Back To The Future - Original Movie Script
Back To The Future - Original Movie Script
written by
Robert Zemeckis & Bob Gale
FIRST DRAFT
24 February 81
“Physicists propose that two alternate histories, two equally valid realities,
could exist side by side: the one you know, and the one in which you don’t exist.
Time itself may have many potential dimensions, despite the fact that we are
condemned to experience only one of them.”
---Carl Sagan
FADE IN:
The MOTHER SHIP rises above Devil’s Tower and sails off into space to the strains
of John Williams. In a moment we realize that we’re watching the end titles of
“Close Encounters”, and then we
The video pirate operating this equipment is MARTY McFLY, 17, a good looking kid
who has an air of confidence just shy of cockiness. He’s wearing a silver Porsche
jacket, and like most typical modern day kids, not a stitch of his clothing is
without some brand name or form of advertising. He’s looking at an ad for a guitar
amp in ROLLING STONE.
With the movie over, Marty shuts down the equipment, ejects the cassettes, and
writes on them, “Close Encounters, Original Edition.”
He puts the master tape back in a drawer, and we catch a glimpse of a few other
titles---“Empire Strikes Back,” “Stir Crazy,” “Superman II.”
MARTY
packs up his cassettes with his school books and takes us into ANOTHER PART OF THE
LABORATORY. The lab is a huge room, and workbenches are all over, covered with
chemical and electronic equipment. The place is old and dusty and has the air of a
mad scientist lab of the 50’s.
An ELDERLY MAN is hunched over an experiment on one side of the lab. Marty calls
to him.
MARTY
Professor Brown! It's almost 8:30---I'm outta here!
PROF. BROWN
Ssshhhh!
PROFESSOR EMMETT BROWN, late 60’s, is tinkering with a device that looks like a
Solar Cell, positioning it under a skylight to catch the sun’s rays. He is
eccentric, moody, but basically kindly. And very involved in his work.
Marty has a closer look at what the Professor is working on. The device is easily
30 years old, and Brown pours a chemical solution into a compartment in the cell.
He plugs a patch cord from the Cell into a Voltmeter. An incandescent bulb on the
panel glows dimly, and the meter needles move slightly.
PROF. BROWN
He throws an Erlenmeyer Flask across the room---it shatters against the wall.
PROF. BROWN
...and we get 24 measly volts. It's not fair! I've been working on this Power
Converter since 1949, and you'd think in all that time, I could find the right
chemicals that would efficiently convert radiation into electrical energy! But no!
33 years of dedication and research, and all I've got to show for it is a bootleg
video operation!
MARTY
That reminds me, if we could scrape up enough for a 35 film chain, I've got a
connection with a projectionist in a first run house---we could be sellin' new
movies on the street before they're even in the theater.
PROF. BROWN
Marty is on his way out. He pauses at a door with 5 locks on it and tries it. Of
course it doesn’t open.
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
(grins)
One of these days you're gonna leave this door open and I'll find out what's in
there.
PROF. BROWN
Did you ever consider that some doors are locked for a reason?
MARTY
Nope. The way I figure it, doors are made to be opened. See you after school.
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
8:30.
PROF. BROWN
A.M. or P.M.?
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
Jeez, for a guy with a ton of clocks, you sure don't pay much attention to time.
PROF. BROWN
On the contrary. I may not pay much attention to the measurement of time, but I'm
very aware of Time itself.
Marty has had enough of the Professor’s rambling. He’s heading down the stairway.
MARTY
Marty is gone.
PROF. BROWN (CONT’D)
The center of attention here is a morass of equipment of 1940’s and 50’s vintage
that looks like something out of “Amazing Stories” or “Weird Science.” A series of
lenses is the final end to the maze, indicating that a ray of some sort is to be
beamed down on...whatever.
PROF. BROWN
Marty comes down the stairs to street level and goes out the door.
Marty steps out onto the street from the ORPHEUM THEATER BUILDING, the 3rd floor
of which houses the lab.
The theater is old and abandoned; on the marquee are the words, “Assembly of
Christ.” From outside, the two stories of offices above the theater look just as
destitute, with weathered, soot covered walls and an occasional boarded up window.
Most of the neighboring businesses are boarded up as well. We get the feeling that
this was once a thriving business district...but those days are long gone.
A black van is parked a little ways down the street; on its side we see the
letters “N.R.C.” TWO MEN are putting samples of gutter water into test tubes. They
pay no attention to Marty.
Marty goes next door into one of the only operating businesses in sight: WILSON’S
CAFE, a lunch counter joint on its last legs.
Marty enters. The proprieter, DICK WILSON, 35, is behind the counter. Dick is
quite overweight...and he’s munching on a Baby Ruth candy bar.
MARTY
Morning, Dick.
DICK
MARTY
DICK
MARTY
DICK
(shrugs)
MARTY
What's N.R.C.?
DICK
(shrugs)
CUT TO:
A PHOTOGRAPH OF A MUSHROOM CLOUD, with the caption, “Last above ground atomic
test, March 18, 1952, Atkins, Nevada.” A HAND writes the initials “M.M. + S.P.” in
the cloud, draws an arrow through it like a valentine, and then writes, “How about
the Dance Saturday? We’ll have a BLAST!”
The hand belongs to Marty, who fakes attention to the lecture being given by MR.
ARKY, a frustrated, embittered teacher of 55.
MR. ARKY
There were only 3 above ground Atomic Tests in the United States, so the
government took every opportunity to study the effects of radiation. Actual single
family tract homes were constructed on the test site, totally furnished with
refrigerators, TV's, furniture...anything you could find in a typical home...just
so scientists could learn what kind of damage an atomic bomb would do to a typical
town. They even put mannequins in the houses, just like in auto crash tests...
Marty tears the page out of his textbook and winks at SUZY PARKER, the cute girl
across the aisle and behind him. They exchange a smile, and Marty tosses the
folded page to her.
MR. ARKY
But the fact remains that today, 30 years after those early nuclear tests, the
threat of nuclear annihilation is as great as it ever was. Certainly, nuclear
annhiliation is something you all must have thought about. Any questions,
comments, ideas? Anyone?
No reaction at all from the class. No one has a hand up, no one seems interested.
MR. ARKY
I'm talking about the complete and total destruction of the entire world. Doesn't
anybody have anything to say about it?
MR. ARKY
How about you, Mr. Jackson? Would you like to share some of your wisdom with the
class?
Now Suzy writes something on Marty’s note, folds it, and tosses it back. It lands
on the floor near Marty, and he picks it up.
MR. ARKY
(frustration rising)
Mr. Gomez? Any thoughts? Miss Parker? Mr. Crump, any reaction?
Next to the mushroom cloud has been written, “That’s sick.” On the back has been
written, “Yes.”
BACK TO SHOT
Marty smiles.
MR. ARKY
MR. ARKY
Marty looked up, facing the inevitable. He might as well give his honest opinion.
MARTY
Yeah. You want to know what I think about atomic bombs. Well, I'd kinda like to
see one.
MR. ARKY
MARTY
Not a holocaust-----
MR. ARKY
Mr. McFly here wants to nuke it all, just so he can see it!
MARTY
MR. ARKY
(isn’t interested)
All I can say is, that's one helluvan attitude, Mr. McFly. “Let's explode a 100
megaton Geothermal nuclear device, just to see it.”
MARTY
Unfortunately, the way things are going, you may get your wish. You may see the
entire annhiliation of the world. If not, you'll certainly see the destruction of
all our natural resources. We can already see the air we breathe, not to mention
the pollution in our rivers and lakes. We'll see all of our oil reserves depleted,
in fact, all of our energy sources. Yes, you people have a lot to look forward
to---a lot to see.
MARTY
Hey, Mr. Arky, gimme a break! I'm 17 years old! I'm not responsible for all these
problems!
MR. ARKY
No, of course you're not. Not for the problems, no. But for the solutions...yes.
MR. ARKY
See you tomorrow.
STUDENTS pour out of the school. It’s a typically middle-American school, brick,
idyllic, flanked by oak trees. There is some graffiti and a boarded up window or
two.
Students begin their after school rituals of smoking, drinking, loitering, eyeing
girls or guys as the case may be, showing off their cars.
Marty is among a group of kids, surreptitiously exchanging video tapes for cash.
RAFE NEWTON approaches him.
NEWTON
Hey Marty, spot me 50 till the weekend, would ya? I'm down to my last 20.
MARTY
NEWTON
Well, when you're a big rock star, how about loanin' me a grand?
MARTY
I gotta go.
DONALDSON
MARTY
In the shop. So I'm sporting this antique. Check out this wind-up action.
Marty shows him a gold wind-up wrist watch. Marty stuffs a wad of cash in his
pocket as he and Donaldson descend the steps.
DONALDSON
MARTY
DONALDSON
Hey, that reminds me: my brother's gettin' married next week and I'm throwin' a
party for him. Can you provide some entertainment?
MARTY
as we hear sounds of HEAVY BREATHING, ORGIASTIC PANTING and other Porno sound
effects. Marty shakes his head at what he’s seeing (we can’t see it) and turns
down the volume. He’s of course copying a porno film.
Marty puts a big wad of cash into a cigar box on the bench, then walks over to
another area of the lab.
Professor Brown is sleeping on an army cot, covered with a horse blanket. Nearby
is an old refrigerator, a hot plate, and some clothes hanging from an exposed
pipe.
Marty opens the refrigerator and pulls out a bottle of Coke. He inadvertently
knocks an orange out, and it rolls across the floor, under the cot.
Marty stoops down to get the orange. He moves the blanket and reacts with
astonishment at what he sees:
A CRATE
MARTY
takes a deep breath, then uses his foot to roll the orange away from the crate. He
cautiously backs away from the cot and tosses the orange into a trash can.
Professor Brown continues sleeping soundly.
Marty twists off the Coke cap, takes a swig, and walks over to a cage with an
ORGAN GRINDER MONKEY in it.
MARTY
Shemp is wearing a red coat and hat. Marty opens the cage and lets Shemp climb on
him.
Now Marty walks over to where the Power Converter is set up. Nearby is a stack of
blueprints, very old. Marty has a look.
THE BLUEPRINTS
MARTY
studies the Power Converter itself. The last rays of the afternoon sun shine
through the skylight and fall on the Photo-cell. A funnel is sticking out of the
chemical chamber, and it becomes just too much for Marty to resist: he pours some
Coca-Cola in it. Suddenly, a blinding spark crackles from the other end of the
device! Marty jumps back!
PROFESSOR BROWN
awakens with a start! He looks around, then rushes over to the power converter.
PROF. BROWN
What happened?!?
MARTY
Well, I'm not sure exactly---I accidentally spilled some Coke in here---just a
drop!
PROF. BROWN
Give me that!
He takes the Coke from Marty and pours a little into the funnel. The light bulb
glows brilliantly, the voltmeter needle jumps, and the equipment hums!
Brown pours in more Coke---the bulb glows with increasing intensity, then
explodes! The voltmeter needle goes off the scale! The Power Converter vibrates
and falls off the bench!
The Professor stares in disbelief; his hands begin to tremble. His reaction would
be no different if Jesus Christ himself walked into the room! He checks the
ingredients on the bottle.
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
Nobody knows the formula for Coca-Cola. It's the most closely guarded secret in
the world!
The Professor ponders the discovery, then gathers up the Power Converter and goes
to the Locked Door. He begins unlocking it, then looks at Marty.
PROF. BROWN
Professor Brown takes the device into the room and locks the door behind him.
