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IMDbPro

Regreso al futuro: Parte II

Título original: Back to the Future Part II
  • 1989
  • A
  • 1h 48min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,8/10
604 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
1054
481
Regreso al futuro: Parte II (1989)
Home Video Trailer from Amblin
Reproducir trailer0:28
5 vídeos
99+ imágenes
Aventura épicaAventura para adolescentesAventura urbanaAventurasCiencia ficciónCiencia ficción distópicaComediaComedia de trama sencillaComedia para adolescentesCyberpunk

Tras visitar 2015, Marty McFly vuelve a 1955 para evitar los desastrosos cambios de 1985... sin interferir con su primer viaje.Tras visitar 2015, Marty McFly vuelve a 1955 para evitar los desastrosos cambios de 1985... sin interferir con su primer viaje.Tras visitar 2015, Marty McFly vuelve a 1955 para evitar los desastrosos cambios de 1985... sin interferir con su primer viaje.

  • Dirección
    • Robert Zemeckis
  • Guión
    • Robert Zemeckis
    • Bob Gale
  • Reparto principal
    • Michael J. Fox
    • Christopher Lloyd
    • Lea Thompson
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,8/10
    604 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    1054
    481
    • Dirección
      • Robert Zemeckis
    • Guión
      • Robert Zemeckis
      • Bob Gale
    • Reparto principal
      • Michael J. Fox
      • Christopher Lloyd
      • Lea Thompson
    • 542Reseñas de usuarios
    • 114Reseñas de críticos
    • 57Metapuntuación
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado para 1 premio Óscar
      • 9 premios y 11 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos5

    Back to the Future Part II
    Trailer 0:28
    Back to the Future Part II
    Back To The Future Part II: The Hoverboard Chase
    Clip 1:06
    Back To The Future Part II: The Hoverboard Chase
    Back To The Future Part II: The Hoverboard Chase
    Clip 1:06
    Back To The Future Part II: The Hoverboard Chase
    Back To The Future Part II: Biff Gives Himself The Almanac
    Clip 1:36
    Back To The Future Part II: Biff Gives Himself The Almanac
    Parody Trailer
    Featurette 1:22
    Parody Trailer
    Dates in Movie & TV History: October 21, 2015 - Back to the Future Day
    Video 1:51
    Dates in Movie & TV History: October 21, 2015 - Back to the Future Day

    Imágenes516

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    Reparto principal62

    Editar
    Michael J. Fox
    Michael J. Fox
    • Marty McFly…
    Christopher Lloyd
    Christopher Lloyd
    • Doctor Emmett Brown
    Lea Thompson
    Lea Thompson
    • Lorraine
    Tom Wilson
    Tom Wilson
    • Biff Tannen
    • (as Thomas F. Wilson)
    • …
    Elisabeth Shue
    Elisabeth Shue
    • Jennifer
    James Tolkan
    James Tolkan
    • Strickland
    Jeffrey Weissman
    Jeffrey Weissman
    • George McFly
    Casey Siemaszko
    Casey Siemaszko
    • 3-D
    Billy Zane
    Billy Zane
    • Match
    J.J. Cohen
    J.J. Cohen
    • Skinhead
    Charles Fleischer
    Charles Fleischer
    • Terry
    E'Casanova
    E'Casanova
    • 'Michael Jackson' Video Waiter
    • (as E. Casanova Evans)
    Jay Koch
    • 'Ronald Reagan' Video Waiter
    Charles Gherardi
    • 'Ayatollah Khomeini' Video Waiter
    Ricky Dean Logan
    Ricky Dean Logan
    • Data
    Darlene Vogel
    Darlene Vogel
    • Spike
    Jason Scott Lee
    Jason Scott Lee
    • Whitey
    Elijah Wood
    Elijah Wood
    • Video Game Boys
    • Dirección
      • Robert Zemeckis
    • Guión
      • Robert Zemeckis
      • Bob Gale
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios542

    7,8603.9K
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    10clydestuff

    From the present, to the future, back to the present, then back to the past. One great ride!

    When Back to The Future was initially conceived, director and writer Robert Zemeckis and writer Bob Gale had no idea how much notoriety it would eventually achieve, nor of the big box office records it would break. They were happy just to see their project come to fruition. When they wrote the original film, the ending they had written was supposed to be the end of it. Because of it's success, however, and Hollywood being Hollywood, there had to be the inevitable sequels. The problem was that with the original ending, they had painted themselves into a corner as to where they could go with the sequel. What they finally came up with in Part II, is a film that is every bit as whimsical as the original, yet moves along at a pace that will leave you breathless.

