

Luckily, Griff throws Young Marty over the counter in a murderous rage, so Old Marty is able to hop up and take the place of his wimpy, terrible son. Old Marty, listening from his hiding place behind the counter, is appalled to discover that his son is a "complete wimp" who can't even say no to a large, violent gang of Lost Boys extras with mercury poisoning. Griff and his hench-griffs offer the customary pleasantries, inquiring after Marty's scrote, etc., and then try to convince him to do this mysterious crime that's going to end his days. Just then, Marty Jr.-who is a shambling simpleton, a sort of futuristic Ruprecht, for reasons unexplained-comes in for his afternoon bullying appointment. While Griff yells at Biff, Marty takes a sec to get clowned on by baby Elijah Wood and some other tiny jerk. Who's the Biff of Marty's generation? Who's Griff's dad? Does he look like Biff too? Or does Biff-face skip a generation? Doesn't anyone in this world ever fucking notice that there are only, like, four guys?

Then another Biff comes in! Except it's not Biff, it's GRIFF, Biff's grandson! He looks exactly like Biff, just like Marty looks exactly like his own son, because everyone in this universe is infected with that Lady and the Tramp disease where all the boy babies look like the dad and all the girl babies look like the mom. "Say no, NO MATTER WHAT." If Marty fails to say no, no matter what, "this one event starts a chain reaction that completely destroys your entire family." Yo, is this really a situation that justifies the use of a technology as fraught and risky as time travel? One family has kind of a crappy time for a few years? That's your emergency? Reminder: Marty and Doc go on to fuck up this "mission" so egregiously that they endanger the fabric of time and space itself. Doc gives Marty some electric shoes and this uggo future-jacket, and tells him to go to a nearby diner and pretend to be his own son and then a man named Griff will come in and ask him a question.

It's raining outside and Marty is like, "ew," but then Doc is like hold up-just wait five seconds and it'll change, because I have the rain memorized for reasons unexplained. Not to worry, though, because then Doc and Marty literally throw Jennifer in the garbage. "No one should know too much about their future." Also, I thought dragging a lifeless corpse around would really speed up our important mission. "She was asking too many questions," he tells Marty.
#Biff back to future 2 movie
Doc Brown is like WHO IS THIS TERRIBLE PERFUMED YAPPER I THOUGHT THIS WAS A BOY MOVIE and immediately blasts her in the face with a shut-up ray.
#Biff back to future 2 how to
When they get to 2015, Jennifer is like, "Why am I in this flying garbage car," and Marty goes, "Uhhh, Jennifer, ummm, I don't know how to tell you this, but, you're in a time machine." So then, of course (WOMAN) literally the only thing Jennifer can think of to do when confronted with the fucking miracle of time travel is to babble incessantly about her wedding. (Yo, just a thought, but I kind of feel like it might be time to let this genetic line peter out? Marty's really the only borderline competent one out of three generations. Marty and Jennifer, you see, have to drive to the year 2015 to stop their horrible toilet children from going to prison and ruining everything. When Marty expresses concern at not having been able to tongue Jennifer, like, at all, Doc Brown says they can take her to the future too. In the movie, Biff Tannen – Hill Valley’s number-one citizen, America’s greatest living folk hero and Marty McFly’s arch nemesis – resides in a palatial penthouse atop a casino, which bears a striking resemblance to the Trump Plaza Hotel, which opened its doors five years before the film premiered."Back.to the FUTUBLLRRRRBRBRBRBRBRRRR!!" “You watch Part II again and there’s a scene where Marty confronts Biff in his office and there’s a huge portrait of Biff on the wall behind Biff, and there’s one moment where Biff kind of stands up and he takes exactly the same pose as the portrait? Yeah.” “We thought about it when we made the movie! Are you kidding?” Gale told the Daily Beast. The similarities between the megalomaniacal billionaire hotel-casino owner with hair the texture of cotton candy, a penchant for surgically enhanced arm candy and outsize ambitions that appears in Back to the Future Part II and the one presently appearing on the presidential campaign trail?īack to the Future Part II screenwriter Bob Gale confirmed in an interview with the Daily Beast that Donald Trump was the inspiration for the character he and director Robert Zemeckis created back in 1989.
