Next Doc returns to the present (the mid ’80s) with bad news about Marty and Jennifer’s future “kids”. Going forward in time, our hero thwarts a potential robbery but can’t keep an adult version of himself from getting fired. Picking up a Sports Almanac with the winners of every athletic event for 50 years in it, Marty sees a chance to get rich. Unfortunately, the book falls into the hands of old Biff, who takes it back to his ’50s self. The 1985 everyone knew is then altered irretrievably. He has killed George and married Lorraine. Desperate to put things right, Marty goes back to the ’50s, finds the moment when old Biff gives his younger self the Almanac, and steals it back. Before he can return to the present, however, the DeLorean is sent even further back in time – to the Old West…with Doc inside! Marty gets an ancient telegram from his mentor, finds the dusty car in a cave, uses the ’50s version of the Doc to get it going, and heads to the Hill Valley of 1885. There, he must prevent another death as well as find a way to use ancient, antiquated “technology” to get back to his own time. In doing so, he will set everything right as well as, perhaps, make amends in his own personal destiny.Īll throughout? All Biff. Remember, as far back as the old West he’s been chasing and harassing the McFly clan. In the guise of Buford “Mad Dog” Tannen, the mega-mean spirit of Biff struggles against the less than understanding ways of vigilante frontier justice. In the first film, he was an uncooked meatball trying to weasel his way into Lorraine’s fragile heart. In the sequel, he spun off into a gambling cheat success, eventually becoming a Las Vegas like tycoon with an even more terrifying temper (and an anti-McFly murderous streak). Eventually, Biff would sire an offspring who resembled the terminator’s mentally challenged human brother, a hoverboard riding reject with a gang of equally stunted cohorts running ramshackle over Hill Valley just like his Ike-era relative did. If you think about it, Biff is the entire franchise’s fulcrum, the turning point for almost every event in the McFly’s life. In the original Back to the Future, he was George’s dictatorial supervisor in the present, his romantic (or perhaps, borderline abusive) rival in the past, and the main obstacle for an out of place Marty to overcome. He is constant motion – chasing, conniving, calculating. In Back to the Future Part II, he was and is, again, the bare-knuckle instigator from the past, but he is also a dangerous millionaire in the historically altered 1985 and his own criminal kid (Griff) in the Hill Valley of 2015. When everything heads back toward a true Western motif, he’s a territorial scourge, a deadly threat to Doc Brown, and the only out of place element in Marty’s manipulation of a train, some special tracks, and some sticks of supersized TNT. Petition sent in the name of Marie-Aurore to the Dauphine, born Maria Josepha of Saxony, 1755. Marie-Aurore's mother later had love affairs with Jean-François Marmontel and the fermier général, Denis Joseph Lalive d'Épinay. The latter spent generously on her, and installed her, along with her sister, in the Quartier d'Auteuil. One of the nephews of the Marshal de Saxe, the Count of Friesen, known in France under the name of Comte de Frise, who inherited property from the Marshal, provided financial help to Marie-Aurore, but his death in 1755 deprived her of all support. A petition was addressed to the Dauphine, Maria Josepha of Saxony, a niece of the Marshal, the same year in favor of Marie-Aurore, proving her existence and ensuring her education. King Louis XV granted her a pension of 800 livres. įollowing the death of the Count of Friesen, Marie-Aurore (aged 7) was separated from her mother by command of the Dauphine. The Dauphine placed Marie-Aurore in an institution for young girls, firstly at the Ursuline convent in Saint-Cloud and later in the Maison royale de Saint-Louis in Saint-Cyr, founded by Madame de Maintenon. Louis-Claude Dupin de Francueil, Marie-Aurore's second husband. Maria Josepha of Saxony died on 13 March 1767 at Versailles. Deprived of her protector, the pension that Marie-Aurore received didn't cover her expenses. She turned initially to Voltaire, an admirer of her father, who recommended that she approach the Countess of Choiseul, but this was unsuccessful. Then, Marie-Aurore returned to live with her mother, Marie Rinteau. On 22 October 1775 at Paris, Marie Rinteau died aged 45. Marie-Aurore then retired with a servant to the English convent at Fossés Saint-Victor street in Paris.
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