INT. MARTY’S BEDROOM – NIGHT
Marty, wearing headphones, is playing his Electric Guitar along with a record on
his stereo. His bedroom walls have posters of rock stars; a second bed and bedroom
set are testament to an older brother no longer living at home.
As Marty plays he walks around using the top of the guitar neck to move objects
and lift magazines on the desk and bureaus. He’s looking for something. He moves a
Rolling Stone---under it are some tools. He moves an issue of Heavy Metal and the
Lampoon---under it, some homework.
The record ends; Marty takes off the headphones and yells out the door.
MARTY
WOMAN (O.S.)
Dinner’s ready!
Marty goes downstairs into the living room. The furnishings are Montgomery
Ward/Sears. GEORGE McFLY, 47, is absorbed in a BOXING MATCH on TV. He’s balding,
bored, uninspired; a man who lost at the game of life.
MARTY
His father doesn’t react. His mother, EILEEN, 47, sticks her head out of the
kitchen. Once she was very attractive. Now she’s in a rut.
EILEEN
I've been calling you for 5 minutes! Didn't you hear me?
MARTY
I was practicing. I've got an audition next week---I gotta practice. How am I
gonna get famous if I don't practice?
EILEEN
MARTY
GEORGE
What drill?
MARTY
The drill! The power drill I bought you for Christmas. I was using it last night.
GEORGE
Marty sits down in the kitchen where his mother is putting food on the table.
EILEEN
GEORGE
Coming, Eileen.
EILEEN
GEORGE
Coming, Eileen.
A commercial comes on; George gets up and rolls the TV stand over to where he’ll
be able to watch from the dinner table.
EILEEN
(to Marty)
MARTY
Fine.
EILEEN
Learn anything?
MARTY
Oh yeah.
EILEEN
That's good.
GEORGE
(to Marty)
MARTY
Fine.
GEORGE
Learn anything?
MARTY
Oh yeah.
GEORGE
Good.
EILEEN
By the way, that reminds me, Saturday night we're taking Grandma Stella out for
Chinese food.
GEORGE
EILEEN
George, if you don't want Chinese food, pick a place you want to go and make a
reservation.
MARTY
GEORGE
MARTY
Saturday night's the “Springtime in Paris” Dance. I'm taking Suzy Parker.
EILEEN
The “Springtime in Paris” Dance. You hear that, George? They're still having the
“Springtime in Paris” Dance.
(to Marty)
That was our first date. Remember George? I remember everything about that night.
Remember the first time we kissed? It was during the last dance. They were playing
that Eddie Fisher song, “Turn Back The Hands Of Time.” I even remember how you
asked me out. We were in the cafeteria. You were so scared, you spilled your
creamed corn.
MARTY
And I probably won't be here when you wake up Sunday morning. Suzy and I are gonna
go down to the lake and watch the sun rise.
GEORGE
MARTY
To see it.
George doesn’t get it. He turns his attention back to the TV.
EILEEN
MARTY
EILEEN
I don't think I like the idea of you staying out all night with a girl.
MARTY
There is a sudden pounding on the back door. No one moves to answer it. Pounding
again.
EILEEN
Marty opens the door and there is BIFF TANNEN, 47, an intimidating lout whose pot
belly portrudes from his security guard uniform. His tie is undone, shirt tail
out; obviously home from work. His shoulder patch reads “Special Security
Officer.”
BIFF
MARTY
BIFF
Show me some respect, you little A-hole. It's Special Officer Tannen to you.
MARTY
What's the matter, Biff, they're not showing you any respect down at the golf
course? Don't they realize what a tough job it is keeping the criminal element
away from the country club?
BIFF
MARTY
BIFF
Marty gestures into the kitchen. Biff now reveals he has a broken power drill and
a set of bits.
INT. KITCHEN
BIFF
Hey, McFly, what's with this cheap-ass drill you're giving me? Thing burned up
first time I used it! Almost ruined my whole engine block!
GEORGE
Uh---Biff---these are wood bits. Says so right here. You're not supposed to use
them on your engine block.
BIFF
Look, McFly, I know a lot about tools. This is a cheep-ass drill! You're just
lucky I didn't ruin my engine block. Next time you buy tools, let me know. I'll
help you pick out some good ones.
Oh--and one more thing: my kid's selling girl scout cookies. I told her you were
good for 4 boxes. Don't make me a liar!
George nods timidly as Biff exits. He turns and faces his wife and son who meet
his gaze with knowing looks.
GEORGE
How do you like that guy, using wood bits on an engine block?
Marty gets up from the table and storms out, into the living room.
EILEEN
Marty puts on his silver Porsche jacket as he stomps across the front lawn. He
punches the beat up old mailbox which has the address: 777; then kicks the family
car.
Marty is taking a walk with Suzy Parker. Marty’s been talking, and although still
frustrated, he’s now much more at ease.
MARTY
...He just lets himself get pushed around all the time. People walk all over him
and he never fights back, never stands up for himself.
SUZY
MARTY
SUZY
MARTY
No way!
SUZY
Me neither. I've always wondered whether they slept together before they got
married. You think yours did?
MARTY
Hell, no! The way my Mom carries on about sex---you even say the word and she goes
into cardiac arrest. You shoulda seen her face when I told her we were gonna stay
up all night Saturday. Always afraid something’s gonna happen.
SUZY
(flirting)
Before Marty can answer, he gets hit in the leg by a runaway SKATEBOARD. TWO KIDS
down the street have been running an obstacle course, and the loser is picking
himself up off the pavement.
Marty hops on the skateboard and whizzes over to the kid. He can’t resist showing
off---he manuevers smoothly through the obstacles, jumps over the last one and
lands perfectly on the board, then hops off, flipping the board into the air and
catching it. He hands it back to the kid.
KID
MARTY
They’re standing in front of a house. Suzy looks at it, then at Marty. Obviously,
it’s her house.
SUZY
Well...here we are....
MARTY
Thanks.
He kisses her.
SUZY
She goes into her house. Marty watches her, then continues down the street, alone
with his thoughts. As he walks, a black sedan approaches slowly from in front of
him and passes by. There appears to be some sort of receiving apparatus on the
roof. Now we see the sedan make a U-turn in the street behind Marty and come up
right behind him.
Marty becomes aware of the headlights behind him. He looks at the car and steps
over to the side of the street. The car pulls up alongside of him, and TWO
GOVERNMENT TYPES get out. There are N.R.C. markings on the car.
REESE
Good evening. Agents Reese and Foley from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
MARTY
FOLEY
Foley takes a Geiger Counter and checks Marty. Nothing unusual happens until Foley
checks Marty’s feet. Then there is some noticeable clicking, especially on the
foot that went nearest the Plutonium. Reese and Foley exchange a look.
REESE
MARTY
FOLEY
REESE
FOLEY
MARTY
No....
REESE
MARTY
Home, school, here.
FOLEY
MARTY
Where?
REESE
MARTY
No.
REESE
MARTY
Yeah. Right.
Reese and Foley get back in their car and drive off. Marty thinks a moment, then
runs like hell the other way down the street!
Marty runs through the street to the Orpheum Theater. The only thing on the street
besides him is newspaper blowing along the gutters. Marty tries the door to the
upstairs. It’s locked. Marty steps back and looks at the upper floor.
Suddenly, 3 upper floor windows are blown out by a tremendous gush of air!
MARTY
Jesus!
He tries the door again. Marty has no other choice: he BREAKS THE GLASS in the
door and lets himself in!
Marty races up the stairs to the laboratory. The door with the locks on it is
unlocked, and LIGHT can be seen coming from the crack under the door.
Professor Brown is standing next to a HOMEMADE NUCLEAR REACTOR, made from an old
furnace, a hot water heater, and boiler room parts. He has one hand on a rope, and
is adjusting some dials and gauges.
SHEMP is sitting quietly on a stool directly under the focusing lens of the
Professor’s invention. He’s wearing his organ grinder clothes, with a digital
watch around his neck.
MARTY
Professor!
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
But Professor----
PROF. BROWN
The Power Converter is activated! The low frequency hum of vacuum tubes becomes
more intense---the frequency begins to rise, accompanied by the crackle of static
electricity!
Shemp looks around, curious about all of these sounds...the sounds grow in
intensity...tension builds...and at exactly 9:00, Professor Brown releases the
rope. At that moment, a high frequency tone is emitted, accompanied by a FOCUSED
BEAM OF BLINDING RED LIGHT---like a spotlight---which hits Shemp!
Shemp DISAPPEARS! And the top half of the stool disappears with him, leaving the
lower halves of the legs (which were not hit by the beam) to topple to the floor!
Air rushes through the lab to fill the vacuum that was created by Shemp’s
disappearance!
The sound of the equipment dies down, and a stunned Marty McFly steps out from
behind the shield.
MARTY
Professor Brown shook his head, a smile playing around his lips.
PROF. BROWN
PROF. BROWN
The appropriate question to ask is when is he. You see, Shemp has just become the
world's first time traveller. I've sent Shemp into the future---two minutes into
future, to be exact.
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
Shemp is right here in this room...two minutes from now. And at exactly 9:02,
we'll catch up to him.
MARTY
Now hold on a minute, Professor. Hold the phone. Are you trying to tell me that
this---all of this here---that this is---it's a---a---
PROF. BROWN
A time machine.
PROF. BROWN
I always knew it would work. I knew it would work when I built it 33 years ago.
But I was never able to harness enough power to test it. Power is the key. Massive
amounts of energy to accelerate matter to the speed of light while creating an
intense gravitational field. But generating that kind of energy has never been
possible...until this afternoon.
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
Precisely.
PROF. BROWN
The Power Converter, now operating at peak efficiency, thanks to the chemical
makeup of Coca-Cola, channels energy into the Flux Capacitor, which releases
several jigowatts in a fraction of a millisecond. Electron acceleration takes
place here...and the result is the temporal displacement beam you saw a few
moments ago. The entire process is triggered when I release the rope.
MARTY
I thought that Power Converter thing operated on solar energy. There's no sun.
PROF. BROWN
Solar energy would have worked just fine...if I could have placed the Converter
about a mile from the surface of the sun. Instead, I've created similar conditions
in this reactor here.
The higher I raise the cadmium rods, the more energy I release from the Plutonium
core, and the further through time I can send an object.
MARTY
The Plutonium! That's what I came over here for! Professor, where did you get that
stuff?
PROF. BROWN
Why?
MARTY
I just got stopped in the street by Federal Agents checking me for radiation! I
figure they're after your plutonium!
PROF. BROWN
Ten seconds!!
PROF. BROWN
It’s 9:01:55...56...57...58...59...
MARTY
Shemp!
Professor Brown picks up Shemp, looks him over and examines the watch around his
neck: 9:00:10. The lab clock says 9:02:10.
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
Is Shemp all right?
PROF. BROWN
Of course. Shemp is unaware that anything even happened, other than his stool
suddenly falling over. We had to wait two minutes to catch up to him, but for
Shemp, the trip was instantaneous.
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
Professor Brown indicates the POLARITY SWITCH on the Time Machine, which is in the
“+” position.
MARTY
(very excited)
PROF. BROWN
A gold mine?
MARTY (CONT’D)
MARTY
Here they are---we send 'em with Shemp back to yesterday, we get the information,
put our money on the winning horses, and become billionaires!
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
So what?
PROF. BROWN
Don't you understand? The mere act of sending matter back in time would change the
course of events, and changing history is a responsibility that I do not wish to
bear.
MARTY
All I know is you're throwing away an awful lot of money.
