^ Who shot the puck? 

^ Who shot the puck?![]()
George shot first though.
Wrong:Doc did offer to reshoe the horse and Mad Dog refused his offer, Tannen was a drunk and a criminal and probably wouldn't just settle for cash.
Buford: You owe me money, blacksmith.
Doc: How do ya figure?
Buford: My horse threw his shoe. Seeing' you was the one who done the shoeing, I figures you was responsible.
Doc: Well since you never paid me for the job, I say that makes us even!
Buford: Wrong! See I was on my horse when he threw his shoe and I got throwed off. And that just caused me to bust a perfectly good bottle of fine Kentucky Redeye. So the way I figure, blacksmith, you owe me $5 for the whiskey, and $75 for the horse.
Really? I can hardly think of a better one - unless, of course, one considers a grouping of Rachel Weisz, a fresh tap of Fat Tire beer and a steaming jacuzzi.Hey, just because you know a guy is gonna kill you, that's no reason to be a bitch.
I wouldn't mind seeing an animated short called "Back to the Future Origins" (just for an example) depicting Marty's first meeting with Doc. Or maybe Bob Gale could do a mini-series for Boom Studios comic wise.
They probably simply didn't notice it. Say someone steals your car while you're in work, drives it for 1,000 miles, parks it back in your spot and you come back to it none the wiser. Would you notice that the odometer has advanced 1000 miles?
(And it's "you're.")
It is concievable that Old Biff had the car for a day or so before going back to 1955 to figure this stuff out. He just came back to the time he first took the car.
#2.) NuMarty did replace Marty-Prime. However, during NuMarty's time in 1955, one of his changes somehow jostled Mr. Parker's testicles just enough so that Jennifer ended up looking like Elizabeth Shue instead of Claudia Wells. When NuMarty returned to 1985 to witness Marty3's departure, he also found himself startled by a bizarro universe where Jennifer looks totally different. Then Marty3 travels back in time, lands right on top of NuMarty, replaces him, makes the same changes, and is this time not alarmed when Jennifer looks like Elizabeth Shue. Thus, it's actually Marty3's adventures that we're following in Parts II & III.
Okay, now give a movie explanation for why Marty's dad looks different in various scenes in Part II
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I skipped through most of the replies, but the show pretty much established that there was a grace period before changes take place (probably to avoid having timelines springing up left and right with every step they took in the past). It was most evident in the delay of Marty's fading the moment he interrupted his mom and dad meeting for the first time.
The real problem is why did they show up in the fudged up past so quickly? The aforementioned deleted scene showed Grandpa Biff fading way faster than Marty was, but there's no real explanation for why that is, nor for why the future didn't begin to change around them at the same time (and sorry, but the changes in 1985 were too big for the "both 2015s were roughly the same" to be plausible; Biff's casino in place of the courthouse, for instance). It also doesn't explain the paradox that was created upon their arrival in the alternate timeline; Doc was never able to have built the time machine, nor would Marty have been involved with Doc unless they met before 1973 or so. They would have had to have traveled straight to 1955 in order to have a chance of avoiding that one.
'Course, Doc's worry about paradoxes and self-meeting-self issues was blown out the door when Jennifer met herself, so maybe they were implying that time's much more forgiving than they thought about such things.
Speaking of which, i find it amusing that there are 4 different Delorians in 1955!
- The original Delorian from the first movie
- The Delorian Doc and Marty cam back to 1955 with
- The Delorian old Biff came back with.
- the 70 year old Delorian in the Mine.
The flying locomotive, to me, was just absurd. It makes a degree or two of sense that the "time machine" Doc built using 1890s components would have to be as big as a locomotive (the "tender" for all we know could've been the entirety of the time machine's working components. And one does wonder how Doc got a steam-engine to generate 1.21 gigawatts.
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