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UNIVERSAL

MOVIE INFO
Director:
Robert Zemeckis
Cast:
Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd, Mary Steenburgen
Writing Credits:
Robert Zemeckis, Bob Gale

Synopsis:
Marty time travels to the Old West to save Doc.

Box Office:
Budget:
$40 million.
Opening Weekend:
$19,089,645 on 2019 screens.
Domestic Gross:
$88,277,583.


MPAA:
Rated PG.

DISC DETAILS
Presentation:
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Dolby Vision
Audio:
English Dolby Atmos
French DTS 5.1
Spanish DTS 5.1
Subtitles:
English
Spanish
French
Closed-captioned
Supplements Subtitles:
English
Spanish
French
Canadian French (Bonus Only)
Brazilian Portuguese (Bonus Only)
Castillian (Bonus Only)
German (Bonus Only)
Italian (Bonus Only)
Chinese Simplified (Bonus Only)
Portuguese (Bonus Only)
Russian (Bonus Only)
Arabic (Bonus Only)
Bulgarian (Bonus Only)
Cantonese (Bonus Only)
Chinese Traditional (Bonus Only)
Czech (Bonus Only)
Dutch (Bonus Only)
Greek (Bonus Only)
Hebrew (Bonus Only)
Hungarian (Bonus Only)
Korean (Bonus Only)
Polish (Bonus Only)
Romanian (Bonus Only)
Japanese (Bonus Only)
Thai (Bonus Only)
Turkish (Bonus Only)

Runtime: 118 min.
Price: $24.98
Release Date: 10/14/2025

Bonus:
• Q&A with Director Robert Zemeckis and Producer Bob Gale
• Audio Commentary with Producers Bob Gale and Neil Canton
• “Tales from the Future” Featurettes
• “The Making of Back to the Future Part III” Featurette
• “Making the Trilogy: Chapter Three” Featurette
• “The Secrets of the Back to the Future Trilogy” Featurette
• Deleted Scene with Optional Commentary
• Outtakes
• “Designing Hill Valley” Featurette
• “Designing the Campaign” Featurette
• Photo Galleries
• Music Video
• FAQs About the Trilogy
• Trailer
• “Back to the Future: The Ride” Featurette
• “The Hollywood Museum Goes Back to the Future” Featurette
• “Back to the Future: The Musical Behind the Scenes” Featurette
• “Lost Audition Tapes” Featurette
• “Could You Survive the Movies?” Featurette
• 2015 Message from Doc Brown
• “Doc Brown Saves the World!” Short Film
• “Restoring the DeLorean” Featurette
• “Looking Back to the Future” Documentary
• Two Episodes of Back to the Future: The Animated Series
• 2015 Commercials
• Blu-ray Copy
• Steelbook Case


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RELATED REVIEWS


Back to the Future Part III (Steelbook) [4K UHD] (1990)

Reviewed by Colin Jacobson (August 16, 2025)

As this represents my sixth review of 1990’s Back to the Future Part III, I’ll skip the standard film discussion. If you care to inspect my longer thoughts, please click here.

In summary, Back to the Future Part III concludes the trilogy on a satisfying note. It wraps up the characters and scenarios in a smooth and rewarding manner, as it generally seems appropriately light and lively. It doesn’t better the first flick, but Future III nonetheless gives us a likeable and entertaining movie.


The Disc Grades: Picture A-/ Audio B+/ Bonus A-

Back to the Future Part III appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 1.85:1 on this 4K UHD Disc. This was a great Dolby Vision transfer.

Sharpness came across as tight and distinct. Nary a sliver of softness materialized, so we got an accurate, well-defined presentation.

Jagged edges and shimmering caused no issues, and I noticed no edge haloes at times. Print flaws failed to appear, and a light layer of grain implied that the transfer didn’t suffer from heavy-handed noise reduction.

Given the film’s earthy setting, Future III presented the most stable and natural palette of the trilogy. The colors consistently appeared distinctive and warm, and they demonstrated no signs of concerns like noise or bleeding.

The movie featured more exteriors than either of the predecessor, which definitely helped make it the most satisfying in regard to color reproduction. HDR boosted the hues and gave them extra dimensionality and range.

Black levels were dark and tight, and shadow detail looked appropriately heavy but not overly dense. HDR added depth and impact to whites and contrast. All in all, the movie looked strong and this became the most attractive of the trilogy’s 4Ks.

