Nerdy Up North Podcast - Back to the future episode artwork

EPISODE · Nov 22, 2022 · 1H 30M

Nerdy Up North Podcast - Back to the future

from Nerdy Up North Podcast · host Paul Watson & Sammie Bryce

This week we take a trip the future and the past with one of the most magical and loved movies of the 80's. Yes we are talking about back to the future.

This week we take a trip the future and the past with one of the most magical and loved movies of the 80's. Yes we are talking about back to the future.

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Nerdy Up North Podcast - Back to the future

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TRANSCRIPT · AUTO-GENERATED

Good. Sound is not going to improve, don't worry. So a lie. Hi, everyone, and welcome to the Nelly of North Park House.

It's a naughty podcast, and it's supposed to be on the next. Ah, yeah, I'm on your horse, Sam. And I'm the host, Paul. And we are coming to you on a Monday night as, oh, it changed up a little bit.

I'm not ready. We just wanted to come to the core host. It's Wim, because she wanted to experience her natural real life con. And she's come back, we're all going to go.

Really? We're all going to go. Do you like it? Yes.

And tonight we are joined by the lovely Emma. And good will. My oldest and dearest friend who gives me zero sympathy. What you deserve.

Thank you. Give zero, folks. Yes. So on this special Monday night episode of the podcast, it was meant to be the special birthday weekend podcast where we were doing a review on Back to the Future.

So we are going to get next. I know as soon as I mentioned that I wanted to review this film, I think Sam said Emma was a messenger like Crazins, and she wanted to be a part of this. Yeah. And good will as well.

We can't read more from this place now, it seems. Even though we do have a risk-free in order in base. It's pending. It's pending viewer.

Right. Guys, he kisses me. That's all I've got to say. Where's your necklace?

Would you like to know? LAUGHTER Don't put the necklace in, so yes. So do you want to get your little bits out of the way there, Sami? I'll get your little bits out of the way.

So everything that's missing today's episode is our opinions and our opinions a lot. If you would like to discuss anything from today's episode, please come and join us in the Facebook group where we can have an open decision. What we want to have is anyone coming for us and tell us our opinions are wrong, but we can all agree to disagree and fandom. So that's a good fun kind and keep the toxic behaviour out of Notism.

She's got no question about it. So much of us. She doesn't know as well. It's the voice that was on the BBC.

It was on BBC. So this is going to be Emma's first experience of Sami's new little thing. Oh, that's right. But it's not you because we've tried to do it since episode one, which I've pointed out was to do it.

And if you want to hear me four and five, that's episode one and all. But just ask, how are you all doing? How are you all keeping watching? What are you being up to?

Oh, God. That's where we're at, Emma. Can I go first? Please, do.

I do apologise. I'm serious. I'm extremely tired. But I've been watching 1899 that came out on Netflix and I bloody loved it.

So you've all said that. And if you haven't seen it already, go and watch it before Netflix cancels it. Please. Because whenever anything goes on Netflix, you'll go, guys, people love this.

Yeah, let's cancel it. Please, this needs a season two. I need a season two of this. Please go watch it.

1899. It does look pretty good. I've seen the advert. It looks quite spooky.

Like chilling. So what's it about? That's so interesting. It's a very interesting.

It's a very interesting. 1899 is set in a year. Are you ready for this? It's from the, I think it's from the meters of dark.

Right. I think it's from the meters of dark. Oh, is that the, um, oh gosh, it's a, it's a, it's a one, isn't it? It's a multi-lingual.

It's multi-lingual. So there's this element of English German. So that's Scandinavian. It's like, I don't know.

It's the very basic non-spoiler premise is the year 1899 on a transatlantic crossing, a ship diverts, because they've received a distress single from another ship that went missing four months ago and was never heard from again. That's all I'm going to say because it's only eight episodes and I really don't want to spoil it because it is brilliant. Top tip though, and I think I did say this on our little chat, Netflix defaults to English with dope. Oh no.

To appease the Americans. If you just change it to English original, it will go to the intended audio, which is obviously an ex of English, vegan, French, Spanish, German, it makes it way more authentic. Yeah. Right.

So I'm going to be watching this week and I really cannot recommend this enough. I love this. That's cool. Sounds like hard work, but I'll try.

I'm going to finish when I started 10 years ago, watching the last season of The Walk on Dead. I'm doing it. I've invested 10 years of my life of this. I'm going to see this fuck out through to the end.

You don't get that time back, you know. I don't realize that 10 years on. No, it's one of those things you have to finish. I know Nick's busy watching the last two episodes now downstairs.

No, she doesn't watch the podcast. I don't like the podcast. I don't like the podcast. She just tells people often, it's going to kick off with everyone.

She just thought it was that way. I'll give her a juice there. You're watching anything interesting? At the moment, I'm watching a couple of things.

