screen Letterbox for 16x9 TV
  • Audio: Dolby Digital Stereo
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 (Theatre Wide Screen)
  • Features:
    • Tales from the future six-part documentary featuring all-new interviews with the cast and crew
    • The physics of back to the future
    • Deleted scenes
    • Michael J. Fox q&a
    • 7 Archival featurettes: including the secrets of the back to the future trilogy
    • Behind the scenes:
    • Nuclear test site ending storyboard sequence
    • Original makeup tests
    • Outtakes
    • Production design
    • Storyboarding
    • Designing the DeLorean
    • Designing time travel
    • Hoverboard test
    • Evolution of visual effects shots
    • Designing the town of hill valley
    • Designing the campaign
    • Photo galleries
    • Music videos: including "the power of love" by Huey Lewis and the News
    • Audio commentaries with director Robert Zemeckis and producers Bob Gale & Neil Canton
    • Back to the future: the ride experience the universal studios theme park attraction, including lobby monitor and preshow footage
AWARDS
  • Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
  •     Won Best Sound Effects - 1985 (Robert R. Rutledge, Charles L. Campbell)
  •     Nominated Best Visual Effects - 1989 (Stephen Gawley, Michael Lantieri, John Bell, Ken Ralston)
  •     Nominated Best Original Screenplay - 1985 (Bob Gale, Robert Zemeckis)
  •     Nominated Best Song - 1985 (Huey Lewis, Chris Hayes, Johnny Colla)
  •     Nominated Best Sound - 1985 (Bill Varney, Robert Thirlwell, B. Tennyson Sebastian II, William B. Kaplan)
  • British Academy of Film and Television Arts
  •     Won Achievement in Special Effects - 1990 (Michael Lantieri, John Bell)
  •     Nominated Best Picture - 1985
  • National Board of Review
  •     Nominated Best Picture - 1985
  • People's Choice Awards
  •     Won Best Picture - 1985
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
REVIEWS:
  • Back to the Future is Robert Zemeckis/Steven Spielberg storytelling at its best, with humor, action, special effects and a Huey Lewis soundtrack rolled together in a package that proves "Fun" and "PG" are not antonyms. Michael J. Fox, then known mostly for his role on TV's Family Ties, is a teenage everyman who fulfills the dream of escaping his go-nowhere home life and dorky parents, only to find them transformed by his own hand. Supporting him is Christopher Lloyd, let loose to do what he does best -- act like a complete nut -- in the role of mad scientist Doc Brown. The film makes the most of the notion that Fox's Marty McFly can change the future, and successfully pays off on an astounding number of plot angles. Marty not only assures his own continued existence but changes the makeup of his family and community by helping his dad grow a backbone or (if you're watching carefully) altering the name of the local mall. More than just a series of anachronisms, Back to the Future has a real heart. You suffer along with Marty's teenaged dad, George, at the depredations of his tormentor, Biff, and get a genuine surge of adrenaline and pride when George finally takes his stand. Could this event lead to a changed life? In Back to the Future it does, believably. In fact, the film has more in common with the sentimental fantasy of It's a Wonderful Life than with the often-mindless action of the science fiction pictures that followed, proving that bigger budgets and more elaborate special effects didn't exactly lead to a higher-quality summer blockbuster. ~ Matthew Doberman, Rovi
  • "History repeats itself" is the jokey lesson at the heart of Back to the Future Part III, as the Old West version of Hill Valley is chock full of ancestors who all behave exactly as their descendents will in 1955, 1985 and 2015. It's in this way that Back to the Future Part III succumbs to sequelitis, the malady that inflicts series in which the same jokes are tirelessly repeated, to remind audiences what they liked so much about the original. And because the head-spinning questions raised by time travel in the first two movies were what connected with audiences, awakening their intellectual curiosity and sense of awe, there's something noticeably absent when the series settles down in an old dusty town for its finale. A conventional, though not unappealing, western/comedy, Back to the Future Part III relies a lot more on the waning charm of Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd, plus an influx of sweetness from Mary Steenburgen, than the fascinating gadgets and elaborate plans that made the first two whir along. Although the softer tone is a welcome change after the dark Back to the Future Part II, the third film feels like a technological and creative step backward in terms of its narrative and contrived plot elements. It maintains a whiff of the genius and wit that set the series in motion, but it also seems like Universal's attempt to play it safer after the risky and challenging middle installment. It's a competent conclusion to the series, but too comfortable to earn the kind of affection this series deserves. ~ Derek Armstrong, Rovi

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