Still, lightning rarely strikes twice in the same place, especially in Tinseltown. The sequel has one major saving grace, the Michael J. Fox-Christopher Lloyd partnership, caught working overtime to sell us on the exposition required to get this machine up in the air again, and then keep it running. It also has a surfeit of ideas, some of which are worked through altogether better than others. These include the vaguely Voltairean notion of a growing philosophical split between our heroes, Fox's Marty wanting to use the time machine to get rich, Lloyd's Doc proposing a more comprehensive study of humanity, "perhaps even an answer to that universal question 'why?'" (What is a DeLorean for? What are sequels for?) There's a clear element of It's a Wonderful Life, that all-American touchstone, obliging Marty to negotiate multiple realities to get where he's headed; there's also far more evidence to support the argument that Biff is Trump, the bully who just won't go away, opening a casino on Hill Valley's main street and letting everywhere else go to hell. If nothing else, it's of historical note as one of the first studio movies to realise the development of string theory partly excuses any script or movie that takes the form of a big old jumble: Zemeckis throws in clips from Clint Eastwood films, a Michael Jackson cameo, flying cars, Hawaiian shirts, six different plots, five different delineations of each of the main characters, Flea from the Red Hot Chili Peppers, a shaggy dog who represents the whole tale, and really just the thinnest connecting material. At 104 minutes, it certainly moves, even if it never fully coheres into anything as substantial as its predecessor, and amid all its chicanery, it may be damning that the best stuff here is the simplest: Biff throwing the kids' ball onto the roof, George throwing his punch (again), any time Alan Silvestri's score strikes up. The third film, heavily trailed in Part II's closing moments, would offer more consistent pleasures - being a better standalone film, and a better Back to the Future sequel - but this one's far weirder and livelier than this viewer recalled.
Back to the Future Part II is now showing in cinemas nationwide.
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