    For part II the cast is pretty much intact from the original film. The exceptions are Crispin Glover as George McFly has been replaced by Jeffrey Weisman and Claudia Wells has been replaced by Elizabeth Shue as Marty's girlfriend Jennifer. George McFly's role in the sequel is more talked about by other characters than his actual on screen time, and Jennifer's time on screen is quick and brief also (although she has one great scene that takes place in the future)so neither casting change is of any consequence.

    The original film dealt with how Marty had threatened his own existence because of changes he had accidentally initiated in the year 1955. For Part II, we learn what happens when the interference is of a much larger scale and consequence. As you recall, the original film ended with Doc Brown(Christopher Lloyd)whisking Marty (Michael J. Fox)and Jennifer away with him to the year 2015 to straighten out their kids. For all his harping about messing with historical events, Doc is not above initiating a bit of interference himself. In their attempt to rescue Marty's future offspring, an aged but still obnoxious Biff Tannen (Thomas F. Wilson), steals the Delorean to transport himself into the past and to bestow upon himself a Sports Almanac book that contains the results of sporting events for years to come. Shortly thereafter, Doc and Marty return to 1985, only to find that not only is Hill Valley not what it used to be, their own lives are in pretty sad shape and far different than what they had been before. And the changes aren't good ones, or as Doc puts it "I can't imagine Hell being much worse."

    What makes the Back To The Future series so terrific, is that Zemeckis and Gale took the time travel concept, applied a little originality to it, then let their imaginations run wild. In BTTFII, we get a story that moves along like a runaway freight train. Not content to give us what the year 2015 may be truly like, since making such predictions are usually wrong anyway, they decide to let it all hang loose and just have fun with it. There are holographic theaters, Cafe 80's shops, antique stores that sell dustbusters and other things, skateboards that hover, paying for cab rides with thumbprints, etc. etc. Yet, for all the glossy, multi-colored stores and goofy concepts, we still recognize it as the same old Hill Valley. Something else Zemeckis and Gale do is to take some events from the first film, and replay them in 2015 Hill Valley. Usually, things like this would be seen as the lack of an idea, but in this case its simply Zemeckis having a little fun and letting us in on it. It works perfectly.

    Likewise, the alternative version of 1985 Hill Valley is an exercise in how far one's imagination can go. Instead of a quaint peaceful town and suburbs, Zemeckis and Gale do everything in their power to give us the equivalent of an opposite. To go into too much detail here would undermine your own viewing experience and give away a bit too much of the plot.

    Then to add fuel to the fire, we once again revisit Hill Valley in 1955, where things really go berserk what with two Marty's and two Docs inhabiting the same year. Zemeckis does a great job of cutting new scenes into footage from the original film with different angles and different perspectives of previous seen activities.

    As for the cast, Fox and Lloyd keep their characters of Marty and Doc on the same entertaining level as before. Fox is also given the chore of playing his nerdy son of the future, Marty as a middle aged man and even his daughter of the future. He is pretty much successful except I do think playing his daughter was a bit much. Lea Thompson, again has the difficult chore of bringing Lorraine Mcfly to us in three different characterizations, and as before handles it admirably. Her 1955 Lorraine will always be her most memorable characterization in these films, but the others are equally well done. As for Thomas F. Wilson as Biff, Biff is biff, no matter how old, how young, or how powerful he may be, and his consistence of performance is also noteworthy.

    Some have complained about being able to follow Zemeckis and Gale's storyline. If you have seen the first film, you'll have no trouble in that regard. I sure didn't, and for me it was one heck of a comedic thrill ride from beginning to end. If you don't have fun watching Back To The Part II, then the only thing I can think of is that your as much of a curmudgeon as old Biff from 2015. It's not often that a sequel can live up to it's predecessor, but when it does, and introduces some originality along the way you get my grade, which for Back To The Future is an A.
    george.schmidt

    Timeless

    BACK TO THE FUTURE, PART II (1985) *** Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd, Thomas F. Wilson, Lea Thompson, Elisabeth Shue. First sequel (noteworthy: both pts. II & III were filmed simultaneously back-to-back) takes up where the first one left off: Fox and Lloyd heading to the year 2015 where Fox must help his family of the future (he plays three other characters of the McFly clan) battling arch-nemesis Biff who goes back to 1955 to alter history...again. Darker in tone and plot but still fun all the same with some mind-twisting plot lines and cool effects.
    9vertigo_14

    Great Scott! Even the Doc Doesn't Take His Own Advice! (spoilers)

    It's funny that the plot of 'Back to the Future II' should be based on altering Marty McFly's future. Wasn't Doc the one who was so staunchly opposed to knowing too much about their future, preferring instead to let things take a natural course? 'Destiny!' he called it. But that is exactly what the sequel is all about, Doc's proposal to altar the future. And this leads not only to bad news for Doc Brown and Marty, but for the your Density? I mean, Destiny? (flashback humor).

