Continuing just before Doc gets struck by lightning in Part II, Marty gets the Doc from 1955 to find the DeLorean so he can get back to 1985. They then find out that Doc was shot a week after his arrival. Marty soon goes back in time once again to save him. There, Doc gets a love interest and Marty names himself Clint Eastwood, when he meets his ancestors. Meanwhile, Biff's relative, Mad Dog, has now set up a duel with Marty.
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The review of this Movie prepared by Estefan Ellison
This movie is the best of the Back to the Future series. This is pretty unusual for a sequel. Marty and Doc Brown must again grapple with restoring the time-line, with constant distractions and dilemmas along the way. Doc Brown's romance with a nineteenth century schol teacher, Clara Clayton is a nice side-plot.
The review of this Movie prepared by trotsky
Picking up right where the second film left off, Marty discovers that while "Doc" appears to be happy in the Old West of 1885, he may be destined to die at the hands of Buford "Mad Dog" Tannen (an ancestor of Biff, apparently). So Marty decides to take the time machine DeLorean back to 1885 and rescue Doc. But there are a number of complications: 1) Indians hit the fuel line with an arrow and the car is out of gas, which it needs to achieve 88 mph escape velocity, 2) "Mad Dog" has challenged Marty to a gunfight, and 3) Doc is falling in love with the new schoolteacher, Clara Clayton (Steenburgen) and is not sure he wants to leave her. Thomas F. Wilson gets to do some splendid overacting as Tannen, Fox gets to play his great-great-grandfather Seamus as well as call himself "Clint Eastwood" in the Old West, Lloyd is terrific as usual, and ZZ Top makes a special appearance as the band at the town dance. As she did in "Time After Time," Steenburgen plays a woman who becomes enamored of a man from another century and has to swallow the truth, which takes her a while. Special effects and the final chase are pretty exciting, although an epilogue back in 1985 drags a bit. But all in all, an excellent closer to the trilogy, better than Part II and equal to Part I.
The review of this Movie prepared by David Loftus