A song:
Childhood reading is not good, so the teacher and I and the head of the class arranged the same table, trying to reverse my lack of interest in the academic situation, the head of the class, a table of talent, smart, the most powerful is to treat people to the level of the realm of the adult, and every time I let me heartily admired. In class, the class president would often remind me that the teacher was glancing at me, so that I could come back immediately from the state of being out of the window. Of course, the class monitor wasn't always a prude.
On one occasion, during language class, the class monitor couldn't contain his excitement and unexpectedly took the initiative to steal some nonsense from me: I read a copy of "Shanghai Pictorial" last night. I "oh" a little, continue to listen carefully to the teacher. He went on to say: it introduces a movie called "Back to the Future". I followed with an "oh". He asked: Don't you think it's strange? I replied: What's strange? He said: The title of the movie? How can you go back to the future? I answered: Oh? He said: This movie is so funny. It's about a boy who gets in a time machine and goes back to a time when his parents were in love and helps his father woo his mother.
His eyes lit up when he said it, with the innocence of a teenager fantasizing about the future. It was one of his few moments of truth, and so I remember it so vividly that I know exactly where he was sitting, when he asked, and the look on his face. He brought me the magazine the next day, and it was there that I first saw the stills and synopsis of Back to the Future.
China Book Import and Export Corporation was a haven for movie and music fans before it moved off Yan'an Road. That's because there were original imported CDs, cassettes and vinyl records to buy, and outside the building there was a syndicate-style hawking of reissues and original beat-up cassettes that benefited generations of music fans. On the second floor, the imported books department has a sign that says "No Chinese Allowed" in the Japanese section, but you can walk around freely in the other areas, which include some Hong Kong movie magazines.
Through one of these magazines, I met a friend from Hong Kong who was also a fan of Stephen Chow, and it was around 1992, before he was even known to most Chinese, and the critics didn't think much of him. Besides Stephen Chow, we also talked about some Hollywood movies, and when I happened to mention that I liked the Back to the Future series, he recorded the Back to the Future Episode 3 broadcast on Hong Kong TV and sent it to me. In the era of video trading, having a slasher movie like that was a big hit, and more tapes chipped in through Back to the Future Episode III left me with quite an interesting experience.
Two:
The Back to the Future Trilogy is one of the most nostalgic series of the 1980s, with Episode One combining sci-fi and teen flicks to create a wealth of laughs and mind-bending drama, and was the top-grossing movie of the year. The second episode was a repeat performance, not only recombining the 1985 and 1955 time periods, but also adding the future time period, but the three were blended together without any confusion, and the end of the movie even left a huge suspense, also selling well. The third episode is basically a western, playing with genres, and humor abounds. The car scene at the end of the film has become a classic, and has been copied over and over again in films such as Toy Story. The trilogy produced big stars such as Michael Fox, and even more so, Robert Fox. Fox, and even more so Robert Zemeckis. Zemeckis ("Forrest Gump"), a commercial director whose seamless screenplay has become a film school textbook for playwrights.
The Back to the Future trilogy was initially watched on internal video and videotapes recorded from TV stations, and in the VCD era, the set was bought at a YC store (which is still alive, but has switched to DVDs), and after entering the DVD era, almost all the VCDs were disposed of, but the set was kept, probably because of favoritism. 2002. The Back to the Future Trilogy was finally released on DVD. Unfortunately, the biggest problem with this version released by Universal was that the picture was out of sync, and the bottom of the screen was cut off a lot of times, so foreign fans posted a lot of comparisons with the LD, which caused a huge stir and forced Universal to promise to release a new version. Region 9 had JQ's Triple D9 direct-mixed version out at the time, a version from Region 2 that had a dts track that Region 1 didn't have but had a lot less content on the bloopers than the Region 1 version, even though the picture ratio was wrong (with the Region 3 ****ed up version). Three years later, last month, R9 released a brand new version of this movie, which is considered the ultimate DVD-era version of this movie.
The Trilogy:
What makes this edition of R9 unique is, first and foremost, its cover design, which abandons the traditional concept of a Region 9 restoration in favor of a conceptual approach. The outer packaging is designed as a special license plate style based on the plot of the movie. This highly imaginative packaging is fully comparable to some of the special packaging of other districts.
Of course, it also brings some problems, the biggest fault lies in the relatively thin license plate packaging, the bayonet design is not very ideal, and even a small error, resulting in one of the side of the two discs in the opening of the package is very easy to fall off, although since then the release of the handmade modification of the program, but the results are generally. And for those who love the discs, they may be willing to take the four discs out and store them in a PP case. It's more or less a minor shame that the discs also don't offer precision printable image files of the original jackets.
Besides the superb packaging, the discs are also among the most well appointed. This is because it combines the best of each region. The biggest surprise of this disc for me is the Mandarin dubbing it contains, from the internal dubbing of that year. Those who are familiar with the Shanghai dubbing scene can hear in it the voice performances of some of the now famous drama actors and hosts 20 years ago.
The complete set is configured as D9×3 + D5, and is based on the Region 1 version, with a small number of reissues of Universal's exact scale images, combined with Region 2's dts tracks and accurately translated Chinese subtitles for the main movie and the bloopers, as well as the Region 1 and 2 bloopers, with Mandarin dubs and OSTs, resulting in an extra capacity and extra features. The extra content is all on the D5 disk.
Another amazing move by R9 was to Chineseize all the main menus, sub-menus, and text introductions within the trilogy, meaning that the viewer would have no language or comprehension barriers when going to any of the options. It's no lie that some people couldn't wait to include it as one of the best DVDs of 2005 as a result. Here is a comparison between the JQ and R9 versions, with the help of which one can clearly see how sharp the R9 set is in terms of production.