I, again, we went back to rewatch something and finish off and it was Orange is a New Black. So I'm on the last series of Armages a New Black at the moment. Because last time I watched it, I kind of got to like, see me try and then give up. I thought I was on the third video.

And we're also me and the other half are watching White Lotus on Sky at the moment, which is actually quite interesting. It's quite intriguing about the hotel in Hawaii and just making it one holiday as well. So, I never heard of that one. I think I've seen a doctorate.

Jennifer Cola, Jennifer Cola, Jennifer. Oh, how did she just move over that? Yeah. I was going to go home.

Sam, how was your mum? She's good. She wants to come on and do a freezer episode. Come on.

She can come on. I'm a little bit of a dumb man. She's definitely something. I went to see Black Adam on Friday.

I know it's got a lot of hate online. I've actually enjoyed it. It doesn't reinvent the wheel. It's a simple, basically, I wouldn't even see it as like a start, but like a start and a fresh.

It's just basically a superhero story where it's not black and white and it's a pain in America without seeing America, like colours in not so great light. There's a well, but it's a little bit too in your face at times with the message that I was trying to get across. But it's intended to and it's worth it for the end credits scene as well, which I think the whole thing that is. We've got to watch it.

I want to watch it. I saw your review on it and I was like, yeah, I'll give it a try. I really need to get out and see Black Panther as well. I watched a Netflix documentary TV show because you know how Netflix loves these TV shows.

The one about the Pepsi advert. Where's my jet? Where's my jet? So it's basically a sort of five episode documentary where the Pepsi broadcast basically an adverts in, if you collect five, seven million Pepsi points was when they were given the Pepsi T shirts and Pepsi bags and stuff.

And then you have a hurry of jets, but they didn't put any disclaimer on. So some college kid worked out how much it would cost to get seven million points. But then Pepsi fucked themselves in the arse again by raising the cup locks in instead of saving the Pepsi points, you can pay for a point of ten cents a point. So he worked out it would cost over 400,000 pounds for seven million Pepsi points.

And he went through the business market, he knew this guy who was like a millionaire and stuff like that. Give him a business plan and look, this is how we can do it. And got the lawyers involved and thought, yeah, there's no legal ramifications and Pepsi shit a brick. That's amazing.

Obviously the center check was $400,000 in we went to a hurry of jet and then Pepsi tried suing them saying that he was trying to get an illegal thing and said this should have should have known it was a joke. That was a joke. No, no, no part of it. But the same went down the whole route of advertising and how Pepsi wanted the number to be kind of like a tenable but not a tenable so they thought no one in the right mind would get the seven million.

But like the original advertisers said like they said they want to say over 700 million or 70 million but they kept on bringing it down to all that numbers to be because it wanted people's like kids to think I'm going to buy Pepsi and they got to talk about and say that originally offered a million pound in settlement. But he declined because he said he won these jet because the jet was worth 30 million. And he knows he's worth this guy. But the problem was like say this guy who's a young kid and Pepsi just threw money out to right where to take through all the courts and and got like say the right judge to George and stuff like it was proper.

So the end of losing would have cost him millions to keep going and trying to get it. So but I said the documentary was hilarious just to say how much this company had fucked up this big company had perhaps even. I want to get it to the point of view as well. You've got a bit of gratification there knowing that how much money Pepsi would have thrown into not being sued because I thought it would have been on their behalf.

When did this all happen Paul and the East and the best area. I'm sat here and I'm thinking of the Simpsons episode where I guess an elephant is just called. Well, maybe I was going to give you some stickers. I think the co-capes only ended in the end of the year by 99.

So I did go on for a long time but every time it kept on saying it's just getting up. I just want this but they got this other lawyer involved who was going to federal prison now because it was a bit dodgy. Because they were going to go really to the throat to Pepsi to the point where they were going to do an ad campaign that always would have ended up with people in jail for libel. So, but also you ended up in the best documentaries I've seen in a while.

I remember the Spice Bells just after Tai Pepsi. I remember when Cindy Crawford did this with the mall. John Crawford married the owner of Pepsi and became one of their. She kind of took off about a decade and didn't go very well.

She was there for quite a year. But John Crawford was the owner of Pepsi. I tell you what was the funniest part of the documentary. Each person that was gone on had to do the court challenge.

So it had to taste like two busy country containers and say which one of the best and court won six five. Actually, Pepsi advertisement died picked a coke. I like to be tried to know. Pepsi's always my drink choice.

I love coke and I can't go to the world but coke and other can. I call glass ball coke. Yes. It's all right.

Now it's an extra. That's how we all talk about coke is coking. That is such a good podcast. But it is such a good segue into what we are talking about tonight because it's actually one of the courts.

That's quite a lot. I get a Pepsi free. You want a Pepsi? Pepsi and Sunny got a paper-ish.

