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40 years later, Michael J. Fox looks back on β€˜Back to the Future’

40 years later, Michael J. Fox looks back on β€˜Back to the Future’

By JAKE COYLE


NEW YORK (AP) β€” Michael J. Fox has been living with β€œBack to the Future” for a long time.

β€œI’ll be on the street and some kid will go, β€˜There’s Marty McFly!’” Fox says. β€œNo, this is an old man.”

It’s been 40 years since β€œBack to the Future” debuted in theaters, but neither time, nor Parkinson’s disease has done much β€” regardless of what he says β€” to diminish Fox’s boyish good nature. For Fox, traveling through time with β€œBack to the Future” has been part of life. It’s the film that strapped a flux capacitor to his career and has, ever since, stayed in his rear view.

β€œSometimes I look at it and think about my family,” Fox, 64, said in a recent interview by Zoom from his apartment in New York. β€œI think about how I have a 37-year-old son who wasn’t born yet. It’s a long time ago.”

On Friday, β€œBack to the Future” is, again, back in theaters. The anniversary celebration also includes a new 4K trilogy gift set that comes complete with an OUTATIME license plate. Fox, himself, has just released β€œFuture Boy: β€˜Back to the Future’ and My Journey Through the Space-Time Continuum,” a book he penned with Nelle Fortenberry.

While anniversary re-releases are commonplace for cherished classics, the occasion is a little different for Robert Zemeckis’ sci-fi landmark. On the one hand, the movie’s turn-back-the-clock nostalgia is indelibly linked to its 1980s moment. After its release on July 3, 1985, β€œBack to the Future” was the No. 1 movie in theaters for 11 of its first 12 weeks. Then-President Ronald Reagan was among its biggest fans.

But what was once so firmly lodged in the space-time continuum has, over the years, turned curiously timeless. Watch β€œBack to the Future” now and you might be astonished at how effects-free most of it is, despite its director’s predilection for pushing film technology. Instead, β€œBack to the Future” conjures its magic with a DeLorean, some Calvin Klein briefs and its most special effect: Christopher Lloyd’s eyebrows.

β€œThe distance between now and 1985 is greater than the distance between 1985 and 1955,” Fox says. β€œIn a way, that makes it more accessible. People aren’t locked into their time period. They’re not saying: This is real, this isn’t real. It’s all fantasy.”

Even more harrowing than pondering the distance from now to 1985 is recalling the flying-car future of the 1989 sequel. That movie was set in the faraway time of 2015. Say it with me now: Doc, this is heavy.

β€˜I got into the time machine’

But what most definitely hasn’t aged is Fox’s live wire performance in the original. His Marty McFly is like the Everykid ur-text: a seminal, guitar-playing, big-screen teenager trying to keep his family together.

β€œI found my voice changing. This kind of squeaky incredulity came out,” Fox says. β€œI get into the time machine, the DeLorean. I just felt comfortable in there. Very different than Alex (P. Keaton). Alex was harder because he knows everything. Marty knows nothing and knows he knows nothing. Everything is a new day to him.”

Fox was 24 at the time of the film’s making. He was thrown into the role while in the midst of playing Keaton on β€œFamily Ties.” β€œBack to the Future” famously began with Eric Stoltz in the part, but Stoltz was fired after several weeks of shooting. Fox, stepping right onto the set, brought a more screwball energy.

β€œNo time for neurosis. No time for self-indulgent bulls---,” Fox says. β€œI didn’t have time to investigate what happened with Eric. I had no rehearsal. I had no pep talk. I just showed up and then I was in a parking lot in the City of Industry. It’s all lit for days, this parking lot. It’s wet, with pockets of streaky luminescence. I remember looking at it and thinking: This must have cost more than the entire budget of β€˜Family Ties.’”

For Fox, Marty’s time-traveling confusion matched the whirlwind he was experiencing off set. β€œSitting around with (executive producer) Steven Spielberg was not where I thought I’d be,” recalls the Edmonton, Canada, native.

A ticking clock

Fox had no choice but to take the ball and run β€” even if he sometimes found himself mistakenly searching for Marty’s camcorder on the set of β€œFamily Ties.” Most remarkably, he and Lloyd found their chemistry on the fly.

β€œHe’s like a father figure and a little brother to me, in a weird way,” Fox says, chuckling. β€œI love him a lot. But at that time, I didn’t know him very well. I got to know him on part three. We jokingly call that β€˜Brokeback to the Future.’”

As time has moved on, β€œBack to the Future” has meant different things to Fox at different times. Right now, in his fight for a cure for Parkinson’s, what resonates is β€œthe whole sense about this clock that’s ticking,” he says. In January, Fox was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by then-President Joe Biden. The Michael J. Fox Foundation, founded in 2000, is the world’s largest nonprofit funder of Parkinson’s research.

β€œMy kids are grown up and they’re doing well and getting married one by one,” says Fox, who has four children with his wife, Tracy Pollan. β€œExhaustion is my biggest issue. But I feel good. And I love rolling around in this movie because I know how much it means to people.”

Often, β€œBack to the Future” recedes in Fox’s busy life. After five years of acting retirement, he’ll make a guest appearance on the upcoming third season of the Apple TV+ series β€œShrinking.” But every now and then, like Doc emerging out of thin air in the DeLorean, β€œBack to the Future” suddenly reappears.

β€œI tell this one story about one Christmas when we were decorating the tree, I went to get some popcorn and heard the opening on the TV,” Fox says, smiling. β€œI sat down and watched it. An hour later, my wife said, β€˜Where are you?’ I said, β€˜I’m watching β€œBack to the Future.” And, you know, it’s really good. I’m good in it.’ Watching it on Christmas Eve, with a bowl of popcorn, I really loved it.”


Source: back-to-future-michael-j-fox-interview


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