PROF. BROWN
The future, Marty, the future is everything. I built this machine to see the
future. So I am going to send Shemp 24 hours into the future. You can assist me,
if you like.
MARTY
Sure.
The Professor exits the Time Machine room into his main laboratory. Marty sees
that he’s gone, so he tears the racing results from the Sports Page, circles the
date, and sticks the clipping into Shemp’s pocket. Again making sure that the
Professor isn’t watching, Marty flips the polarity switch to “-“.
Professor Brown is looking for something on a table near the window. He finds it:
a Micro-cassette recorder. He hurries back into the Time Machine room.
Professor Brown locks the door behind him and then gives the Micro-cassette
recorder to Marty.
PROF. BROWN
Take this, stand at the panel, and read off the radiation levels. I want to have a
record of what happens here. Be sure to tell me when we reach 85 rads.
Brown sets up the stool and again places Shemp upon it.
PROF. BROWN
The Professor takes his place at the reactor. Shemp is between him and Marty. He
doesn’t notice the polarity switch.
PROF. BROWN
Here we go.
MARTY
Suddenly the door is kicked open by N.R.C. AGENTS REESE and FOLEY, along with
POLICE and OTHER AGENTS! They leap into the room with drawn .38’s!
REESE
PROF. BROWN
Get back!!
FOLEY
REESE
PROF. BROWN
Brown makes no effort to move away from the reactor---rather, he pulls the rope a
slight bit more!
Professor Brown takes the bullet in the upper chest! He staggers back, still
holding the rope, and as he falls, he pulls the rope as far as it will go!
MARTY
Professor!
(glances at meter)
REESE
What??
MARTY
The incredible din of the equipment makes the screaming virtually inaudible! Marty
rushes toward the Professor, but Foley immediately levels his gun at him!
FOLEY
Freeze!!
Marty freezes---he’s standing right under the focusing lens! He raises his hands!
Professor Brown is lying on the floor, his hand still on the rope. His grip
relaxes, and the rope is released!
The Time Beam engulfs Marty! This time, it’s BRIGHT WHITE!
MARTY’S P.O.V. OF
an intense WHITE LIGHT. Then, suddenly, everything goes BLACK! And with the
blackness comes dead quiet.
MARTY’S VOICE
Professor?? Hello??
A match is struck, and Marty looks around and finds himself in what appears to be
a STOREROOM.
Marty cautiously looks and walks around, almost tripping over an old chair. There
is some dusty furniture and crates in the room. Marty lights another match and
makes his way to the door---it’s in the same place as the door in the Time Machine
room, because this is the Time Machine room...as it was once. Marty tries the
door: locked.
MARTY
Damn!
He goes to the window and opens it. We can hear the sound of muffled traffic.
Marty climbs out the window.
Marty comes out of the third story window onto a fire escape, and descends. Just
as he drops into the alley below, he’s hit by a pair of headlights: A LARGE TRUCK
is barreling toward him! Marty presses himself up against the wall and the
speeding truck passes, narrowly avoiding him!
Marty sighs relief, then notices the sign on the door he’s standing next to:
“Wilson’s Cafe, Rear Entrance.” Marty tries the door---it opens. Marty is
surprised at this; nevertheless, he enters.
MARTY
Marty stares open mouthed, walking around, taking it all in. A chubby little BOY
of 5 in pajamas, is playing on the floor with toy trucks.
Now Marty notices the WAITRESS is staring at him with curiosity and suspicion.
WAITRESS
Marty decides to sit down at the counter and act like he belongs here.
MARTY
WAITRESS
What?
MARTY
A Tab.
WAITRESS
Kid, I can't give you the tab until you order something.
People at the counter are looking at him, especially at his silver Porsche jacket.
Marty notices that the MAN next to him is drinking coffee.
MARTY
Uh, coffee.
WAITRESS
Did something happen to you, kid? I mean, you been lost in the woods or something?
MARTY
Huh?
MARTY
WAITRESS
Sweet and what?
WAITRESS
MARTY
Sure.
Marty pulls out his wallet and hands the woman a 20 dollar bill. Her eyes nearly
fall out of her head.
WAITRESS
A 20? What do you think this is, a bank? I can't break a 20!
(suddenly suspicious)
Say, what's a kid your age doing with all this money?
MARTY
WAITRESS
MARTY
WAITRESS
MARTY
WAITRESS
(laughs)
MARTY
(paranoid)
MAN:
Freak? Are you from some circus? Is that what all that writing on your clothes
means?
BOY
WAITRESS
MARTY
WAITRESS
Marty looks at him as he grabs a Baby Ruth from the candy counter. Then Marty
spots the calendar behind the cash register. In big black numbers, it clearly
reads, “1952!”
MARTY
1952?? This is 1952?!? Holy Shit!! You know what this means?? I've gone back in
time 30 years! 30 goddamn years!!! I haven't even been born yet!!!!
WAITRESS
But even as she goes to the phone, Marty bolts out the front door!
Marty stares in astonishment at the sight before him: the run-down Monroe Avenue
that he knew is now a bustling, thriving business district! Traffic of 1940’s and
50’s cars pulses through the street, and pedestrians wander about. The storefronts
that were boarded up are now shops doing profitable business.
Pedestrians eye Marty curiously as they walk past, but Marty is too panic-stricken
to notice them.
Now he sees the Orpheum Theater. The marquee is lit up, and the place is obviously
a first class movie house. The flashing marquee advertises, “John Wayne, Maureen
O’Hara, The Quiet Man. In Full Color.”
MARTY
Dammit!
Marty sees a pedestrian with a newspaper. He grabs it away from him and looks at
the date.
MARTY
1952! Dammit!
He throws the paper down in disgust and runs down the street.
ON THE STREET
Marty stops and looks at the licence plate on a parked car. Once again, there’s
the year.
MARTY
1952! Dammit!
Marty is in a phone booth, frantically tearing through the phone book. He finds
the page he’s looking for.
Marty’s finger goes down a list of “Browns,” coming to rest at, “Brown, Emmett L.,
788 W. Spruce. Madison 3489.” A BIC PEN circles the name and number.
BACK TO SHOT
MARTY
Dammit!
OPERATOR (V.O.)
Operator.
MARTY
Operator! Listen, this is an emergency! I have to make this call, but I don't have
a dime---all I got is a nickel---but you gotta connect me---
OPERATOR (V.O.)
(interrupting)
Sir, it only costs a nickel.
MARTY
What?
OPERATOR (V.O.)
MARTY
OPERATOR (V.O.)
OPERATOR (V.O.)
MARTY
OPERATOR (V.O.)
March 11.
MARTY
What year?
OPERATOR (V.O.)
Nineteen fifty---
MARTY
(interrupts)
Dammit!
He slams down the receiver, then tears the page out of the phone book and runs
down the street with it.
Marty runs down this residential street, tired, breathless, exhausted. He leans
against a mailbox to catch his breath, and then notices the number on it: 777. He
turns and looks at the house.
MARTY
My house!
Indeed, it is Marty’s house---or rather, it will be. The trees aren’t quite as
tall as those we saw earlier, and the curtains are different; there’s a 1949 Chevy
in the driveway. But it’s the same house.
Then, the front door opens, and a WOMAN opens the screen to let out a dog. Unless
we’re seeing things, it’s EILEEN, looking nearly identical to when we saw her
last, save her different clothes and hair-do.
MARTY
is stunned!
MARTY
Mom!!
EXT. HOUSE
As Marty runs toward the house, the WOMAN closes the door. Marty runs up the steps
and pounds on the door.
MARTY
The door opens. Indeed, the woman appears to be Eileen. But she doesn’t recognize
Marty.
MARTY
WOMAN
MARTY
Mom! It's me! Marty! Don't you know your own son!
WOMAN
MARTY
A MAN in his mid-40’s approaches the door. He’s smoking a pipe and seems like a
decent sort.
MAN
MARTY
Stella?!? No! Don't tell me you're Stella! Tell me you're Eileen!! Please tell me
you're Eileen!
Through the door, we can see a GIRL of 17 coming down the staircase. She’s very
attractive.
GIRL
I'm Eileen.
MARTY
EILEEN
Seventeen.
What does one do when he meets his mother in such circumstances? Marty faints!
A HAND
holds smelling salts and brings them under Marty’s nose. Marty is lying on a
couch; he stirs and opens his eyes.
MARTY’S P.O.V. OF
PROFESSOR BROWN as a young man! He’s well dressed, less eccentric in manner, and
seems much more self confident than his older self. It is Brown who is
administering the salts.
The room is the same as in Marty’s house, with different furniture (in the same
basic arrangement) and a different color scheme.
MARTY
BROWN
MARTY
Professor, you time machine works! It works! It sent me back in time! I'm from
1982!
PROF. BROWN
Ssshhh!
Brown isn’t sure whether to believe him. Now the FAMILY approaches---MR. BAINES,
his wife Stella and daughter Eileen.
MR. BAINES
Is he all right?
BROWN
He will be. Simple inebriation, is all. The young man must have a rather low
tolerance for alcohol...something that runs in the family. You see, he's a second
cousin of mine on my mother's side. Came quite a distance to visit me. His name's
Lewis.
MARTY
(correcting him)
Marty.
BROWN
Uh, Marty Lewis. I almost didn't recognize him---haven't seen him in years.
Young Eileen can’t take her eyes off Marty. Marty too is fascinated by her.
STELLA
It's a good thing he had your name circled in the phone book. I would have called
the police.
BROWN
Well, Mrs. Baines, Mr. Baines, thank you for your trouble. Both Marty and I
apologize for the inconvenience. We'll get him home and as good as new.
MR. BAINES
(to Marty)
MARTY
Yes, sir.
Eileen gives Marty his Porsche jacket which was lying on a nearby chair.
EILEEN
Oh---here’s your jacket.
MARTY
(nervous)
Uh, thanks...
EILEEN
What sort of material is this? I've never seen anything like it.
MARTY
(matter-of-factly)
It's polyester.
EILEEN
Poly-what?
PROF. BROWN
The Professor goes out the front door. Marty is behind him, and just as he steps
into the doorway, Eileen speaks up.
EILEEN
Marty?
MARTY
Huh?
EILEEN
Their eyes meet, but before Marty can answer, the Professor’s arm reaches over and
yanks him away!
MARTY (V.O.)
...and the flux capacitor is hooked into this thing that looks like a condenser
with a lens on it...
Now Marty and the Professor get out of the car. Marty stares at the incredible
house, very impressed.
MARTY
Jeez---this is where you used to live, huh? You must have been rich!
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
Oh, yeah, well, there's a mall here now---I mean, there will be.
PROF. BROWN
A mall?
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
Ssshhhh---don't tell me these things, Marty. I don't want to know about the
future.
BROWN
Marty looks around the room. The evidence of the Professor’s eccentricity is just
beginning---mechanical apparatus laying haphazardly around on antique tables and
furniture. There’s something built out of the shell of an old vacuum cleaner, and
an old washing machine that might now be a still.
MARTY
No.
Again a light goes on. Mostly, this is a library, but there are some models of
some of the professor’s ideas here, including the Aero-mobile and the Mechanical
Home Butler. Professor Brown looks at Marty.
Now Professor Brown unlocks a door at one end of the room and puts on a light.
Marty approaches the doorway.
MARTY
This is it!!
MARTY’S P.O.V. OF
THE TIME MACHINE, looking almost exactly as we saw it in 1982, except that it’s a
lot cleaner and shinier.