That's it. I'm a guy. I gave you a tab without telling you what it was. The product placement and advertising in this movie was brilliant.

Genius. Absolutely genius. So yes, we are talking all about Back of the Future. We're just doing the first one.

We're going to delve into the other ones. We're going to talk about the C, how it goes. I'll mix it because I want to keep the trilogy for another podcast, another day when we talk about best franchises and stuff like that. It's going to come up and all the rings can pop off but we'll not pull it out.

You must have just read my mind because I was just thinking, oh, and we can add a lot of the rings into that one too. No. Good will. A lot of the rings, yes, but the Hobbit.

No. I'm just going to put that in there. Yeah, I agree with that one. Absolutely not.

A lot of the rings. One of the rings. Yeah, I guess. Anyone who's listening on YouTube as well, I've got a little soundbite over us playing.

So if you can hear it, just let us know if it's annoying you or anything like that. I've got a little do do do do do make for the back of the future. Oh, that noise. Do do do do do do do do.

You hear it when you walk through Universal Studios in Florida. Ah, it's about trying to be jealous of anybody who's been Universal Studios to say that. Yes. Well, it's gone now the back to the ultra-rise one but I went on it so many times and it was so so busted up by the end that you can tell it was honestly out.

I'm so jealous of anybody who's been honest. I've touched the train. So I've touched the train from number three. I'm touching the walk past the view.

I've been to Hill Valley. Oh my God. Oh, I've got a lot of lines. I've got a dog.

Well done, man. It's in the box. So she needs to take out the box. No, no, no, no, no.

I can't take out the box. I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm. It's because he's telling you. It literally joins my two favorite things in life.

Dogs and about the future. Yes. Some of us older than others. But we got to experience back to the future like first time around maybe not at the cinema, but I can see a VHS release.

We've got PGE up as we can see now. We've got 85. 85. Literally in a movie.

Yes, it is. It actually is. So directed by Robert's Megas and I can't remember that. I want to say Bob Korean, but it's not.

It was written by Bob Gail. Robert's Megas. It was produced by Spielberg. It wasn't a film.

Yeah, it was produced by Spielberg, but it wasn't a film. I think Kennedy and Bob Gail were the judges. With David Spielberg, who made the shoes, the Doc's pet, because he was initially in the first draft of the script. He was supposed to have a pet chimp.

But Steven Spielberg turned around to Robert's Megas and said that apparently nobody made no film, makes money with a chimp in it. So the changes. I like Einstein as a dog. What was he called when he went the first dog called?

I was it to Pertnall? It was a Copernicus. Something like that. I think that's a name.

Some astrologist or something like that. Scientists. I'm going to do it with science. I knew you were the first time you saw Back to the Future.

I genuinely can't because I've seen it that many times. I can remember the first time I saw the kunis, but I can't remember the first time I've seen Back to the Future because literally it was on every bank holiday, every Christmas, every Easter weekend. Anytime I see it, I think it needed a slow film and the first time I saw it. I can't remember that actually watching it for the best time.

It's one of my dad's favourites. Absolutely loves it. I've seen so many times and we watched it last weekend with it as well. I've got to watch a few films.

I still love that. I was in the line before the lines. We're coming on. It depends on how many times have you seen this film.

I can't even see it. I'm not even seeing it. I'm not seeing it. I'm not seeing it.

I'm not seeing it. I'm not seeing it. I'm not seeing it. I'm not even seeing it.

So what's this with you? It's like a go to film like for me every time I'm having a rubbish time or I'm feeling a bit little. Back to the future is one of the ones. I know I can go to, I know I can just watch it over and over again.

Not had the greatest time at the moment lately. I did watch it over the day. It was on the sofa. I've never seen the sofa with a cat me in the cast.

It was just great. Let's take the comfort blanket as well. I watched it too. In theory as well, when you're watching the film now, this movie could have been a real big mess.

The things, the storylines and everything, everything that's going on in it. it. This movie shouldn't work as well as it is. Yeah.

So not only is it the most scientifically proven perfect film of all time, it also gets teach in UCLA as the most perfect script, not just the script alone, as the most perfect script written and that's the teach off the back of that. Yeah, it's a fun lesson, isn't it? It's funny saying it's like it was the continuity within the film itself. And, you know, again, things going from when he, you know, the beginning where the mall's called Twin Pine Mall, and then obviously he goes back to, you know, to 1955, knocked over a pine tree and then later on in the film towards the end, you say that's called like lone pine mall.

Yeah. Everything. Everything means something, even to the point where when I comes back from the future and he looks at the way she goes, oh, he's one minute and 21 seconds out, just 1.20, 21. Yeah.

Everything means something and that's why this is like the most perfect script. Yeah. It took seven years to make the process. Rob's a mechus literally barging into Spielberg's office to it being film bought.

