Back to the Future: The Ultimate Trilogy [Blu-ray]

£19.15
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Back to the Future: The Ultimate Trilogy [Blu-ray]

Back to the Future: The Ultimate Trilogy [Blu-ray]

RRP: £38.30
Price: £19.15
£19.15 FREE Shipping

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UHD: English SDH, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, Greek, Hindi, Hungarian, Norwegian, Polish, Romanian, Russian, Swedish Editor’s Note: A few of the featurettes on this set are actually NEW content and are now marked as such above.] Several publications have named it as one of the best science-fiction films ever made, and one of the best films of the 1980s. Popular Mechanics and Rolling Stone listed it as the number one and number four best time-travel film ever made respectively. Entertainment Weekly named it the 40th most essential film to be watched by pre-teens and the 28th best high-school movie. Marty McFly appeared at number 39 on Empire's 2006 list of its "100 Greatest Movie Characters"; Doc Brown followed at number 76.

All the same set of bonus features are ported over from the previous Blu-ray versions, but this UHD edition features a seventh Bonus Disc with all new material to enjoy. each disc. This set also includes a bonus disc with additional content, both new and returning from the 30th Anniversary Trilogy release. For review of Selected items are only available for delivery via the Royal Mail 48® service and other items are available for delivery using this service for a charge. Deleted Scenes (HD, some upsampled from SD – 8 scenes with optional commentary by Bob Gale – 10:45 in all) That night, Marty meets his eccentric scientist friend, Emmett "Doc" Brown, in the Twin Pines mall parking lot. Doc unveils a time machine built from a modified DeLorean, powered by plutonium he swindled from Libyan terrorists. After Doc inputs a destination time of November 5, 1955 (the day he first conceived his time travel invention), the terrorists arrive unexpectedly and gun him down. Marty flees in the DeLorean, inadvertently activating time travel when he reaches 88 miles per hour (142 kilometers per hour).

Back to the Future 4K Video

The story - or perhaps more importantly, the efficiency of the storytelling, means that a Nolan/ Tenet-lite array of time-travelling could be depicted with relative ease, seeing our protagonists go to the future to change things, whilst the antagonists meddle with events in the past, which affects the 1985 then-present, and require a trip to the past to fix the present and the future, further complicating matters as we cross paths with the very same protagonists during their exploits from the first movie. It's genius, hilarious, and wonderfully - satisfyingly - complex for a family-friendly sci-fi romp. The film is presented with Dolby Vision color grading which is largely a boon for the picture. Longtime fans will immediately note that the picture is a Grain is intact, complimentary and somewhere between fine and dense but always organic. It does have a slightly noisier appearance in lower light

Casts were made of the actors' faces, from which plaster molds were made. Chase sculpted more subtle effects over the plaster molds using latex. For Lorraine, he crafted jowls and eye bags, plus body padding to reflect her increased weight and alcohol abuse. Instead of a receding hairline, Chase changed the style of George's hair; he used prosthetics only to give him a less-defined jawline. Biff's character changed more significantly because Chase wanted him to look "obnoxious"; he was fattened, given sideburns, and a comb over hairstyle to hide a growing bald spot. The prosthetics were combined with makeup and lighting to further age the characters. and clarity, bringing the movie's iconic sounds and score to newfound life; it's the perfect compliment to the practically perfect UHD picture. There in Doc's 50s home couldn't be more inviting. The Dolby Vision grading even allows for fans to catch some small details that others versions reallyout in daylight delight with bold greens, intense clothing tones (Loraine's sweater again), and all of the vintage signage around town benefit from UHD - English SDH, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, Greek, Hindi, Hungarian, Norwegian, Polish, Romanian, Russian, Swedish Sound: English Dolby Atmos and Dolby Digital 2.0 ; French European DTS Digital Surround 5.1 ; Latin American Spanish DTS Digital Surround 5.1 The UHD and Blu-ray share these bonuses (and the Blu-ray includes the new master). It’s the same bonuses as before, although there is an additional bonus disc containing new material, separate from the rest. are some good examples of the overhead channels not necessarily overriding everything else but certainly adding some quality spacial depth. Two

couldn't show with the contrast and color accuracy to see clearly, like the fact that Goldie Wilson's campaign poster, seen on a van plastered Lea Thompson as Lorraine Baines McFly, a 1955 teenager who grows into Marty's unhappy, alcoholic mother More importantly, all three films benefit from a noticeable boost in contrast with daylight sequences, obviously, looking brighter and more vivid than in previous HD releases. The whites in many of the costumes from the past and the future are extraordinarily clean while the whites shining from various light fixtures are illuminate interiors scenes with a warm, natural glow. Added to that, specular highlights are absolutely spot-on, supplying the electrical sparks of the time-traveling visual effects with dramatic, eye-squinting brilliance, the metallic bodies of vehicles with a crisply tight, realistic sheen and the sun's rays breaking through the clouds with a beautiful, true-to-life radiance. through the speakers with phenomenal detail and full-stage spread. "Johnny B. Goode" has never enjoyed such richness, detail in every note and lyric,Once again Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd define the piece, but honourable mention should be made of Thomas F. Wilson's glorious triple-header as old Biff, the thunderously stupid cyborg grandchild Griff, and young Biff. Sure, Fox's Eddie Murphy-style comedy line in playing a slew of family characters - of both sexes - gets a few laughs, but Wilson makes the Biffs very interesting Lex Luthors of the franchise, in a way that you wouldn't have expected from the first movie. BONUS: English SDH, Brazilian Portuguese, Cantonese, Spanish, Complex Mandarin, Czech, Dutch, French Canadian, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Latin American Spanish, Polish, Cast: Michael J. Fox (Marty McFly / Marty McFly Junior / Marlene McFly), Christopher Lloyd (Doctor Emmett Brown), Lea Thompson (Lorraine), Thomas F. Wilson (Biff Tannen / Griff), Casey Siemaszko (3-D), Billy Zane (Match), Elisabeth Shue (Jennifer), Elijah Wood (Video Game Boy) Chase found the work frustrating compared to his experiences with more fantastical prostheses that made it easier to hide defects. The rubber latex did not reflect light the same way as natural skin, so Chase used a stippling process (creating a pattern with small dots) to variegate the actors' faces to better conceal where the skin and prosthetics met; close-up shots were avoided. Doc's appearance was not altered significantly. Chase painted latex on Lloyd which, when removed, caused crinkles in the skin, onto which other elements, such as liver spots and shadows, were painted.

BLU-RAY: English SDH, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, Greek, Hindi, Hungarian, Norwegian, Polish, Romanian, Russian, Swedish

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every channel. When Marty and Jennifer arrive at school, voices echo through the otherwise empty hallways. It's a little dense but the effect is quite Sound: English DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 and Dolby Digital 2.0, French European DTS Digital Surround 5.1 and Latin American Spanish DTS Digital Surround 5.1



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