PROF. BROWN
You've convinced me that you must be who you say you are. No living human has ever
seen this machine.
(thinking)
But why? Why even in my twilight years would I remotely consider sending someone
back in time?
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
No! Don't tell me! I don't want to know the future! My knowledge of future
events...your mere presence here...could have devastating effects on the course of
history. And altering history is a responsibility that I do not wish to bear. My
immediate responsibility is to send you back to your own time.
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
(not understanding)
Pardon me?
MARTY
Marty examines the models of Brown’s inventions while the Professor talks.
PROF. BROWN
Hello?
(pause)
Yes Charles, yes, I looked over the offer.
(pause)
It's very generous that they want to make me a major stockholder. But I'm just not
interested in a position with this little X-rox corporation.
(pause)
(pause)
Well, any day now. And then I'll need people to work for Emmett Brown Industries!
I've got a lot of ideas that are going to create a lot of jobs.
(pause)
(Hangs up)
The X-rox Corporation. How are they going to sell a product if you can't even
pronounce the name?
PROF. BROWN
Now...the Time Machine works, that's obvious. As I've always known, it's a
question of power. Where did I---will I get enough power to send a man 30 years
through time?
PROF. BROWN
On second thought, there may be some things you'll have to tell me.
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
Of course, it works!
MARTY
Well, Professor, are you sure you want me to tell you? You know, changing the
course of history and all....
Professor Brown would plainly like to know, but his sense of scientific
responsibility gets the better of him.
PROF. BROWN
Blast it---no, I suppose you're right...You do know the proper chemical formula?
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
Coke?
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
PROF. BROWN
All right, then it's very simple. Tomorrow, weather permitting, you'll get the
chemicals, and we'll wire the Power Converter to the Time Machine, point it at the
sun, and send you home.
MARTY
Well, not exactly, Professor. You see, we don't point it at the sun.
PROF. BROWN
We don't....
MARTY
No. We need a Nuclear Reactor.
PROF. BROWN
CUT TO:
which is playing back the tape of the moments before Marty went through time. All
of the voices on the tape are muffled, except Marty’s---and the gun shots sound
fairly clear.
Professor Brown is seated at his desk. He fumbles with the recorder and shuts it
off.
PROF. BROWN
PROF. BROWN
(rewinds tape)
Fascinating device...
These loud bangs...could those be some sort of malfunction in the time machine? Do
you know what they are?
MARTY
Again we hear the “4200 rads” portion of the tape. Professor Brown shakes his
head.
PROF. BROWN
PROF. BROWN
However...there's a lot I don't know about Nuclear Physics. So first think in the
morning, I'll go to the University, see what I can find out.
I want you to stay in the house. It's very important that you don't interfere in
any way with the outside world.
I've got plenty of food, there's the radio, books, magazines...I've even got one
of those new television sets. There's plenty to do.
Professor Brown looks at Marty who is still trying to twist off the Coke bottle.
Brown stares incredulously.
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
The Professor takes the bottle from Marty and opens it with a bottle opener. He
hands it back, not sure what to think...but afraid to ask.
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
Morning light streams in through a window. Marty is asleep on the bed, still in
his clothes. He awakens...and sighs as he realizes that his surroundings are real,
it wasn’t a dream...and he’s stuck here.
Marty takes an old-fashioned drip coffee pot out of a cabinet. He fumbles it and
it breaks into its component parts. Marty tries to put it back together.
CUT TO:
MARTY
pulling a BOTTLE OF MILK out of the refrigerator. He removes the foil seal and
tries to pour some into a glass. Nothing comes out---the cardboard stopper is
still in it. Marty tries to pull it out---he can’t get the tab. Frustrated, he
punches a hole in it with his finger.
CUT TO:
MARTY
drinking a glass of milk, looking at the magazines and newspapers on the kitchen
table.
TIME has a cover story, “The Republicans: Who Will Win In ’52?” with photos of the
top contenders.
MARTY
Eisenhower.
He looks at NEWSWEEK. Cover story: “Will We Have War With Russia This Year?”
MARTY
No.
MARTY
Jesus.
The DOORBELL RINGS. Marty reacts with uncertainty. He’s not sure what to do.
It rings again.
Marty gets up and cautiously walks to the front door. He stares at it, unable to
make up his mind.
Finally Marty opens it. It’s PROFESSOR BROWN who immediately points an accusing
finger at him.
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
I told you not to interfere with any of the events of this time! Nobody's supposed
to see you here! What if I was a mailman? Or a salesman?
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
Then I would have figured out to get back in through events in the natural course
of history! Don't you understand? The fabric of history is very delicate. Anything
you do could have serious consequences!
MARTY
Hey, look, gimme a break! All I did was answer the door! How's that gonna change
history?
PROF. BROWN
I don't know, but I don't want to take any chances. Now you stay here and don't do
anything. Don't answer the door, don't answer the phone, don't go outside.
Understand?
MARTY
Hey, get off my case, would you? I didn't want to come here, and the only reason
I'm here in the first place is because I was a nice guy, helping you out. So don't
tell me I gotta stay cooped up in here and vege out, because none of this was my
fault!
PROF. BROWN
Let me put it on a level you can understand. You don't belong here. You don't know
anything about this world. You don't know the customs, you don't know how to talk,
how to act---you don't even look like you belong here. And if you walked out on
the street, you wouldn't get 100 yards without being arrested. Then there would be
a lot of questions, and where would we come up with the answers?
Marty sighs.
MARTY
Okay, Professor, I get where you're coming from. The way I look, the way I'm
dressed, I'd stick out like a sore thumb.
PROF. BROWN
I'm glad we finally got that straightened out. I'll see you tonight.
A window opens, and MARTY climbs out! But now he’s wearing some of the Professor’s
clothes, and he’s got his hair slicked back in Ronald Reagan style! He actually
looks like a resident of 1952! Marty runs off down the hill, toward town.
Marty walks down the sidewalk with the other pedestrians, trying to act like he
belongs here. He’s doing a good job of it, too, because no one gives him a second
glance.
Suddenly, a COP in front of him glances at Marty, then points an accusing finger
at him.
COP
Panic fills Marty’s face as the cop approaches him---has he been had? No---the cop
walks right past him and collars a TRAMP several yards behind Marty. Marty sighs
relief.
MARTY
bops down the street, full of confidence, full of excitement, full of curiosity.
He’s a tourist in another time and he takes in the sights, which include...
A DANCE STUDIO, where through the window can be seen a Mambo Class, and a big
sign, “Everybody’s Doing the Mambo!”
A STUDEBAKER SHOWROOM, with “The most modern car ever developed in the entire
history of man.”
Marty stares at the window display at the record store, promoting America’s top
recording artists: Sinatra, Guy Combardo, Dinah Shore, Perry Como. Something is
bothering Marty about this so he goes in.
The Number One Single is prominently displayed on the counter: “Papa Loves Mambo”
by Perry Como. Marty can’t believe it. A CLERK approaches him.
CLERK
Can I help you, sir?
MARTY
CLERK
Yes, sir!
MARTY
CLERK
MARTY
This is 1952...?
CLERK
MARTY
CLERK
No.
MARTY
(big smile)
CUT TO:
EXT. PAWNSHOP
A PAWNBROKER pulls a Guitar out of the window, along with the price tag: $5.00.
The Pawnbroker takes the guitar to the cash register; Marty follows him.
PAWNBROKER
That’ll be 5 bucks.
Marty pulls out his wallet and hands the man a 20. The Pawnbroker rings it up,
then takes a closer look at the bill.
PAWNBROKER
Hey, what kinda funny money is this?
MARTY
Huh?
PAWNBROKER
He gives the bill back to Marty. Marty looks at it and realizes his mistake.
MARTY
Oh---yeah---I can’t believe I did that. That’s a joke. My friend had these printed
up---see, that's his name there...
...Blumenthal.
MARTY
Gee---I don't seem to have anything on me...Hey, how about this watch? It’s a
genuine antique!
Marty hands the man his watch. The broker examines it.
PAWNBROKER
Antique? They just came out with this watch last month. But this one looks like
its been through a war.
MARTY
PAWNBROKER
Okay, kid. You got a deal. The watch for the guitar.
CUT TO:
Marty is performing “Blue Suede Shoes” for an AGENT in an office. Marty’s really
cooking---jumping around like Elvis, and really playing his heart out. He’s good,
too.
The Agent, 45, sits stonefaced behind his messy desk, puffing on a big cigar. The
office has the same feeling as the Agent: cheap. The walls are covered with 8 x
10’s of clients.
AGENT
Well, kid, it's interesting, I'll say that. But it's not commercial.
MARTY
Not commercial? Mister, don't you know what you're listening to? This is rock 'n
roll!
AGENT
Call it what you want to kid, but don't call it music, 'cause it sure ain't that!
MARTY
AGENT
No buts, kid. I've been in this business my whole life and I know what people
want. The smooth sound, that's what sells. Como, Crosby, Dinah Shore. Gimme a
melody, and a nice slow tempo. Now beat it!
Marty is stunned. In a moment, the door opens and his case is thrown out too!
REGINALD
That sound I just heard coming through the door, that was like nothing I ever
heard before! I mean, you got something there, young man!
MARTY
REGINALD
Reginald Washington is my name; I manage some of the local bands around town, and
I think you've got something we can promote all the way to the top! Now, I've got
a real important cat comin' in from a New York Record Company on Monday the 18th,
and I want you to play that music for him. I think the time has come for a sound
like that.
Marty grins. Reginald takes a business card and writes the particulars on it.
REGINALD
MARTY
REGINALD
Reginald gives him the card and they shake hands. Marty is elated.
MARTY
REGINALD
I think you're a little mixed up. There is absolutely no way that I could be your
brother.
Marty, dressed once again in his 1980’s clothes, is practicing on the guitar in
front of the mirror.
He hears the door opening downstairs, so he quickly puts the guitar in the corner,
messes up his hair, takes Reginald’s business card from off the bed and sticks it
in the pocket of his Porsche jacket which is laying on a chair.
Marty comes running downstairs and finds a very sullen Professor Brown pouring
himself a drink. Brown looks at him.
PROF. BROWN
Well, I found an energy source that can generate the 4200 rads that we need...
An atomic bomb.
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
I am serious. If we could get you, the Time Machine, and the Power Converter in
the vicinity of an atomic blast, we could send you back to the future.
MARTY
You're talking crazy! An Atomic blast would melt me and the time machine in a
matter of seconds!
PROF. BROWN
You forget---time travel is instantaneous. The time machine would melt, but you
would have already travelled through time. Of course, it's a moot point
regardless. The only place atomic bombs are detonated is at the Army's Nevada Test
Site, and those tests are kept absolutely top secret.
Marty rushes into the bedroom and goes through the pockets of his Porsche jacket.
He pulls out the textbook page he passed to Suzy Parker and unfolds it. Reginald’s
business card falls out of the same pocket.
Underneath the picture of the mushroom cloud is the caption, “Last above ground
atomic test, 15 megatons, March 18, 1952, Atkins, Nevada.”
MARTY
compares this to the business card: the dates are the same.
He considers his problem, then makes his decision: he crumples up the textbook
page and throws it in the trash can.
PROF. BROWN
He slipped the card back in the jacket and shrugged, trying to seem nonchalant.
MARTY
Professor Brown catches a glimpse of the guitar in the corner, then has a closer
look.
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
PROF. BROWN
CUT TO:
Morning light streams in through the window. Marty awakens. This time, he’s
sleeping in the bed instead of on it. He smiles.
