By JAKE COYLE
NEW YORK (AP) β Michael J. Fox has been living with βBack to the Futureβ for a long time.
βIβll be on the street and some kid will go, βThereβs Marty McFly!ββ Fox says. βNo, this is an old man.β
Itβs been 40 years since βBack to the Futureβ debuted in theaters, but neither time, nor Parkinsonβs disease has done much β regardless of what he says β to diminish Foxβs boyish good nature. For Fox, traveling through time with βBack to the Futureβ has been part of life. Itβs the film that strapped a flux capacitor to his career and has, ever since, stayed in his rear view.
βSometimes I look at it and think about my family,β Fox, 64, said in a recent interview by Zoom from his apartment in New York. βI think about how I have a 37-year-old son who wasnβt born yet. Itβs a long time ago.β
On Friday, βBack to the Futureβ 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 βFuture Boy: βBack to the Futureβ and My Journey Through the Space-Time Continuum,β a book he penned with Nelle Fortenberry.
While anniversary re-releases are commonplace for cherished classics, the occasion is a little different for Robert Zemeckisβ sci-fi landmark. On the one hand, the movieβs turn-back-the-clock nostalgia is indelibly linked to its 1980s moment. After its release on July 3, 1985, βBack to the Futureβ 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 βBack to the Futureβ now and you might be astonished at how effects-free most of it is, despite its directorβs predilection for pushing film technology. Instead, βBack to the Futureβ conjures its magic with a DeLorean, some Calvin Klein briefs and its most special effect: Christopher Lloydβs eyebrows.
βThe distance between now and 1985 is greater than the distance between 1985 and 1955,β Fox says. βIn a way, that makes it more accessible. People arenβt locked into their time period. Theyβre not saying: This is real, this isnβt real. Itβs all fantasy.β
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.
βI got into the time machineβ
But what most definitely hasnβt aged is Foxβs 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.
βI found my voice changing. This kind of squeaky incredulity came out,β Fox says. βI 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.β
Fox was 24 at the time of the filmβs making. He was thrown into the role while in the midst of playing Keaton on βFamily Ties.β βBack to the Futureβ 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.
βNo time for neurosis. No time for self-indulgent bulls---,β Fox says. βI didnβt 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. Itβs all lit for days, this parking lot. Itβs wet, with pockets of streaky luminescence. I remember looking at it and thinking: This must have cost more than the entire budget of βFamily Ties.ββ
For Fox, Martyβs time-traveling confusion matched the whirlwind he was experiencing off set. βSitting around with (executive producer) Steven Spielberg was not where I thought Iβd be,β 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 Martyβs camcorder on the set of βFamily Ties.β Most remarkably, he and Lloyd found their chemistry on the fly.
βHeβs like a father figure and a little brother to me, in a weird way,β Fox says, chuckling. βI love him a lot. But at that time, I didnβt know him very well. I got to know him on part three. We jokingly call that βBrokeback to the Future.ββ
As time has moved on, βBack to the Futureβ has meant different things to Fox at different times. Right now, in his fight for a cure for Parkinsonβs, what resonates is βthe whole sense about this clock thatβs ticking,β 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 worldβs largest nonprofit funder of Parkinsonβs research.
βMy kids are grown up and theyβre doing well and getting married one by one,β says Fox, who has four children with his wife, Tracy Pollan. βExhaustion 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.β
Often, βBack to the Futureβ recedes in Foxβs busy life. After five years of acting retirement, heβll make a guest appearance on the upcoming third season of the Apple TV+ series βShrinking.β But every now and then, like Doc emerging out of thin air in the DeLorean, βBack to the Futureβ suddenly reappears.
βI 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,β Fox says, smiling. βI sat down and watched it. An hour later, my wife said, βWhere are you?β I said, βIβm watching βBack to the Future.β And, you know, itβs really good. Iβm good in it.β Watching it on Christmas Eve, with a bowl of popcorn, I really loved it.β