Home > Categories > Movies > Sci-Fi > Back to the Future: Part 3 review
In this third instalment of the 'Back to the Future' series, hero Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) must go back in time to the Wild West of 1885 to rescue his friend Doc Brown (Christopher Lloyd), who he has discovered is due for a fatal showdown with one of bad guy Biff's nasty ancestors. Meanwhile, the good Doc has fallen in love with a newly arrived schoolteacher (Mary Steenburgen).
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Part three of the Back to the Future trilogy sees us head back to the Old West.
Marty ends up finding out that his dear friend, the Doc, who is living in the Old West, is going to be killed by one of Biffs ancestors (showing us that all in the Biff Tanner gene pool are bad to the bone) so off Marty goes into the past to rescue Doc. Once again we have Doc not wanting to know what is going to happen, so Marty is stuck trying to get things done, and to complicate things, Doc falls in love.
Back to the Future Part three manages to hold on to the charm from the first two movies without being over the top. Whilst this one doesn't fit in with the other two as well, because it isn't all about Marty, but it still does a great job and you can't really watch it without having seen the first two or you'd be missing a lot of context and history.The special effects are good and they hold up well, one of my favourite parts involves a train, though I can't say more about it for fear of spoilers, and just as a little aside... I've been where they filmed part of this movie and it was awesome!
Love this movie as much as the other two, well worth watching all three in one marathon.
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Mel Brooks uproarious version of history proves that nothing is sacred as he takes us on a delirious romp featuring everything from a wild send-up of the film 2001 to the real stories behind the Roman Empire (Brooks portrays a stand-up philosopher at Caesar's Palace), the French Revolution (Brooks reigns as King Louis XV1) and the Spanish Inquisition (a splashy song-and-dance number with monks and swimming nuns).
It's Mel and company at their hilarious best.
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