INT. KITCHEN
Marty pours himself a cup of coffee from the drip coffee pot, and victoriously
pulls the stopper out of the milk bottle. His mood is very positive, and he sings
as he adds milk to his coffee.
MARTY
(singing)
Once again, the DOORBELL RINGS. Marty reacts with a “Not again” look and goes to
answer it.
MARTY
It’s Eileen. Marty is dumbfounded. She smiles at him. She’s carrying books,
obviously on her way to school.
EILEEN
Hi, Marty.
MARTY
Uh, hi...
EILEEN
Eileen.
MARTY
EILEEN
MARTY
EILEEN
Well, I was on my way to school, and I just wanted to stop by and see if you were
feeling okay. You seemed like you were in pretty bad shape the other night.
MARTY
EILEEN
MARTY
EILEEN
(hopefully)
MARTY
MARTY
EILEEN
MARTY
MARTY, dressed once again for 1952, goes up the front steps carrying a notebook.
As he gets to the door, the BELL RINGS, indicating a passing period.
Students pour into the hall from the classrooms. Marty marvels at what his
“contemporaries” look like.
Marty proceeds through the corridor and pauses at a classroom door. He decides to
enter.
It’s the same science classroom Marty was in earlier, only everything looks much
newer, and the chalkboards are black instead of green.
Marty goes over to his old desk---of course, it’s now in excellent condition. He
runs his hand across the desktop.
VOICE
The voice is familiar---Marty looks up: it’s Mr. ARKY, 30 years younger! Marty’s
eyes nearly fall out of his head! Young Mr. Arky is energetic and dynamic, the
kind of teacher who’s going to change the world.
MARTY
MR. ARKY
Yes, that's my name. Who are you, young man? Are you supposed to be here?
MARTY
MR. ARKY
MARTY
CLOSE ON AN INKWELL
as Marty stares with amazement at the STUDENT next to him filling her pen.
Mr. Arky is in the middle of his lecture.
MR. ARKY
...and it is, of course, due to Science that we Americans enjoy the highest
standard of living in the history of the world. When we think of the technological
advances made in just the past 30 years, it boggles the mind to imagine what the
world will be like in another 30 years.
I think I can safely say that we can all look forward to a world of plenty, a
world free of disease and starvation. There'll be entire cities built under the
sea, cars that can go 2 or 300 miles an hour.
Marty can’t believe what he’s hearing. The rest of the class seems pretty bored.
You girls will be able to cook an entire meal, clean the entire house, and do all
of your laundry and ironing by push-button. You may even have a robot to assist
you in all your duties as a wife.
WISE GUY
MR. ARKY
Well, Biff, since you seem so eager to get into this discussion, perhaps you'd
like to tell us what you think you'll be doing in 30 years?
Yes, it’s young BIFF TANNEN sitting in the back of the class, looking just like
what he is: the school’s biggest troublemaker. Sitting around him are his THREE
CRONIES: GUMS, so named because he’s missing his two front teeth; MATCH, who is
perpetually chewing on wooden matchsticks; and SKINHEAD, who has a crewcut just
short of being bald.
BIFF
GUMS
SKINHEAD
Ataway, Biff!
Now Biff notices that Marty is staring at him. He takes an immediate dislike to
Marty.
BIFF
Marty’s eyes meet Biff’s hateful glare; then Marty turns away.
MR. ARKY
Anybody else have any ideas about what life might be like in 30 years?
MR. ARKY
(pause)
So am I to understand that no one has anything at all to say about the future?
MR. ARKY
MARTY
Oh, shit...!
At the same time, the student sitting directly in front of Marty opens his mouth.
GEORGE
Well, I, uh...well...
It’s young GEORGE McFLY! And he’s really a mess, too---nervous, hair poorly
combed, just not with it.
MARTY
MR. ARKY
George stands. Marty reacts with embarrassment for himself and his future father.
GEORGE
BIFF
Biff hits him in the head with a spitball. George immediately sits down. Marty,
pissed, turns on Biff.
MARTY
MR. ARKY
MR. ARKY
(louder)
MARTY
Who, me?
MR. ARKY
You're the only Mr. Lewis in this class. If you have something to say, say it so
the whole class can hear.
MARTY
Well, yeah, I was thinking, if cars are gonna be going 2 or 300 miles an hour,
they're gonna be using an awful lot of gas. Like, what if we run out?
MR. ARKY
He reacts as if it’s the most ridiculous thing he’s ever heard. There is laughter
from the class.
MR. ARKY
Well, class, it seems we have a doomsayer in our midst. I must say, Mr. Lewis,
that's a mighty pessimistic attitude for a young man like yourself.
First of all, with all the studies we have indicating the vast supplies of
petroleum in the earth, plus the massive reserves that have yet to be discovered,
the likelihood of any such shortage is highly remote. And even if the most
improbable, catastrophic circumstances were to occur and we did have a shortage of
petroleum, I'm sure that American technology and ingenuity would overcome the
problem in no time at all. All in all, I'd say your time would be better spent
worrying about the real problems that face our world instead of a shortage of
gasoline.
BIFF
Students pour out of classes into the hall, including Mr. Arky’s science students.
Marty steps out into the hall, waits for George to come out and, keeping his
distance, follows him.
Marty follows George toward a hall intersection where EILEEN is passing by with
her girl friend MADGE. Eileen sees George, but not Marty. She smiles at him.
EILEEN
Hi, George.
George looks at her and is so at a loss for words that he walks into another
student.
AT A DRINKING FOUNTAIN
George stops at a fountain, goes down for a drink and gets water sprayed in his
face! Marty shakes his head.
SCHOOL LOCKERS
George dials the combination to his locker, opens it, and is hit by an avalanche
of books!
A LARGE POSTER advertises the “Springtime In Paris Dance” on Saturday, March 16.
We PAN OVER to the cafeteria line where George is getting his lunch. Marty is
right behind him in line and watches as the cafeteria ladies give George the burnt
pork chop, the wilted salad, and the green stewed tomatoes.
GEORGE
Marty hears this, then notices the poster. He perks up, very interested.
INT. LUNCHROOM
George comes out of the cafeteria line and looks around the lunch room. Eileen,
Madge, and some other girls are sitting at a table. George takes a deep breath and
heads over that way. Marty follows a short distance behind.
GEORGE
Uh, Eileen?
EILEEN
Hi, George.
GEORGE
His shaking tray causes him to spill his creamed corn. She smiles---she thinks
it’s cute.
GEORGE
Uh, well, the thing is, that is, what I wanted to ask you...
EILEEN
George whirls around to see who she’s talking to and spills his entire lunch all
over himself!
GEORGE
MARTY
MARTY
GEORGE
Leave me alone!
MARTY
GEORGE
Not now...
EILEEN
Is that what you were going to ask me, George? To go to the dance?
GEORGE
No!!
MARTY
George! Wait! Get back here! You're not supposed to run off! It doesn't happen
that way!
MARTY
EILEEN
MARTY
EILEEN
MARTY
But he does! Don't you see? He comes out of the cafeteria line, he's nervous, he
spills his corn, and he asks you to the dance!
EILEEN
...yet.
She smiles at him, then picks up her empty tray and walks off.
MARTY
I know.
Professor Brown reacts with shock at what Marty has just told him.
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
Do you realize what that means? Do you have any idea what that means?
MARTY
Look, it's not that big a deal! I can fix it! All I gotta do is get 'em together
and make sure my old man asks her out!
PROF. BROWN
You’d better make sure your old man asks her out, because if he doesn't, they may
never have a first date. And if they don't have a first date, they won't have a
second date. If they don't have a second date, they won't fall in love. If they
don't fall in love, they won't get married, and if they don't get married, you'll
never be born!
Marty gulps.
CUT TO:
Marty is dragging George down the street toward the MALT SHOP just ahead, the
local hangout. TWO KIDS on homemade scooters (roller skates nailed to a 2 x 4 with
an orange crate on top) cruise down the sidewalk past them.
GEORGE
George, she's beautiful, right? She's nice, she's decent, she's the kind of girl
you'd like to marry, right? And there's nothing in the world you'd like more than
to take her to that dance, right?
GEORGE
Well...yeah...
MARTY
Okay, then!
GEORGE
Wait a minute---who are you, anyway? What are you doing this for?
MARTY
Let's just say I have a vested interest in you and Eileen going to this dance, all
right?
The Malt shop, Eileen at a table with Madge and another girlfriend, talking and
sipping ice cream sodas.
BACK TO SHOT
MARTY
GEORGE
What do I say?
MARTY
GEORGE
MARTY
GEORGE
Huh?
MARTY
Marty tears a page out of George’s notebook and starts writing something with his
Bic Pen. George stares with fascination at the ball point pen.
GEORGE
MARTY
Huh?
GEORGE
(reads)
MARTY
GEORGE
MARTY
Fill it with ink? You don't fill it----oh, come on, George!
Marty points George in the right direction and shoves the piece of paper in his
hand.
MARTY
There she is. Just go and ask her. I'll be sitting right here.
George takes a deep breath, takes a step forward, hesitates, then goes to the
counter.
GEORGE
(to Soda Jerk)
George looks at the piece of paper with what he’s supposed to say and mouths the
words to himself. The Soda Jerk brings George his malted. George takes a slug; he
gets up his nerve and approaches Eileen, unaware that he now has a pink moustache.
EILEEN
Hi, George.
GEORGE
EILEEN
GEORGE
Oh--I'm all right. Say, listen, about this dance Saturday night---
We hear the sound of the door being thrown open, and a familiar voice calls to
George.
BIFF (O.S.)
George turns around and sees Biff and his gang standing there. George shudders.
BIFF
Well, it's gonna cost you, McFly. How much money you got on you?
GEORGE
As Biff starts to walk toward George, Marty sticks out his leg and TRIPS HIM! Biff
stumbles to the floor, careening into a chair. Everyone in the malt shop laughs at
him. Biff, however, doesn’t think it’s very funny. He picks himself up and goes
over to the stool where Marty is sitting with his back facing Biff.
BIFF
Listen, A-hole, it's about time I taught you a lesson.
Biff puts a hand on Marty, and with that, Marty whirls back around and slams his
fist into Biff’s face!
Biff goes reeling backward into a table! Match, Gum and Skinhead face Marty, ready
for action!
The three guys pull Biff to his feet and they all run out after Marty!
Marty dashes down the street, followed by Biff and the boys!
Then one of the kids on the scooters comes by. Thinking quickly, Marty yanks the
scooter out from under him, kicks off the orange crate and creates a homemade
SKATEBOARD! Marty hops on it and sails off down the sidewalk!
Biff and the boys have never seen anything like it---nor has the kid whose scooter
it was! Biff stares as Marty whips down the sidewalk.
BIFF
In the car!
Biff and the gang jump into a convertible parked nearby. Biff peels out and races
down the street after Marty!
MARTY
looks over his soulder and sees the convertible closing in!
The convertible is mere yards away. Suddenly, Marty cuts a sharp turn into the
street and crosses right in front of Biff’s car! He turns again and heads back the
way he came!
Another car is now coming up from behind Marty. As it passes him, Marty grabs onto
the back and hooks a ride!
Biff and the boys are stunned! Biff cuts a U-turn and continues the pursuit!
Marty, towed by the car, whizzes past the Malt Shop! The spectators are truly
amazed! Madge turns to Eileen.
MADGE
MARTY
again looks over his shoulder and sees that Biff is closing in---and fast! Things
don’t look good for Marty!
