Back to the Future is back in the theaters to celebrate its 40th Anniversary (what?) and I had so much fun seeing it on the big screen again yesterday. Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) meets his eccentric friend Emmett "Doc" Brown (Christopher Lloyd) to test his latest invention, a time machine made out of a DeLorean powered by plutonium. However, they are interrupted by Libyan terrorists who are not happy about having their plutonium stolen and Marty is forced to flee in the time machine which takes him to 1955. He eventually finds Doc but he also inadvertently disrupts the meeting between his parents, Lorraine (Lea Thompson) and George (Crispin Glover), which puts his own existence in jeopardy. Will Marty be able to get his parents back together? Will Doc be able to get him back to 1985? I think the action really holds up well after forty years, especially when Marty is pursued by the Libyans before he travels to 1955, when he is chased on an improvised skateboard through the town square by Biff (Thomas F. Wilson), and the incredibly tense sequence when he and Doc try to harness the electricity from a storm to power the DeLorean back to the future. I love all of the subtle humor, particularly when the teacher judging the battle of the bands (Huey Lewis) says the song that Marty performs ("The Power of Love" by Huey Lewis and the News) is too loud, when the Twin Pines Mall is renamed the Lone Pine Mall after he hits a pine tree in 1955, when he crash lands into a barn and the owners think he is an alien in a space ship (and when he uses this to his advantage to get George to ask Lorraine to the dance), when everyone thinks he is a sailor because of his puffer vest, when Doc refuses to believe that he is from the future after he tells him that the actor Ronald Reagan is president, when Lorraine pursues him after telling him that his girlfriend Elizabeth (Claudia Wells) is too forward, and when he performs "Johnny B. Goode" in front of Chuck Berry's cousin. I also love the message that you can do anything you set your mind to (which Marty, who is scared to take a chance on his music, realizes after telling George to take a chance on his writing). Finally, Fox is incredibly appealing as Marty and I can't think of anyone better than Lloyd to play a mad scientist! I don't know how much longer this will be in theaters but, if you grew up in the 1980s, seeing this on the big screen again is a must!
Note: My only criticism is that we are ten years past 2015 (the time Doc travels to at the end of the movie) and we still do not have flying cars!

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