When we moved to the Dolby Atmos soundtrack of Back to the Future Part III, it seemed pretty involving. Downconverted to Dolby TrueHD 7.1, much of the audio remained focused in the front channels, but the imaging spread nicely throughout the movie.

Elements blended together cleanly and moved across the spectrum neatly and accurately. The surrounds consistently presented a good sense of environment and kicked into gear effectively during the louder scenes; they worked especially well during the movie’s train-based climax.

Audio quality sounded better than ever here. Speech seemed natural and crisp, and I noticed no problems related to edginess or intelligibility.

Music appeared bright and lively, as the score demonstrated nice clarity and good depth. Effects also came across as distinct and accurate, and they showed solid bass punch when appropriate.

Compared to today’s movies, the audio of Back to the Future Part III was dated. However, I felt the sound seemed quite positive for its era, and it continued to succeed 33 years after the fact.

How did this 2025 "40th Anniversary" 4K UHD compare to the 2020 UHD? Both offered identical picture and audio, as the 2025 release simply replicated the 2020 disc, right down to the copyrights.

The 2025 release mixes extras from the 2020 Part III discs as well as some from a different source. The 4K’s extras start with an unusual form of audio commentary. Instead of a traditional screen-specific track, we hear a Q&A with Director Robert Zemeckis and Producer Bob Gale.

This comes from a session at the University of Southern California, as DVD producer Laurent Bouzereau hosts a conversation with the filmmakers. By far the shortest of the three Q&As, this one lasts a mere 30 minutes, and it seems more lackluster than the other two.

Not that Zemeckis and Gale don’t offer some useful information, as they cover a mix of good topics. They relate various facts about the production as well as their thoughts about the series as a whole and its legacy. The track seems too short to be tremendously notable, but it still gives us some nice facts about the third film.

A second audio commentary provides a more standard format. This one involves producers Bob Gale and Neil Canton, both of whom sit together for a running, screen-specific piece.

As with their tracks for the first two films, Gale heavily dominates this one. Though Canton chimes in a little more frequently than in the past, I can’t imagine he talks more than five percent of the time here.

As always, this track generally acts as a repository for information not heard elsewhere, so a lot of the information Gale covers falls into the “trivia” category. But that doesn’t mean the material fails to become involving and interesting, as Gale provides a nice traipse through the production.

He gets into a myriad of different issues and lets us know many compelling factoids that add to our appreciation of the flick. For instance, we learn of one personality they tried to land for a cameo. As with prior commentaries, this one suffers from a few too many empty spaces, but it still seems engaging and useful.

For our first video-based supplement, we go back to 1990. A featurette from that period, The Making of Back to the Future Part III fills seven minutes, 31 seconds with remarks from director Robert Zemeckis, actors Michael J. Fox, Mary Steenburgen and Thomas F. Wilson, producer/writer Bob Gale, and producer Neil Canton.

Although it shows too many film snippets, the program actually packs a fair amount of good information. It includes some nice behind the scenes images and gives us a quick but moderately useful glimpse of the production. Despite its brevity and promotional focus, the featurette still merits a look.

Making the Trilogy: Chapter Three takes 16 minutes, 19 seconds, and we hear from Zemeckis, Gale, and Fox. Only approximately the first half of “Chapter Three” addresses the production of III, and it includes a cursory discussion of the hectic schedule caused by the almost-simultaneous creation of the two sequels.

The second part of “Chapter Three” acts as something of a valedictory statement for the trilogy. We get comments on the films’ impact and success and what they meant to the participants. Added together, the three chapters of “Making the Trilogy” don’t offer a great look at the series, but they seem reasonably entertaining and informative.

Next we find a single deleted scene that lasts one minute, 18 seconds. It features Buford Tannen and Marshal Strickland, and it definitely deserved to be cut, as it seems way too dark for this flick.

You can watch the deleted scene with or without commentary from producer Bob Gale. He conveys the reason for its omission.

Additional unused footage appears in the Outtakes area, which runs one minute, 35 seconds seconds. I usually don’t care for gag reels, but this one tosses in some fairly funny stuff. It’s not quite up to the standards of the first disc’s amusing outtakes section, but it beats the tepid material found on Part II.

After this we locate two short featurettes. Designing the Town of Hill Valley lasts only one minute, eight seconds as Bob Gale chats about the evolution of the location. He covers the basics of the set but doesn’t give us enough specifics to make this a very useful piece.