Up ahead is an intersecting street: Hill Street. Marty lets go of the car and cuts
a sharp left onto Hill Street!
BIFF
is coming too fast to make the turn! He overshoots the intersection and has to
make another U!
It’s an incredibly steep hill, and at the bottom is an intersection with a traffic
light. Marty picks up speed as he coasts down!
Now Biff’s convertible shoots onto Hill Street, actually leaving the ground as it
comes over the hill!
Biff drives like hell after Marty, and he’s closing fast!
Then Marty drops into a crouch, cuts his wind resistance, and speeds away!
At the intersection at the bottom of the hill, the traffic light turns yellow!
Marty zips through the intersection! Cross traffic screeches to a halt to avoid
hitting him! Marty whips around the cars and makes it safely across!
Biff sees the stalled traffic in the intersection: directly in front of him is a
RED CAR! He slams on his brakes! Biff’s wheels lock up and rubber screeches across
the pavement! It looks like Biff is going to hit the car---then, at the last
moment, the red car pulls out of the way---and Biff rams into the car in the next
lane of traffic---a POLICE CAR!
TWO COPS immediately get out of their car and approach Biff. Biff sighs.
BIFF
CUT TO:
MARTY’S P.O.V. OF
George and Eileen, as George, carrying her books, walks her to the door. He gives
her her books and, after an awkward moment, they politely shake hands.
MARTY
sighs a massive sigh of relief. He hops back on his skateboard and goes off, OUT
OF FRAME.
We HOLD on Eileen’s house as Eileen closes the door and George departs. George’s
mood abruptly changes: He’s pissed. He throws his jacket down on the street and
slumps in the gutter, dropping his head in his hands.
Marty pulls Reginald’s business card from the pocket of his Porsche jacket. He
looks at it for a long moment, then rips it into little pieces. He goes through
the trash can and pulls out his Science textbook page.
Professor Brown is at his desk, again playing back the micro-cassette tape,
listening to the section with the gunshots. He plays that portion over and over
again, but he just can’t figure it out.
Marty walks in with the textbook page, and the Professor quickly puts the recorder
down: as if he doesn’t want Marty to see him using it.
MARTY
Professor, you were right about everything. I don't belong here. I almost screwed
up my existence again today while I was trying to put it back together, and I've
had enough. I want to go back to the future.
He hands Professor Brown the text book page and points out the caption under the
picture of the Mushroom Cloud. Brown’s eyes light up.
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
Believe me, Professor, running around on a nuclear test site can't be any more
dangerous than what I've been doing.
PROF. BROWN
All right, here's what we'll do: we'll get an Army Surplus Truck, mount the Time
Machine and Power Converter on it, and drive it to Nevada. If we leave by Saturday
night, we can make it to the test site in plenty of time.
And just to be on the safe side, I'd better build a lead-lined time chamber for
your added protection. I don't know if I trust these atomic bombs.
PROF. BROWN
Hello?
(pause)
PROF. BROWN
(into phone)
PROF. BROWN
Your “mother” wanted me to tell you that she was very impressed by what you did
this afternoon, and that if you were interested in going to the dance Saturday
night, she's available.
MARTY
But that's impossible!! George asked her out! He had to! I saw him walk her home!
Oh, God!!
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
But why? Why would she do that? She's supposed to marry the guy!
PROF. BROWN
Apparently, what has happened is that the maternal instinct has transcended the
gap of time, and this has caused an alteration in your mother's emotional
behavior.
MARTY
Are you trying to tell me that my mother's got the hots for me?
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
Eileen is sitting at the same table with Madge. Again, they’re talking, drinking
ice cream sodas.
MARTY
EILEEN
Hi, Marty!
MARTY
Listen, Professor Brown told me you called last night and gave me your message...
Marty’s HANDS attach the Micro-cassette recorder to the underside of the table
with a piece of heavy masking tape and start it recording
MARTY (O.S.)
...and if you're still available, I'd like to take you to the dance Saturday
night...
Isn't he a dream?
Boy, I've never seen you fall for anybody like that before.
I know. I've never felt like this about anybody before. I really don't understand
it but I just feel like---like mothering him.
But what about George? I thought you wanted him to ask you.
Why? You always thought George was cute because he was so shy.
Well, that's what I thought. But he really isn't shy. He's just chicken.
Professor Brown grabs the tape recorder and replays the last part of the tape.
CUT TO:
MARTY
Come on, George, don't be such a chicken. Hit me in the stomach. Right here, go
ahead.
Marty makes himself a target. George seems quite unwilling. In the background, a
homemade body bag (a duffel bag filled with clothes) is hanging from a tree.
GEORGE
MARTY
GEORGE
MARTY
How many times do I have to explain it to you? We know you're not a fighter. You
know it, I know it...but she doesn't know it. That's why we gotta make you look
like a fighter, somebody who'll stand up for her, somebody who isn't chicken. And
you're not gonna look like a fighter if you can't hit me in the stomach.
GEORGE
MARTY
You're not picking a fight, you're coming to her rescue. Maybe we'd better go over
the plan again. Where are you gonna be at 8:55?
GEORGE
At the dance.
MARTY
GEORGE
MARTY
Okay. So right around 9:00, she's gonna get very angry with me---
GEORGE
Why?
MARTY
Why what?
GEORGE
MARTY
GEORGE
MARTY
George: it's not your concern. Don't worry about it. Just remember that at 9:00,
you'll be strolling through the parking lot and you'll see
us...(gulps)...struggling in the car, you'll run over, open the door and say...?
MARTY
GEORGE
Oh. Uh..."Hey, you! Get your damn hands off her!" You really think I should swear?
MARTY
Yes, definitely, George, swear. Then you hit me in the stomach, I go down for the
count, and you and Eileen live happily ever after. Now, hit me in the stomach.
George takes a deep breath and throws a flimsy punch into Marty’s gut.
MARTY
No, George, put a little emotion into it. A little hostility, a little anger.
George tries to get himself angry. He makes some faces and throws another punch.
It’s not much better.
MARTY
GEORGE
MARTY
George throws another punch. This one is slightly better than the last one.
MARTY
Well...I think you're starting to get the hang of it. Just keep practicing. I'll
see you tonight. Remember, anger, George. Anger.
Marty walks off, leaving George with the body bag. He stares at it, trying to make
himself mad.
GEORGE
Anger...anger...
GEORGE
Yeeeowww! Goddammit!!!
He’s really angry now, and he socks the bag with his left----he KNOCKS IT CLEAR
OFF THE TREE!
George is astonished!
The Time Machine and lead-lined refrigerator-time chamber are assembled in the bed
of the Army truck, as well as the Power Converter and a motorcycle with a sidecar.
Marty is putting his 1980’s clothes in a laundry bag along with a few bottles of
Coke.
PROF. BROWN
Everything's ready to go. What about the chemicals for the Power
Converter...whatever they are?
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
Good. I'll pick you up in front of the school at midnight. Don't be late---we're
cutting it close as it is. We've got a long drive ahead of us.
Marty fidgets with the tie he’s wearing. He’s very ill at ease.
MARTY
Look. I'm a little worried about this---this whole thing with my mother. I mean, I
don't know if I can do it---I mean, hitting on my own mother, that's pretty heavy.
PROF. BROWN
Nobody said anything about hitting her. You're just going to take a few liberties
with her.
MARTY
That's exactly what I said! I mean, a guy and his mother---that's illegal, isn't
it?
PROF. BROWN
Look, Marty, she's not your mother yet. And if you don't go through with this, she
may never be. I know it's hard, but there are some things we must do in life that
are unpleasant. Some choices must be made that are difficult. Nonetheless, we must
make them. Besides, this may be more than simply a question of your own existence.
The fate of the entire space-time continuum may rest on your shoulders
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
There's no way of knowing. It could happen at the moment you arrive back in the
future...theoretically, it could happen at the moment of your birth...or
conception. Actually, it could happen at any time. It's a question to which I hope
we'll never learn the answer.
MARTY
Amen.
On stage is the band: Lester Moon and the Midnighters. They’re all black---Lester
himself plays rhythmn guitar and sings; there’s also a drummer, piano player, sax,
clarinet and bass fiddle. They’re playing “The Blue Tango.”
The gym floor has a paper-mache Eiffel Tower in the center; students do the Tango
around it.
GEORGE is on the sidelines, bopping out of time to the music. He’s quite nervous.
Marty is at the wheel, very uneasy. Eileen, next to him, looks beautiful in her
best party dress. Marty looks at the clock on the dashboard.
MARTY
EILEEN
MARTY
EILEEN
I'm usually nervous myself on first dates...but not tonight. It's funny, but
somehow, I feel like...like I know you.
MARTY
Uh, yeah, well, believe me, I sure feel like I know you!
George now glances at the clock in the gym. It says “8:59.” Alarmed, George looks
at his own watch.
GEORGE
GEORGE
STUDENT
EILEEN
MARTY
Well, Eileen...jeez, that's hard for me to say---have you ever been in a situation
where---well---you know you have to act a certain way, but when you get there, you
don't know if you can go through with it?
EILEEN
You mean like how you're supposed to act with someone on a first date?
MARTY
EILEEN
MARTY
You do?
EILEEN
(nods)
EILEEN
And with that, she throws herself on him, kissing him passionately, climbing all
over him, putting his hands on her breasts! Marty is absolutely shocked!
George is at a pay phone, dialing a number. His number rings and a WOMAN answers.
George doesn’t even wait for the tone---he takes off down the hall!
INT. PACKARD – MARTY, EILEEN
Eileen, her blouse partly undone and her bra exposed, continues her passionate
assault of Marty---then abruptly stops and pushes him away. She’s very confused.
EILEEN
George runs down the hall to the front door! He throws it open and runs out---only
to get his jacket caught on the door jamb! He tries like hell to get his jacket
undone.
EILEEN (CONTINUING)
MARTY
EILEEN
Marty hears the footsteps too. He looks at the dashboard clock. It’s 9:00.
MARTY
(to himself)
Suddenly, the driver’s door is opened, an arm reaches in, yanks Marty out, and
Marty finds himself fact to face with
BIFF!
BIFF
Behind Biff is his usual entourage. Biff shoves him roughly into the arms of
Skinhead. Marty struggles, but Skinhead and Match grab him and restrain him.
EILEEN
BIFF
EILEEN
I'm not!
She lunges at her door to escape, but Biff grabs her and climbs into the car.
BIFF
BIFF
(a beat)
They drag Marty away. Biff shuts the car door and tries to kiss her. She
struggles, and in a moment, all we can see through the windshield are tussling
arms and legs, accompanied by Eileen’s muffled screams.
Skinhead, Match, and Gums drag Marty around the corner to the side of the school.
At the side door, REGINALD WASHINGTON is smoking a reefer. He sees the three guys
dragging the kid he met the other day.
REGINALD
GUMS
REGINALD
SKINHEAD
George finally gets his jacket unhooked from the door jamb and hurries down the
front steps and over to the parking lot. There are a few COUPLES hanging around.
GEORGE
runs frantically through the parking lot, looking for the right car. His eyes open
wide upon seeing it.
GEORGE’S P.O.V. OF
the Packard. Through the windshield, we see arms and legs flailing about in a
struggle! We hear Eileen screaming!
GEORGE
adjusts his pants, runs to the car, and opens the driver’s door.
GEORGE
George realizes that he’s facing Biff! Now he’s really scared!
BIFF
EILEEN
BIFF
EILEEN
Gums and Match are holding Marty up against a wall, and Skinhead is about to throw
a vicious punch. Skinhead winds up, but suddenly his fist is grabbed by a black
hand! Skinhead turns around and finds himself facing Sax---and the rest of the
band!