    The story focuses on Marty McFly's future. Picking up right where we left off in the first movie, Doc informs Marty that in the year 2015, Marty's son partakes in some unfortunate activities with Griff (Biff's grandson) that lead to his arrest and incarceration. While in the future to fix up that little mishap (again, messing with 'Destiny'), Marty picks up a sports Almanac to take back with him. The Almanac contains all sports scores since something like 1955 (why it is only the size of a magazine, I don't know, considering it covers major college and pro sporting event for a whole lot of years).

    The Doc, in disgust at Marty's foolish get-rich-quick desires, throws the magazine out (while still in 2015). Unfortunately, Biff, now an old man, gets hold of both the magazine and the Delorian and travels to his young self in 1955. This sets off a change of events in the past so that when Marty and the Doc, now in the future, are ready to go back to 1985, suddenly find themselves in an unfamiliar hell. With Biff changing the past, he also changed the future, creating a desolate, alternate 1985. One where Biff is the richest man in Hill Valley, though still the sleaziest. And where a lot of other things have changed as well. Now, Marty and the Doc have to go back to 1955 and get the magazine from Biff if they expect to restore the future and erase the alternative 1985.

    This is a great sequel to a great movie. You get the 1989 version of the future (I don't know that 2015 will make the kind of progress we see in the movie with cool flying cars and dehydrating pizzas and hoverboards). This is the special effects and visual beauty of the second, whereas in the first one, it was recreating the past. Marty had to once adapt to 1955, now he has to do the same for 2015, even if only for a moment.

    But, it also ties in another creative aspect: when Marty and the Doc must return to 1955, they only know the whereabouts of Biff based on where they last saw him in that year--the school dance and all of that which took place in the first movie. Going back to that past means that a Marty "Calvin Klein" McFly is already there, and the events are taking place again just as we saw them in the first movie. And now, the Marty and the Doc from the future are intermingling once again with their past versions of themselves. So, in essence, the filmmakers had to recreate some of the scenes from the old movie, from different angles, and the actors had to play dual roles (which they do often throughout the trilogy) by being added into those scenes. It was a great special effects/visionary project to undertake, and what makes the series so damned creative and really a fun idea. And here, too, the goal is to avoid running into your past self because, yes, it could altar events once again. I wonder how the future changed since Marty and Doc's intervention in 2015?

    So, prepare yourself for what may arguably be the best movie out of the trilogy (probably because you get to see the future and past and everything in between; although, I'm still torn between rating the first or the second as my absolute favorite). It is the continuation of a fun first movie, and keeps up the creativity and novelty. I think that was the reason most responsible for its success: the ability to keep offering something new (although some things, are obviously repeated, like the running gag of Marty blacking out and waking up to some version of his mother informing him of what year it is after he tells her what an awful dream he had).

    So, sit back and let the Delorean be your guide.
    10Anonymous_Maxine

    Excess with good reason, good skill, and great results!

    Marty McFly is back, and this time he has to travel back to 1955 after an unfortunate incident which took place in 2015 so that he can prevent the destruction of the peaceful society of Hill Valley (what a great fictional name!). The film provides two hours of absolutely wonderful and fun entertainment.

    Every paradox and logical problem of time-travel is explained very well in the film itself, and those that are left out are easily overlooked due to the creativeness of the rest of the film. Who cares that if Marty leaves 1985 in a time machine to 2015, there would be no Marty left in 1985 to grow to up into the 47 year old Marty in 2015? This movie is so much fun that things like this are gladly forgotten about in order to accept the huge amount of satisfaction delivered by the film.

    The Back To The Future trilogy is a perfect example of the need to be willing to abandon at least a tiny bit of logic in order to fully enjoy a movie. This suspension of disbelief is necessary for a person to be able to truly experience the effectiveness of all three Back To The Future films, and this experience truly is a great one.

    It is so rare that a film or a series of films comes along that is so well written and perfectly acted and directed as the Back To The Future movies are. Although I realize that another sequel would probably be disastrous to the credibility of the series as a whole, I have to admit that I have always been disappointed that they stopped at the third film. All three are so much fun that they leave you wishing that the story left room for a few more sequels.
    Chrysanthepop

    The Travelling Through Time Continues

    'Back to the Future Part II' takes off where the first movie left. Pretty much the essence of the first one is present except this time Elisabeth Shue has been cast as Marty's girlfriend. Like the first movie, this one too is non-stop fun. The original plot once again, brilliantly revolves around the time-travelling paradox but this time the interference with the time-line has huger repercussions that are more complicated to solve. It's slightly a little more complex than the first movie but the energy and entertainment level is the same. I liked Zemeckis's version of 2015. It has that ultracool look and the futuristic gadgets and gizmos were quite amusing. The soundtrack is equally wild. The camera-work and special effects are very well done considering that the challenge was greater (e.g. showing two Michael J. Fox on the same screen). Okay, so showing the same actor share the screen with himself isn't anything new but in most movies/shows it looks poorly done which is not the case here. With most movies, the sequel tends to be a let down but 'Back to the Future Part II' is a great continuation of the first film.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que...?

