What’s forty years between friends? Turn your clock back to 1985 and look up your old pal Marty McFly who is about to embark on a science fiction adventure of momentous depths and heights. You and the Waterbury Symphony Orchestra are providing the passport and tickets on Saturday, March 15. Lift off time is 2 p.m. at the Palace Theater, 100 East Main Street, Waterbury and luggage is not required but anti-nausea medication might be necessary.
Way back in 1980 Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale conceived of writing a screenplay about time travel, a project they could not get off the ground (pun intended), after a number of theatrical failures to launch (another pun intended). After forty rejections by various studios, it finally got approved after Zemeckis’ successful direction of “Romancing the Stone.” The men’s next obstacle was their choice of Michael J. Fox for Marty McFly proved unsuccessful. The casting of Eric Stoltz worked… for a short time. Renegotiations with Fox, re-shoting all the scenes already shot with Stoltz and adding $4 million to the budget sealed the new deal and created a $381.1 million hit, the highest grossing film of 1985, and a multi-award winner. "Back to the Future" was officially born.
You now have the unique opportunity to revisit Marty McFly before, during and after his historic flight in the DeLorean back into the future, flux capacitor and all, with the magnificent assistance of the Waterbury Symphony Orchestra in concert musically accompanying you to the heights, while watching the big screen movie. Join Marty and his good friend Doc Brown, the eccentric scientist Christopher Lloyd who dreams up his time travel invention, and their incredible adventures back to 1955. Marty gets the chance to meet his future parents and has to prevent them from never marrying, an event that would have doomed his ever being born. He has to make them reconcile and fall in love and then solve the bigger problem of finding a way to transport himself back to the future and the present, when there is no more plutonium as fuel. Where is there a good lightning bolt when you need one?
This movie is considered “the landmark of American cinema," one of the greatest films ever made, in 2004 called one of the 1000 best movies ever by the New York Times, in 2005 the 56th greatest screenplay in the preceding 75 years by Writers Guild of America, number 10 on Film4’s 50 Films to See Before You Die and by Rolling Stone the #1 Best Time -Travel Film Ever Made. What are you waiting for?
For tickets ($35-75 plus fees), call The Palace Theater, 100 East Main Street, Waterbury at 203- 346- 2000 or online at palacetheaterct.org.
.Follow Alan Silvestri’s dazzling score as it embraces this exciting time travel adventure into the unknown. Hold on to your seat belt and flux capacitor and remember the words of Doc Brown: “Your future is whatever you make it, so make it a good one."