Designing the Campaign (1:17) also features Gale, and he goes through the different advertising concepts for all three movies, with an emphasis on the first one. The images of the rejected posters are cool to see, but otherwise, this featurette seems pretty insubstantial.

Music videos for songs from films usually blow, and the clip for ZZ Top’s Doubleback doesn’t alter that impression. It integrates the Top into shots from the movie – or the other way around – and it does so really crudely. The song’s nothing special, and the video seems cheap and dull.

The Secrets of the Back to the Future Trilogy runs 20 minutes, 40 seconds. Hosted by Kirk Cameron (!), this program apparently was created to promote Future III.

It features questions about various issues, and we see lots of shots from the set to depict some of the “secrets”. These include the effects that brought the hoverboards to life, the physical strains of the shoot, and the creation of the train scene from III.

We also hear short interview snippets from Zemeckis, Fox, Thomas F. Wilson, Steenburgen, Neil Canton, Gale, visual effects supervisor Ken Ralston, and supervising model maker Steve Gawley. Much of the material appears elsewhere, and the program seems too puffy and promotional to offer anything terribly worthwhile, but at least the behind the scenes images provide some good pieces.

For some text information, we go to FAQs About the Trilogy. Composed by Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis, this question and answer series goes through a lot of interesting issues related to the series.

Most of them deal with time paradox concerns, and the Bobs reply openly and amusingly to the problems in this fun extra. Some of this repeats information found in “Secrets” and elsewhere, but the “FAQ” offers a reasonable amount of new material.

We find the film’s theatrical trailer as well as a look at Back to the Future: The Ride. This splits into two areas; “Lobby Monitor” (15:05) and “The Ride” (16:00).

The first shows what you saw when you waited in line for the attraction, and “Ride” lets you check out footage you viewed right before and during the experience itself. Of course, the ride doesn’t work as well without the motion simulator elements in the actual cars, but this is still a good way to remember a fun attraction.

Under Tales from the Future, two featurettes appear. We see “Third Time’s the Charm” (17:07) and “The Test of Time” (16:59).

In these, we hear from Zemeckis, Fox, Gale, Thompson, Steenburgen, Canton, Lloyd, executive producers Steven Spielberg, Frank Marshall and Kathleen Kennedy, production designer Rick Carter, key makeup artist Kenny Myers, costume designer Joanna Johnston, associate producer Steve Starkey, mechanical effects supervisor Michael Lantieri, replica car owner J Ryan, director of photography Dean Cundey and actors Marc McClure, Claudia Wells and James Tolkan.

The programs look at taking the series into Western territory, sets and locations, costumes and period details, cast and performances, story/character areas, various effects, and the series’ legacy. Nothing revelatory comes out here, but the last two “Tales” featurettes act as a nice complement to the rest of the extras.

On the included Blu-ray copy, Photo Galleries, we break into five domains. These cover “Production Art” (15 frames), “Additional Storyboards” (50), “Behind the Scenes Photographs” (154), “Marketing Materials” (28) and “Character Portraits” (80). These add up to a good collection of elements.

Originally found on a bonus disc for the 2020 "Ultimate Trilogy", another Bluray comes packed with extras. We discover a 2015 Message from Doc Brown.

In this 45-second clip, Christopher Lloyd reprises his role as Doc to let us know we’re now in the future. It’s nice to have but not anything memorable.

More new material shows up in Doc Brown Saves the World!, a short film. It lasts nine minutes, 38 seconds and gives us more from Lloyd as Doc attempts to prevent Armageddon from occurring in 2045.

It incorporates the trilogy’s invented technology in clever ways and offers decent entertainment. However, its social message seems heavy-handed.

Next comes a featurette called Outatime: Restoring the DeLorean. In this 22-minute piece, we hear from film historian Rob Klein, DeLorean Construction Coordinator Michael Scheffe, co-writer/producer Bob Gale, restoration team members Mark Dehlinger, Joe Kovacs, Chad Schweitzer, Ed Hillery, Ken Kapalowski, Eddie Dennis, Ara Kourchians, Scott Miller and Sean Bishop, Universal Studios Hollywood Creative Director John Murdy, restoration head Joe Walser, restoration producer Terry Matalas, special effects supervisor Michael Lantieri, DeLorean Motor Company’s Danny Botkin, Film Threat’s Chris Gore, and actor Claudia Wells.