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    • Curiosidades
      Filmed at the same time as Regreso al futuro: Parte III (1990). It was claimed at the time that in the four years since Regreso al futuro (1985) was made, Michael J. Fox had forgotten how to ride a skateboard. However, motor skills are not so easily lost (as in riding a bicycle), and Michael J. Fox has since stated that this was an early symptom of his Parkinson's Disease, although the medical diagnosis was not made until 1991.
    • Pifias
      When old Biff steals the time machine to change the past, he returns the Delorean back to 2015 so Doc and Marty would suspect nothing. He should instead have arrived in the alternate version of 2015 just like Marty and Doc went to the alternate 1985. No explanation is given as to why he can return to the unaltered time-line while Doc and Marty can only get to alternate versions of the time-line. In Big Bang (2007), the episode The Focus Attenuation (2014), they suggest that this could be because when Old Biff travels forward, Young Biff hasn't made his first bet that starts the time-line changing yet, thus allowing Old Biff to return to the original 2015. Possible explanation: It is implied that Lorraine eventually got totally fed up with her abusive married life, and shot Biff to death sometime within just a few years after the time when Marty saw them in Alternate 1985 (this is the real reason that Old Biff clutches his chest and crumples to the pavement as he is exiting the DeLorean after returning to 2015, not because his aging body couldn't tolerate the physical stresses of time-warping, as most audience-members would have assumed was happening), removing him and his toxically-greedy influence on the Hill Valley area. The logical "further" idea, therefore, is that the decent-hearted Lorraine --- along with 99% of the other locals, who of course would themselves have also strongly disliked the dystopian wasteland that their community had degenerated into --- would then have banded together en masse --- "in numbers, there is strength" --- and ousted whatever "scum of the earth" officials and politically-influential residents were currently present in the area, and then made sweeping changes for the better to get Hill Valley back to being the peaceful bedroom community that it had been before Biff's interference that had started in the late '50's. Also, Hilldale --- where the McFlys were now living --- was quite a distance from Hill Valley, and so it's possible that Biff's dissipative influence hadn't reached that somewhat-geographically-removed area so much as it had affected his own immediate stomping-grounds.
    • Citas

      Doc: Roads? Where we're going, we don't need roads.

    • Créditos adicionales
      The theatrical version had a teaser for Regreso al futuro: Parte III (1990). Some later versions do not have a teaser at all, only showing "To Be Concluded", and skip to the credits. Some have "To Be Concluded" followed by "Back To The Future III". Some cable versions retain the teaser for Back To The Future Part III, but, of course, do not say "Coming Summer 1990". It was, however, added back to the film for its digital download and Blu-Ray versions.
    • Versiones alternativas
      Spanish dubbed version also refers to Marty as Levi Strauss instead of Calvin Klein.
    • Conexiones
      Edited from Regreso al futuro (1985)
    • Banda sonora
      Beat It
      Written and Performed by Michael Jackson

      Produced by Quincy Jones (uncredited)

      Courtesy of CBS Records, Music Licensing Department

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    Preguntas frecuentes35

    • How long is Back to the Future Part II?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Why does Marty McFly Jr. use a payphone instead of a cellular telephone?
    • When 1985 Doc is riding his bike around town in 1955, he wears a brown jacket. In the first movie, when 1955 Doc is working with the DeLorean out on the street, a person is seen in the background riding a bike and wearing the same type jacket. Is this intentional or coincidental?
    • Was Marlene McFly (intentionally or accidentally) a prediction of increased transgender visibility in the 2010's or was she a cisgender girl who happened to be played by Michael J. Fox?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 22 de diciembre de 1989 (España)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Sitios oficiales
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Retorn al futur 2
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Griffith Park - 4730 Crystal Springs Drive, Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos(Tunnel scenes)
    • Empresas productoras
      • Universal Pictures
      • Amblin Entertainment
      • U-Drive Productions
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • 40.000.000 US$ (estimación)
    • Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
      • 119.361.197 US$
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • 27.835.125 US$
      • 26 nov 1989
    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 332.861.197 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Duración
      • 1h 48min(108 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Digital
      • Dolby Atmos

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