It's insane that it is scientifically, you know, a perfect movie considering that the insanity of production and post-production, because it started filming in November, 84. Yeah. And it was just a torrential rain constantly on the universal lot, but it had to be filmed on a night time as well. It was the first movie to be ever filmed in a universal backlog.

So it was basically the learning curve that any other film after that was based on what they did that in that production. But you have to give them props with the Edison, you know, with the continuity, like Sammy said, because they they wanted it originally from May 85 and then they put it back to July, late July, early August, 85. And they then said, oh, can you do it for July 4th? And the absolute speed of which they got this for, I mean, in the 80s as well, they didn't have the technology that we do that on this and the perfection in it.

And the famously that the last thing that they did was the effect shot island had to do the effect shot where Marty's hand is disappearing. It was the last shot and they just turned around and went, yeah, that'll do. And they left and it spilled because they were all against the wall with the deadline. It was a couple of weeks before it was due to pre-six.

Yeah, Michael J Fox was doing family time. Yeah, because that's because that's the reason why you originally turned down the part. Yeah, I think I've excelled so no. Yes.

And that's the question I'll say is picture look, because there's actually been pictures released now, a very salt in in back of the future because the film quite a lot of it. Yeah, still in the movie. He is as part of the way, yeah, as part of the way he's back turned and it's because the shot is so short they've used him. But he was such a he was trying to go all what's the word, like method, that's it.

And we have everyone calling him. I'm Marty with that. You've got to call his mind with that. So when he actually got fired, nobody knew who he was.

They were like, oh, Eric's also being fired. Like who? I have no idea. And the two, the guy who plays the band, the guy who plays his man, they did that.

They did that. They got they did their wrap up. And on the first part, got a phone call from Robert's next and said you have to come into me office now, generally both of them thought they'll be in fact. And it wasn't that had to apologize to them and say, listen, we fired, Eric, we need to get his back.

We have to go and reshoot it all. Use will be paid. But we're going to have to push because obviously an actor has given a time of how long you'll be on set for that time and changes when you've got to add into reshoots of something you shouldn't really be reshooting. And so yeah, they got a bit of a relief.

They were generally crying as they I was having been a lot of facts to do. They were generally generally crying as they walked into his office. And he was like, what's like, what's like, did they have no idea that they thought they were going to get sacked because he has the crew knew for a week before the sack and salt. And the message was deliberately filming shots where it was either without him, or it was like close-ups involved in the thing.

And the new for a week and they said I want to find him, he was more relieved than anything because he just said I didn't gel with the movie at all. Obviously it was designed for someone with obviously it was designed for JF Foxy mind. And the comedic time and the comedic movements just weren't there with Eric Salska. He is very method.

I read somewhere that he when he was asked about, obviously, you know, when he was asked to play a bit more like comedy style, he was refusing because he didn't feel like, you know, he thought it was a tragedy. He was, you know, going on about how the script is such a tragedy. And so he wasn't actually, you know, willing to do it in a comedy time and things like that. Yeah, because it did happen a different title in the back of the future before when it was a space man from Pluto.

Yeah, because he was actually in the book. Wasn't it? It was a comic that the putting in is a deliberate reference because the EP, not the EP, what's he called, he was the thing of the universal for what his name, he said, or can we change it from back to the future to space man from Pluto? And obviously, Zemeckis hated the name, Spielberg hated the name.

So I went back and I said, Oh dear, so thank you for your humor, it's no, ha ha ha, we all had a laugh and then they just had his name, he was not even biased, he didn't want to correct them. And they're not serious, but they whacked it in to the little comic book on just a little aside. I didn't know that, you know, I think it's the either the dynasty, not a school fight scene that Eric Sals actually broke the after he plays baseball. Yes, he did.

I have because he was in hospital for a really long time for that. Yes, when he went and punched him. And apparently Lee saying I think he's I read it right Lee, he's actually consulting him ever so slightly in that scene. Yeah, he swings the punch, you can see his eyes are a touch.

But again, the film is so seamless and so tight and tidy. Adjian, I couldn't point that out together unless you're actually going to tell us and that's what I'm looking for. Yeah. Michael Jeff Fox was so clever with how he obviously got to do it out now, he was filling family ties, but he told family ties.

If they cut his scenes, if they cut his episodes or change his schedule in any way, he would see them who caught any fucking mentit, like, yeah, the dude was working like, you know, sleeping in a car wasn't it? Yeah, three hours that pull up in the stage with a bed in the back and then he like finished it. He was doing 10, five on family ties, hopping in a station wagon, going off to Universal, doing all the way up until four in the morning and then going into the car and falling asleep before being driven back to Fox to fill family ties inside of LA. But you don't see any of that in his performance.

It is absolutely perfect. There's no, you can't say, tell you this, grouchiness, everything that we would do, like I'm doing right now, everything that we do, because we're tired, you don't see that in a man that just goes to show how a man's and of an actor, he actually is. Yeah, like, dedication. Yeah, massively.