SAX
Who you callin’ “spook,” peckerwood?
Skinhead throws a wide punch at Sax---Sax smashes him in the face! Then the entire
band jumps Biff’s boys! Marty escapes and runs back toward the parking lot.
BIFF
All right, McFly, I asked you politely to leave. Now I'm gonna have to teach you a
lesson!
Biff steps out of the car, grabs George’s right arm and starts twisting it----we
can see pain on George’s face...pain and anger! Almost by reflex action, George
lets go with a tremendous left hook, smack into Biff’s face! Biff hits the
ground---out cold! George can’t believe he did it!
Marty rushes toward the Packard. He is astonished to see George and Eileen
embracing, and Biff out cold on the ground. He keeps his distance, allowing George
and Eileen to have their moment.
Nearby are a few bystanders from the front of the school, discussing what they
just saw.
BYSTANDER #1
BYSTANDER #2
BYSTANDER #3
BYSTANDER #4
George and Eileen go up the front stairs. Marty, a safe distance away, watches.
Just as they’re about to go in, Eileen turns and sees Marty. She smiles. He smiles
back.
The fight is over; Lester kicks skinhead in the ass one more time, and Biff’s gang
runs away. Marty returns to assess the damage.
MARTY
(to the band)
SAX
It's okay.
MARTY
Well, you guys go back in there and play the best version of “Turn Back The Hands
of Time” that you can.
DRUMMER
MARTY
DRUMMER
Look at Lester's hand. He smashed it on top of old Baldy. We can't play without
Lester.
MARTY
But you guys have to play! The dance isn't over yet! You gotta play “Turn Back The
Hands of Time.” My parents gotta--George and Eileen gotta dance the last dance and
kiss!
DRUMMER
Hey, man, the dance is over...unless you can find somebody who can play the
guitar.
CUT TO:
Marty is playing the guitar with the Midnighters, in a version of “Turn Back The
Hands of Time.”
George and Eileen are dancing cheek to cheek. As the number concludes they kiss.
Marty sees this and smiles. He glances at the clock---it’s a few minutes before
midnight. Marty steps up to the mike.
MARTY
MARTY
Marty looks at the clock, then at the band...they seem to have no objections.
MARTY
Well, I probably shouldn't do this, but what the hell, you're gonna be hearing a
lot of this in the future anyway...
Marty turns the volume on the guitar amp all the way up, places his guitar against
it and blasts the gym with electronic feedback a la Jimi Hendrix!
The audience is horrified, and the Midnighters don’t know what to think.
Then Marty immediately picks out a Chuck Berry riff and goes into “Johnny B.
Goode!”
In moments, the band figures it out and joins in...and for the first time in the
history of the world, Rock ‘n Roll is heard!
Marty whips off his sport coat and throws it into the crowd!
ELDERLY TEACHER
That’s right, officer, there’s a riot in the school gym!
Now Marty tears open his shirt and does some Elvis pelvis moves!
Girls scream!
Marty wraps it up with a final riff, and the audience goes berserk with applause!
MARTY
(into mike)
SAX
Man, that stuff cooks! That's the hottest sound I ever heard!
LESTER
You gotta play that Monday for that record company cat from New York!
MARTY
(suddenly serious)
MARTY
And don't you guys play it either. Its time hasn't come yet. If you play it, you
might screw things up. It'll happen on its own.
LESTER
MARTY
Professor Brown’s truck is idling in front of the school. Now Marty comes running
out and jumps into the cab. Professor Brown is wearing an Army Uniform.
MARTY
Everything's cool! They danced, they kissed, they're in love! Let's go!
MARTY
I sure wish I could have seen the punch. I mean, he decked him---laid him out
cold---one punch. It must have been beautiful! I didn't know he had it in him!
PROF. BROWN
You didn't?
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
(profound concern)
MARTY
Professor Brown’s truck is being filled at “State Line Gas,” a typical desert gas
station of 1952. Facing one direction are signs, “Welcome To Nevada;” facing the
opposite direction, “Welcome To Utah.” And of course, “Last Chance for gas in 150
miles.” In the background, the sun is rising between the distant mountains.
Marty is putting on an ARMY UNIFORM: fatigues, and a jacket. He takes the bottles
of Coke out of his bag and shoves them in the jacket pockets. He checks out his
appearance in the mirror. Satisfied, he exits.
ATTENDANT
26 gallons...that’ll be $3.75.
Professor Brown pays him; Marty rejoins the Professor, they climb into the truck
and depart.
A dirt road leads to an intimidating looking gate guarded by M.P.’s. Barbed wire
extends as far as the eye can see along the perimeter of the grounds, and a large
sign proclaims, “U.S. ARMY, RESTRICTED AREA, AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY.”
Professor Brown’s truck pulls in and stops at the gate. An M.P. steps over.
M.P.
PROF. BROWN
Brown indicates it. The M.P. sees it and shakes his head in disbelief.
M.P.
PROF. BROWN
This is where they're gonna drop the bomb, right? Well, Philco wants to find out
what it does to their refrigerator.
The M.P. looks under the tarp and sees the motorcycle.
M.P.
PROF. BROWN
General Motors wants to find out what it does to their truck. The motorcycle is
because we don't want to find out what it does to us.
M.P.
Well, you better shake a leg. That bomb goes off in 55 minutes!
Marty and the Professor exchange a look of relief, and they head out onto the
nuclear test site!
This is where the top brass and supervisory personnel are assembled to witness the
atomic test. There is also an artillery battery with 105mm Howitzers, and a full
communications base.
COLONEL NORDELL is looking across the desert through binoculars.
BACK TO SHOT
COL. NORDELL
LT. GLASS
COL. NORDELL
From Philco? Jesus Christ! How many refrigerators do we have to blow up in this
test?
There are several tract houses here, a surrealistic suburban neighborhood, just as
Mr. Arky described in 1982. A large sign nearby gives the distance from ground
zero: “1.5 MILES.”
Professor Brown’s truck backs into the driveway of a house where there are
mannequins on the front lawn---a man with a lawn mower, and a woman in a chaise
lounge.
Marty hops out of the truck and opens the garage door. Brown backs the truck in
and shuts it down. Marty removes his jacket---he’s perspiring under the hot desert
sun---and throws it in the cab.
INT. GARAGE
The Professor and Marty remove the tarp and start hooking up the Time Machine.
This is a 1950’s version of Mission Control, where the personnel, military and
civilian, actually control the nuclear test. There are a number of clocks and lots
of equipment here. It’s 11:30 hours, and a flurry of activity.
TIMEKEEPER
TECH #1
Mark.
TECH #3
MAJOR LANZA
LT. JONES
Roger.
A TOWER WITH AN ATOMIC BOMB on it. This is it---Ground Zero. Yardage markers are
posted at 200 yard intervals from the tower, up to 1600 yards, then a mile marker.
Marty and the Professor each have a pair of field glasses, and they stand at one
side of the house looking toward the target area.
Behind them, we can see that the truck is all rigged up and ready to go. The Power
Converter is mounted on the roof of the cab with the solar cell pointed straight
along the forward axis of the truck.
MARTY
It was sure nice of Uncle Sam to put those yardage markers up for us.
PROF. BROWN
We're at one and a half miles, so you're just a little over a mile from where you
want to be. Wait until minus 3 minutes before you go---that should give you plenty
of time, and it should be close enough to zero hour that they can't do anything to
stop you.
Park the truck at 800 and get in the refri---the time chamber. Just be sure the
nose of the truck is pointed at the bomb...the Power Converter will do the rest.
Marty follows Professor Brown back into the garage. The motorcycle and side car
have been unloaded, and the male mannequin who was mowing the lawn is the
passenger. Brown hands Marty a walkie-talkie.
PROF. BROWN
Here's a walkie-talkie,
CONTROL VOICE
(walkie-talkie)
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
(grins)
Marty becomes very sober, knowing that he won’t see Professor Brown ever
again...and knowing there’s nothing he can do about it.
MARTY
Uh...yeah...
PROF. BROWN
Is something wrong?
MARTY
Marty steps outside, not wanting to look at him. Professor Brown hesitates, then
asks a question.
PROF. BROWN
Marty, I know I've repeatedly asked you not to tell me anything about the future,
but...well, those loud bangs on the tape recorder...are they...
MARTY
CONTROL VOICE
(walkie-talkie)
T minus 27 minutes.
Marty raises his binoculars and looks back toward ground zero.
Marty, still gazing through the binocs, hasn’t seen any of what just happened.
Professor Brown’s motorcycle heading back the way it came. The mannequin looks
like a real person.
BACK TO SHOT
LT. GLASS
COL. NORDELL
All right.
(into phone)
Marty is walking around in front of the house, looking it over. He goes inside.
In the dining room, more MANNEQUINS are seated at the table, which is set with
full place settings. Marty wanders through the house, chuckling at the idiocy of
it all.
MARTY
goes into the kitchen and has a look around. There is a Frigidaire refrigerator---
Marty opens it and discovers it is well stocked with food, including meat, cheese,
milk, eggs, Coke, fruit and vegetables. Marty takes an apple, has a bite, and
returns to the living room.
Marty turns on the TV. Snow. He switches channels and finally tunes in a
picture---the “Howdy Doody” Show. Marty watches Clarabell dancing around and
shakes his head.
MARTY
TIMEKEEPER
TECH #1
TECH #2
TECH #3
TECH #4
CAPTAIN TEAGUE is passing out sunglasses to his troops and to the civilian
spectators.
CAPT. TEAGUE
You are here to witness one of the most spectacular sights in the history of man.
It is really quite beautiful. There will be an intense white fireball that will
recede into a bright yellow glow, accompanied by an intense shock wave...
At the gate, the M.P.’s are monitoring the countdown on their radios.
CONTROL VOICE
Marty is watching TV as he takes off his fatigues. Under them are his 1982
clothes. He checks the time on the walkie-talkie.
CONTROL VOICE
Professor Brown speeds along a dirt road on his motorcycle, up a hill, into the
mountains. At a suitable point, he cuts off the road and parks at a break in the
hills. He gets off his bike, raises his binoculars and gazes off in the distance.
PROFESSOR BROWN
CONTROL VOICE
He flips channels.
PROF. BROWN
MARTY (V.O.)
PROF. BROWN
Is everything set? Have you put the formula in the Power Converter?
MARTY (V.O.)
Marty enters and goes to the cab of the truck to get his jacket---of course, it’s
gone! Marty is shocked! He checks the floor of the truck, under the
seat...nothing!
Marty climbs into the back of the truck and looks around. Not there, either! Panic
fills his eyes as he grabs the walkie-talkie.
MARTY
Professor! I can't find the formula! I left it in my jacket, and my jacket's gone!
Brown turns and looks at the motorcycle. Marty’s jacket is on the mannequin!
PROF. BROWN
Oh my God!
TIMEKEEPER
TECH #1
TECH #2
TECH #3
PROF. BROWN
Marty, it's over. Do you understand? It's over. Now I want you to get in the
refrig---the time chamber, and we'll just pray that the lead lining---
MARTY
Marty runs to the refrigerator and opens it. Sure enough, there are several
bottles of Coke here! Marty is elated!
MARTY
(into walkie-talkie)
PROFESSOR BROWN
PROF. BROWN
(to himself)
The refrigerator?