What you could tell he was having fun in this film, like, that's just beams over like every single person who performs like Crystal Lloyd is just, like, every time he's on the screen, he just whaddiness, like, he don't burst out laughing when some of the stuff he comes out with and his facial expressions as well would bring him. Apparently, he turned it down at first as well, you know, Chris, because he didn't want to do a comedy role, he wanted to focus on something a bit more serious. And he didn't want to do a comedy role. So apparently he turned it down the first time he read the script, he said he didn't want to do it.

Well, there was a fair few actors who actually auditioned for Miley McLae. Johnny Depp was one of them. Johnny Depp was one of them and Rob Simeka said, I generally can't remember him actually being there. That's how good of an impression he is.

But there was so many Brad Pitt auditioned for him, there was like, very, like, a lot of big names in there. But either role was written with Michael J. Fox and Miley. Yeah, but it's not like, I know everyone says like, perfect films and stuff like with the trilogy as well.

And there always is that controversy as well. I know the Chris and Glover stuff that goes on, like what? I still don't quite understand what happened there, mind. I still don't get what happened.

He was very, I think he had a lot of nerves filming and he was a bit of a nightmare. I kept trying to change things and then already like filmed quite a lot of it and he wanted to change his actual character and wanted to change his hairstyle and whatever else, but you know, to like develop his character. He was used to come on set up times and if he said if I can't read the lines, well, I think it should be and stuff like that. Absolutely nightmare.

And then sat, he got a pro-swipe. I think it was a skill scene. It's the bit of the the lunch when he's writing, he's writing one of his stories. He admits the amount you are writing on writing sci-fi.

Apparently that scene was a continuity nightmare because he did one thing and then he fidget or move and he's hair kept moving and all the peripherals kept moving and to make his apparently just kept sitting down and just going, well, Chris, we need to do this and do this. And apparently this was like four or five takes and then at the end. So make it what I looked through and he said, if you don't stop moving, I'm going to duck tip your arse to the chair. And then he had to duck tip and ready because he said he just kept moving and kept screwing up the scene because he's obviously with the hair because it was like real cream.

They'd set it all up and then in the next scene they'd be a bit sticky down. So they just said you'll stop moving. But I think wasn't he, I forgive me, but didn't they just use his scenes in Back to the Future 2? They didn't do anything new.

And we got someone else in to look at him and put the hat on him, wear some glasses or make it another little bit. Yeah, he was just upside down. That's the scene that really freaks me out in that film. Like, immediately freaks us out because obviously you've got Michael J.

Fox playing the two kids, but there's one scene where the girl, the daughter who was Michael J. Fox looks directly into the camera and I score really wide and it freaks me out. He's been going back to the movies for the last bit where he's on there when he's sorting the wire out and everything. I can't find anything behind me and I'm just seeing this film.

But I'm just not getting nervous. Sorry, you're just being confused. I just went blank there for a second. And it's the facial expression, I mean, I'm literally laughing like proper howling at his face.

Like, he's comedy, like, he's physical comedy is fucking out. I don't think I properly appreciated it. And so like, if you have just because today I've been like a fucking walking edge, like I just couldn't kind of function so my eyes were just completely on the screen. I wasn't on the phone or anything.

I just couldn't stop laughing. I don't want to stop. Tell you what though, because he gives you all the emotions in the world because like that scene he goes to the ring. Like everything he does, like from like Brian in the police officer, you know, you don't see it in the original, there's an alternative scene you've seen given him money.

Basically, when the way he comes down he slides down, what I still tear up when Marty goes back and you see the doc and you realize he's did it. I mean, did that little jig and you're really excited. And the realization of his face as well that he's like, that his idea works. Yeah, that's just like again, all the comedy and everything that he does through that.

That one moment just gives you such a satisfaction and you just think that's just like the perfect moment. Like not Marty, not trying to fuck his mother and everything. I'm not trying to fucking, I'm sorry. That moment with the doc, that moment with the doc, realizing that he's like, he's not crazy.

He's not mad. Yeah. The scene where the end variants like, you know, where Marty's watching and being shot, and then he's driving off and he runs down. Now, I'm two in the moment, because I generally like think when I first thought he said, but when I watched it the day, I was like, how the fuck did I not notice?

He's bulletproof ref is like literally sticking out of the top of these jackets. How about not? But I'm not focusing on that. I'm not focusing on the tiny detail that you can generally see the jacket is sticking off out of these colors.

And I'm focused on the fact that I think it's dead. And it's when he sits up and he says, let him, he's like, I thought, you know, we don't miss the time. I really just wanted to do that moment for him to go. I thought fuck it.

But that just goes back to what you were saying about being such a continuity white is such a perfect film because every single time that you watch it, you'd notice something different. Yeah, absolutely. Absolutely. Like, like, you know, I've never noticed that but now that I'll watch it again.

I'll notice that. Yeah, it's literally here. You can actually see the cover of coming out of his shirt as well. So, what do you originally get shot?

Did he have the cover on then? Or was it after you went back? Oh, I don't know. I'm going to have a cover on now.

Well, it goes back and forth. So people have always said there's a massive plot hall in this film to where the, why didn't Marty, Marty's mom and dad remember Marty from 1950, whatever. Well, so I was trying to round and said, 17 year old, you've met someone for eight years, not you've never seen them continuously, but eight years, but you've seen them, but eight years. Can you generally tell me you would remember who they are?

Absolutely not. I can't remember anybody. I remember when I was 17. Really?

In fact, I have told me remember people from last week never mind. Yesterday. Yeah, that was it. That was Robert's answer was, would you remember?

But two now that's pulling apart like little things like as you would when you're trying to tear up something apart, look at the negative side of things, it's little things like that, but anything can be explained away as well. That's the view of it. But I do like your point there though, because he again, people change or people change. Why would you think that was me son from 20 years ago?

Nobody would think that way. You wouldn't think that way. You wouldn't remember it like that. And always what's always getting made up is obviously they have that single where he says, you know, where she goes, oh, Marty, I like that name.

You know, it's such a good name. If it's like, oh, why did you wait until I third child? That's a good point. Maybe she was like, oh, well, this is the last one.

I might as well check that name as well. I'm just gonna bring the creamy factor in as well. Because, like, he's been run over by his grandfather and taken to the bedroom and and to the rheens took his pants off and just mentioned them pettled Calvin Klein pants. She probably bought them pants in the future.

Absolute turn. So she's in the future. Are these pants the reminders or something? No, he took that to a dog level.

She sees them in the future and then does that not drive a memory and go, how long a minute? He called themselves Calvin Klein. He called himself Calvin Klein because it was his name on his underwear. Now that's gonna be really messed with his hands.

Maybe she's just turning around everybody and going, you know what, I had to sit with the dancer with Calvin Klein. That you want? The Calvin Klein and now he's a designer. I wish I had my back on instead of this guy.

Nice guy. But he felt sorry for him, like, all the different aspects. Like, when we originally get introduced to Marty's family, they are down and out. Like, his brother's basically working in a fast food restaurant.

Not gonna work that, but again, makes it up there. And basically, he's just a can't get a deat to save a life. And then... Don't forget uncle Joe, Joe, bad Joey.

Yeah, Joe, Joe, Joe, Joe. But we are on the down and out, the like, the family is completely and ugly broken. Yeah. And then she's just, she's just, she's, she's, she's, she's, she's, she's, romanticizing like how her and her, like, and like, the father got, got together.

And she's like, yeah, and I fell in love with him. And I knew I was gonna stay with him for a stir and you look, this is your source of sadness and her fears. I was like, oh, that's not, that's not the point where you want to portray all the occasions. No.

But what gets me? So the life is like completely different, all because he punched me in the face. But his first book doesn't come out until it's the, get it? She's like, oh, your first book.

Oh, Foxy made his money since then. Oh, you could have, you could have been right? So you could have done short stories. I think they just, I think they just brought to much into that.

Exactly. It's like the Macalesco's and what did they do to get that house kind of thing? Right. No.

I'm just thinking I'm happy. I'm happy. Oh, yeah. He signed a Chicago.

Come on. Oh, yes. Um, because the house pretty much was stayed the same, like, so it wasn't being out of success. They just bought money, the drug that he wanted forever.

I think it's the area though, because the area approved, because the line of states were down and out graffiti later than at the end, the line of states entrance was polished. It was clean and the streets were cleaner. So we had a positive impact in going back and messing up and putting everything right, but making little changes. I think it's just because you hit that pine tree.

That's all I'm talking about. Really? Yeah. But no, and we haven't even talked about the real, like, one of the best things in the movie as well.

The villain of the piece, and in my opinion, I know he didn't, the ritliest poll on who's the greatest villains of all time. I think he was robbed. Um, Biff. Biff.

Everyone's known a bit though. That's the thing. That's why it's so relatable. And anyone's growing up, everyone's had a biff in their lives and you've wanted to just smash the living day like that.

Good world, but it's the same about me at this moment. I was about to say that. I got one at college called Paul Watson, but you know. You loved it.

What's the other story show you know? I don't know. I don't think there are any stories to tell about you. I don't want to start calling you a biff because no one's writing fan fiction about us.

Yeah. I don't know. We all know that the word biff is another word for a lady pass, don't we? In the UK is probably not the best.

I bet you. I was not in the Americans. The Americans of the group won't know that. Yes.