CONTROL VOICE
INT. GARAGE
Marty climbs up on the cab of the truck to the Power Converter. He’s got two
bottles of Coke. He tries to twist off the top of a bottle---of course, he can’t!
There’s nothing else to do---he smashes the top against the edge of the cab! Marty
pours Coke into the Power Converter!
TIMEKEEPER
TECH #1
TECH #2
(flips switch)
TECH #3
(flips switch)
EXT. GARAGE
Marty revs up the truck and guns it out of the driveway! He heads for Ground Zero!
Colonel Nordell is looking toward the bomb site with his field glasses.
BACK TO SHOT
Nordell is shocked!
COL. NORDELL
Captain Teague and Lieutenant Glass raise their own binoculars for a look.
CAPT. TEAGUE
LT. GLASS
COL. NORDELL
Captain! Get your men on this artillery and blow that truck to Kingdom Come!
CAPT. TEAGUE
Men, get on this artillery and blow that truck to Kingdom Come! Fire mission!
Let's move!
SERIES OF SHOTS OF
CAPT. TEAGUE
CAPT. TEAGUE
Fire!
A cannon is fired!
The shell EXPLODES wide off to one side of Marty, showering dirt and debris
skyward!
MARTY
Jesus!
CAPT. TEAGUE
Suddenly the SHELL EXPLODES ahead of, and on the other side of the truck!
PROF. BROWN
Oh my god!
TECH #1
TECH #2
TECH #3
(hits switch)
SGT. GUNTHAR
The shell explodes several yards behind the truck, but right in line with it!
Marty looks behind him and shudders at how close that last one came! Just ahead of
him is the 800 yard marker! Marty parks and checks the Army channel on his walkie-
talkie.
CONTROL VOICE
COL. NORDELL
CAPTAIN TEAGUE
CONTROL VOICE
...53...52...
MARTY
Hurry up!
PROF. BROWN
SGT. GUNTHAR
Marty is starting to climb into the back of the truck! He’s on the wrong walkie-
talkie channel!
CONTROL VOICE
...47...46...
PROF. BROWN
Back up! Back up! They’re drawing a bead on you! Back up!
Marty moves faster than he’s ever moved as he rushes back into the cab!
CAPT. TEAGUE
FIRE!
Sgt. Gunthar yanks the trigger pull! The cannon erupts with a tremendous BOOM!
The smoke clears, revealing a large CRATER at 800 yards! Marty’s truck is a safe
distance away!
CONTROL VOICE
T minus 30 seconds!
COLONEL NORDELL
Captain Teague and his men leave their artillery posts and head for shelter.
Marty can’t get the truck started! He’s white with fear as the engine refuses to
turn over!
CONTROL VOICE
...24...23...22
PROF. BROWN
CONTROL VOICE
...20...19...18...
Finally it starts! Marty heaves a sigh of relief, then aims for the crater, some
100 yards away.
CONTROL VOICE
...14...13...12...
Marty jams his walkie-talkie against the accelerator and the truck lurches
forward. He opens the door and climbs out of the moving truck!
The truck barrels along toward the crater as Marty climbs into the back of the
truck and throws the switches on the Time Machine!
CONTROL VOICE
...9...8...7...
Marty is thrown from his feet, into the bed of the truck!
The truck lodges into the hole with the nose slightly off kilter from the tower!
Marty climbs to his feet and turns the solar cell back toward the bomb!
CONTROL VOICE
...5...4...3...
CONTROL VOICE
...2...1...
TIMEKEEPER
Detonate!
EXT. TRUCK
Marty looks up as an intense white beam shoots down from the focusing lens above
him!
The yellow glow turns everything around it yellow! The tower is non-existant now,
and the truck begins to melt before our eyes!
The Army Officers, their men, and the civilian observers marvel at the incredible
site before them! The mushroom cloud has formed, billowing thousands of feet into
the air!
CUT TO:
EXT. PROF. BROWN’S VANTAGE
Professor Brown turns his attention away from the mushroom cloud in the
background, to the mannequin sitting in the sidecar. He notices that there is a
bulge in one of the pockets. He stares at it, thinking, wondering, trying to make
up his mind...
All is quiet on the desert. No mushroom cloud, no sign of life...just the desert.
Of course, he looks the same as he did a moment ago. He looks at the remains of
the refrigerator, and then notices the twisted metal hulk of the truck, half
buried nearby.
MARTY
Shit.
Marty wanders around aimlessly for a bit, not sure which way to go. Now he becomes
aware of low noise---a noise coming from above---a noise like the rotors of a
helicopter. The noise becomes steadily louder---Marty looks up.
There is an aircraft up there, and it’s descending. It’s hard to see against the
glare of the sun, and as it gets lower, it blows sand all over the place. Marty
averts his eyes.
ON MARTY
as the helicopter noise ceases. He turns his head, and there in front of him is
It has the shape of a 1950’s car, but has 3 whitewalls, propellers, and
stabilizing fins! Professor Brown is in the driver’s seat! On the rear deck of the
craft is a Power Converter!
Marty is speechless!
Professor Brown hops out of the Aero-mobile. He’s 30 years older than when we last
saw him...but he seems a little different from the eccentric Professor we knew
earlier. He’s not brittle and old, but energetic and lively. He’s a man who’s got
the world on a string.
PROF. BROWN
Marty! You're here! Right on time! How are you? Feeling okay?
MARTY
(very hesitant)
PROF. BROWN
1982! March 18, just like we planned! My calculations were absolutely correct!
30 years! God, I cannot believe it's been 30 years! Sure was a long time ago---
longest I've ever had to wait for the results of an experiment!
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
Shot? Who'd want to shoot me? I've never felt better in my life!
Marty doesn’t know what to say or do---he just stands there, staring.
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
A car.
The controls and the dashboard are in the streamlined moderne style of the late
40’s Futurism.
Professor Brown pulls a 16 ounce bottle of Coke out from under his seat---the same
style Coke bottle we’ve always had---except he uses a bottle opener to pop the
cap! He pulls open a compartment on the dashboard labeled “FUEL” and sticks the
bottle in a funnel inside.
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
(shrugs)
Yeah. I figured, what the hell!
We hear the sound of whirring turbines and machinery, and the “car” lifts
vertically off the desert floor and flies off into the sky!
Professor Brown has been answering questions. Out the window we see only blue sky
and clouds.
PROF. BROWN
You see, I never rebuilt the Time Machine after it was destroyed in 1952. I
decided that experimenting with time and possibly changing history was too risky.
Anyway, experiments in time travel were banned in all 87 states after the governor
of Cuba caught Dr. Feldstein fooling around in the Bermuda Triangle---that was
back in '64.
MARTY
But if you didn't rebuild the Time Machine, how did I go back in time in the first
place?
PROF. BROWN
According to your girl friend, Suzy Parker, you and she were at the movies. You
went to the restroom, and you never came out. Obviously, you stepped through an
inter-dimensional time warp, created by the original operation of the time
machine.
MARTY
Obviously.
PROF. BROWN
But I told everyone your disappearance was due to a teleportation experiment you
were helping me with. So don't mention anything about time travel to anyone.
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
The Orpheum.
Marty smiles; it’s all sort of making sense to him now. He glances out the window.
MARTY’S P.O.V. OF
MARTY
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
It's the most beautiful city I've ever seen! What is it?
PROF. BROWN
Cleveland.
The same house Marty has always lived in---except it’s been “streamlined.” The
corners have been rounded, to decrease wind resistance, and on the roof is a large
power converter. In the driveway is another Aero-mobile.
Professor Brown’s Aero-Mobile descends and lands on the street in front of the
house. In the background are other streamlined flying cars, buses and trucks.
PROF. BROWN
Go on in. I'll be with you as soon as I adjust this blasted flow capacitor.
as Marty gets out of the Professor’s Aero-Mobile and approaches his house.
Marty looks at his house, takes a deep breath, and walks up to the front door. He
rings the door bell.
The front door is answered by...A ROBOT! It’s the mechanical man not unlike
Professor Brown’s “Mechanical Home Butler.” The robot speaks in an electronic
monotone.
ROBOT
MARTY
Right...
Marty hands the robot his Porsche jacket and steps into his house.
It seems to be pretty much the way it was when Marty left in 1982. His mother
rushes excitedly toward him.
EILEEN
EILEEN
ROBOT
Yes, Madam.
EILEEN
INT. HALL
There are several display cases along the wall, and Marty has a look. In one is a
PAIR OF BOXING GLOVES, and a plaque – “McFly-Liston Fight,” “Madison Square
Garden, 1966.” In the next, a silver boxing champion’s belt, engraved with “George
M. McFly, World Middleweight Champion, 1963.” And in another, a framed magazine ad
with a picture of George McFly holding a very strange device: “The Champ gives
tooth decay the One-Two Punch with Son-o-Dent ultra-sonic tooth care system, by E.
Brown Enterprises.”
INT. STUDY
George McFly looks up from his desk. He’s a much different George McFly than we
saw before: in better shape, more extroverted, more self-assured. After all, he
was the middleweight champion of the world!
GEORGE
Welcome home, son! The Professor told us what happened with the experiment---that
there might be some side effects...lapses of memory.
Marty approaches to get a better look at the man who looks like the father he
remembers, but isn’t.
GEORGE
Your mom's got one heckuva dinner planned tonight! She's been pushing buttons all
day!
Marty notices a figure out in the yard, through the window. He has a closer
look---it’s BIFF, in a Security Guard Uniform, sitting in a chair, sleeping. Now
George has a look too and opens the window.
GEORGE
Hey, Biff! What are you doing, sleeping on the job? A security guard's supposed to
be alert!
BIFF
GEORGE
BIFF
George resumes his own unfinished business. He attaches a suction cup to his
forehead which is connected to a pen-like device by a wire, and waves the “pen”
over a blank check---handwriting appears, accompanied by electronic beeps. It
says, “Pay to the order of the Coca Cola Company.”
MARTY
(wide-eyed)
GEORGE
What's it look like I'm doing son? I'm paying the fuel bill. It's over $2.00 this
month---we really oughta try to cut down.
GEORGE
What's wrong, son? You act like you've never seen a Write-O-Matic before.
Marty takes out his own Bic pen and examines it.
GEORGE
Say, what have you got there? An antique pen? Let me see that!
I haven't seen one of these in...well, this is strange. How do you fill it with
ink?
George suddenly looks at Marty strangely---does he remember this conversation
happening 30 years ago?
EILEEN
Suzy Parker enters. Her hairstyle is a little unusual, as are her clothes, but
she’s certainly the same girl.
MARTY
Suzy!
SUZY
Hi, Marty!
MARTY
SUZY
GEORGE
SUZY
GEORGE
Why don't you two get out of here---I'm sure you can find something better to do
than watch me pay bills!
SUZY
Marty, you'd better change your clothes. You can't go to Mambo Class looking like
that.
MARTY
SUZY
SUZY
PROF. BROWN
MARTY
They all exit, leaving George sitting at his desk. George is thinking about
something. He opens a desk drawer and pulls out a scrapbook...not an ordinary
scrapbook...a HYDRAULIC SCRAPBOOK. It says so right on the cover, along with the
name of the manufacturer: “E. Brown Enterprises.” George plugs it in, and
pnuematic cylinders begin automatically turning the pages. At a particular page,
it stops. George stares at the newspaper clipping on the page.
INSERT – CLIPPING
A story with the headline, “Police Quell Near Riot At School Dance,” along with a
photo of the dance that shows Marty on stage!
GEORGE
GEORGE
INSERT – PHOTO
But it is....
FADE OUT