I'll let you listen for your Americans. I'm glad I can teach that to the world. And the best part about biff is he's come back. Why don't you make a tree and get out of here?

I love that line. On the ride, he says some of the best one because the ride storyline is where then top round is showing off the DeLorean to all these visitors and then big events up ceiling DeLorean and you've got to go and stop them and put it in the middle. There's one bit of the ride where you kind of in like in vault county place. It's really quiet and he's just going, oh you button.

And it goes throughout the whole place. It's half a reason that I went back on the ride for as long as for as many times I did was for that bit alone because it's funny. But to be further, I was one of my second favourite insults as a kid. The first was always Red Dwarf Snackhead.

But but heads like I was calling someone about head when I was a kid. He's still doing now. Get your messages just a day but it's just letting you know you're playing. That's fine.

I'm actually watching you last week. Yeah exactly. You want to bet? I love it good well.

I love it good well. One day good well then I take a swing. And I'll change everything. I was a good one day.

I was a good one day. I was a good old kid with everything. When I was watching it today, I was looking at these goons and obviously Billy's in. And I couldn't remember if he was in this one or the second one.

Second one. Second one. Second one. But what was the three day glasses guy?

I didn't see the point in front of him. He must have had headaches all the time. Oh, that was a trend in the 50s because it was the first run. Yeah, it was the first run of three days.

So it was very off the period because I've seen B-B-B-S, sci-fi movies of the time. It was like, oh, I was in 3D. So obviously you get like, you used to get the no-bet, the B-B-S, that's what I'll call it. So the rolling gangs obviously you had the creases, you had stuff like that.

You had that gank, the wall of 3D glasses all the time. I was supposed to be fucked. So basically, the references a little bit in the second one with the Jaws 19 wasn't it? Yeah.

And then we're trying to go to the start. So I think like, for shadowing that 3D was coming to the table, now Avatar 2 is coming out. So it will be all about 3D again soon. Did you know that Elijah Wood is in the second one?

Yes. Is there a shooting game? Yeah. The gun, what's it called?

Gun, something? Oh, gosh. Oh, the laws are coming at cost. That's right.

You've got to use your hands. That's stupid. Yeah. That's the babies.

But, um, it's not me. It wasn't this film and you don't realize it. When you go back through it, even like all three of them, I know we would want to know before we went live back to future 3D tops. Yes, the top.

The first one that was the guy doing auditioning. You're just too damn loud. You're just too damn loud. Like, see Elijah Wood, Billie Zian, Flea from the Tree Peppers was in it as well.

And you can probably score the list of the shoes coming in the second and third. Yeah. You're jumping uphill. Yeah.

Did you know that Cuyu Lewis, he written the theme or the, what was he back in time? I read this. This is a guy in the middle finger to Ray Parker Jr. Yes.

He's really Parker Jr. Stor. Ripped off a one of you, Drilke, for gosh, what's your saying? Yeah.

He was like, yeah, you're like, this bastard took millions through me. I'm going to do something and get my own back into back in half. Yeah. Yeah.

And back in, so he originally wrote, when he wrote, um, the power of love, it was Robert's effects here. Is it? Absolutely here. He didn't say, listen, I'm really sorry.

Can you just go back? You know, the back in time is kind of like, that's the theme we're looking at. So if you listen to back in time and power of love, almost exactly the same song because he was that fucking sick. He was like, oh, I'm just going to recycle this.

But we actually had power of love as one of our ones. Sounds as we were coming out of the venue was hearing those from power of love. Oh. Like, it's one of their movies as well.

I don't think it does get as much credit for the music aspect. Everyone will know it. But when you ask my favourite soundtracks and stuff, the lowest voice and stuff, and of the crew and stuff like that, I think that the future doesn't get the credit that it deserves. Because even like the score, like the music, like the little hints, like when something happens, it's, and it's like, yeah.

Yeah. And Dessie is one of Anne's favourite soundtracks, because every song is on his playlist. He loves Earth Angel. Yeah.

I catch him singing that many times. But any time, I'm glad about that. I'm glad about that. What's the, what's the thing that the dance?

Don't you go, don't you go. Yeah. Every time that comes out, I can hear him going, it's your cousin, from my very, that's your sound you're after. I love the family guy.

What do you do? Marvin Ashley, that's your local sound. You're the local. Listen to this.

That doesn't. Because it's obvious that it's not Michael J. Fox singing, unfortunately. Oh, clearly.

It's not. Oh my God. But I do love it though. I know that it's, it did show a few years ago that he can actually play the guitar like that.

Yes. So yeah, he got points. Isn't he? One of the people who played his band, he said, this is how you'll do a blues riff.

This is how you do it on a fretboard. And like, even I can't do that. So I was like, really, really good. But as you said, like all the way through this movie, like the hard work that we put in.

And I know like when Tarnan got with it as well, because she gets confused a lot with time travel, like what's happening there. And so this one doesn't all the complicated, where it can do. And when it does all the complicated, it makes you go with it. Like, like, at the end of two, I think where, I'm back from the future and again, and the doc said, so you went back and you're back and maybe passes out and stuff like that, because it's too much room.

But it's just so much fun. In jokes as well, and say, well, why do you use a DeLorean? Well, one of the times she wanted to be like a bit of style. I think it was what was the worst card he used ever.

That's for style wise in the world. Yeah, I looked to 85, didn't it? Yeah, the guy who did the DeLorean was so happy. What we call John DeLorean.

Yeah, it was so happy that they used the DeLorean, because for all the card did really bad, it's forever more like what I see. Oh, one one. I was looking at the Monet bin and I was like, I really want a grand for DeLorean. Right, that's all got the cool ones.

Someone near me just saw theirs for £64,000. Was it was a modded out? Well, it was completely stock with the value of the DeLorean. So, it was completely stock with the value of the DeLorean.

Did it come with the Don plutonium? Well, it is T-side, so probably. He bought it for £10,000, he kept it for about 20 years, and it's not worth a £64 grand. Say, Alan, what's the name?

I'm not going to just buy one for one roll. I'll just be right. I'll try to get a little fee 500, I'll get a DeLorean quite happily. I'll just remember something as well, because they're opening in Fallback to the Future as well, because it tells a lot of the story, like before everything's happening, it goes through like, so they killed you and everything.

When you see the clock and you see the dock hanging on the clock for some reason, you don't notice it, but if you go back and watch it in the first one, you can see a picture of the dock hanging off the clock. I don't know if it's like a drone, but I notice it. It's a movie reference. It's from a silent movie, the bass received from the dock where he's hanging off.

He said, I can't remember the movie, but it's a stunt that he did, and he was hanging off the minute hand, and he started the clock peeled off. And it was a reference to that, it was also for shadowing, when you're hanging off towards the end. Yeah, because there's so much for shadowing in this bit, you see the dock hands, and it may feel queasy, you see the ball of dog feel just getting piled up. And then you see the yellow box, that you find out it's the box of plutonium as well.

But again, with this as well, the name of the risks as well, making the Libyans like terrorist organization. It's still the real system. I mean, it's usually that one of the Russian. True.

The sense of the alt in the two in 9-11, they just said the word terrorist, 20 was on TV, they just said, oh, you'll be shot. They never answered by terrorism. The main amount would be really stupid as well, because one of you is something like, and they didn't know. Oh, something was like a little pig.

A pinball. Yeah, pinball. Yeah, pinball. Yeah, yeah.

So we made them look really stupid. And also, why would they only be two? Liby and Gangcom, it's just the guy who shot him, the guy in the top. Go and go to the area.

It's like, in a beatable U-Buds. But it was the 80s. But it was hilarious as well. It was like, they found me.

And I kept white band, I said, Doc Brown. Don't. That's a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit. Also, they had the lights turned off, as the were pulling in, but then turned them on.

When they were getting up to the post of them. I was in the post of them. Oh my gosh. Well, they did crash, because they're coming.

The crash, the crash into a tiny little lame. Can you stop pinball? Can you stop pinball? I don't know.

Big Old Life: Heather Blackbird interviews people on planet earth. Heather Blackbird loves asking questions. This podcast is a learning experience. Join me, Heather Blackbird, as I talk to people about their lives. Frequency of new episodes is a little all over the place and I'm learning as I go. Big Old Life is a small way of talking about the vastness of life, one person at a time. If you are reading this or found this podcast it's probably because someone you know gave you a link to it. :) Explicit The Sacred +Profane Podcast nephtaragrace The Sacred + Profane Podcast is a provocative conversation dedicated to cementing a better future for all. We specialize in unpacking the nuances of what is considered sacred and profane, particularly focusing on sex, death, and all that pertains to the circle of life. Our aim in focusing on such ”taboo” subject matter is to demystify what is unconscious, bring to light what has been known for centuries as ”the occult,” and empower the rapid transformation that is occurring on the Planet. Explicit Undeniable w/ Braxton Curtis Braxton Curtis The official Podcast of Braxton Curtis.A Father, Husband, and Business Owner just trying to figure it all out. Explicit Never Time to Give Up Shadoe Lass A nod to the classics with a note from the future. A project meant to encompass every call I wanted to make but never went through. Seriously, it's just me, calling you. Pick up the phone? :) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Explicit

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Nerdy Up North Podcast?

This episode is 1 hour and 30 minutes long.

When was this Nerdy Up North Podcast episode published?

This episode was published on November 22, 2022.

What is this episode about?

This week we take a trip the future and the past with one of the most magical and loved movies of the 80's. Yes we are talking about back to the future.

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Yes, a full transcript is available for this episode. You can read the complete transcript on the episode page.

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