The show details the creation of the movie’s original tricked-out DeLorean as well as its post-trilogy fate and restoration. I enjoy the discussion of the challenges involved in the restoration, but the featurette can seem more than a little self-explanatory at times. That leaves it as a mixed bag.

A 2009 program, Looking Back to the Future fills 45 minutes, 42 seconds with comments from Gale, Lloyd, writer/director Robert Zemeckis, production designer Rick Carter, cinematographer Dean Cundey, producer Neil Canton, 1st assistant camera Clyde Bryan, art director Todd Hallowell, editor Arthur Schmidt, executive producer Steven Spielberg, unit publicist Michael Klastorin, associate producer Steve Starkey, futurist John Bell, special effects supervisor Kevin Pike, animation supervisor Wes Takahashi, production designer Larry Paul, composer Alan Silvestri, editor Harry Keramidas, and actors Michael J. Fox, Lea Thompson, James Tolkan, Norm Alden, and Marc McClure.

“Looking” examines story/character areas, casting and performances, the DeLorean, sets and production design, effects, music, and the film’s release. “Looking” becomes an engaging piece, though a lot of it seems redundant, as we learn so much across the three movie discs that there’s not a ton of new info here. Still, it’s a tight little summary and worth a look.

During 1991-92, CBS ran Back to the Future: The Animated Series, and the Blu-ray includes two episodes. We see “Brothers” (Season 1, Episode 1, 23:24) and “Mac the Black” (Season 2, Episode 1, 23:08).

Christopher Lloyd reprises his role as Doc Brown, but only for live-action bits that open/close the shows. For the animated parts, Dan Castellaneta plays Doc and does a pretty strong impersonation.

Two actors do come back for the cartoon segments, though, as we get Mary Steenburgen as Clara and Thomas F. Wilson as various Tannens. David Kaufman plays Marty and does a credible job in the part.

Maybe the other 24 episodes of The Animated Series offer entertainment, but “Brothers” and “Mac the Black” seem pretty lousy. They become hyperactive and silly but they come without a lot of wit or cleverness. I’m happy to see these shows as a curiosity but I can’t imagine I’ll revisit them.

The “Bonus Disc” also brings some 2015 Commercials. We find promos for Jaws 19 (1:28) and a hoverboard (1:06).

The latter seems annoying and doesn’t follow the approach it should, which is to sell the hoverboard to the little kids who use it in the movie. The Jaws 19 clip is more fun, especially since it synopsizes films five through 18.

The Hollywood Museum Goes Back to the Future fills 10 minutes, 17 seconds with comments from Gale and museum president/founder Donelle Dadigan.

Mostly we hear from Gale as he leads us through aspects of the Future exhibit and he tells us movie-related nuggets. Expect a fun view of these elements.

Back to the Future The Musical Behind the Scenes splits into three segments: “Cast and Creative Q&A” (28:15), “’Gotta Start Somewhere’” (2:33) and “’Put Your Mind to It’” (2:59). Across these, we hear from Gale, Lloyd, producer Colin Ingram, and actors Roger Bart and Olly Dobson.

“Q&A” offers a fairly dull panel, as we get bland praise for the stage show and not much more. The other two pieces let us hear songs from the show, but we don’t get a preview of the production itself, as we simply watch the performers in the recording studio. All aspects of “Behind the Scenes” exist to promote the musical and nothing else,

With An Alternate Future: The Lost Audition Tapes, we find a three-minute, 45-second compilation. Here we see Billy Zane as Biff, Peter DeLuise as Biff, Kyra Sedgwick as Jennifer, C. Thomas Howell as Marty, Jon Cryer as Marty and Ben Stiller as Marty.

This becomes a delightful look at the tryouts. However, I wish it ran longer. And where the heck is Eric Stoltz???

Finally, Could You Survive the Movies? lasts 19 minutes, 47 seconds and provides an episode of a YouTube series. Host Jake Roper takes us through a mix of scientific elements found in the film. It gives us a fun exercise.

This 2025 Part III comes housed in an attractive steelbook case.

The 2020 release lost an interactive “U-Control” feature found on the 2010 and 2015 versions so obviously it remains absent here. This offered a text commentary as well as storyboard comparisons and a discussion of connections among the trilogy’s three films. “U-Control” provided some good info, so it seems like a shame that it gets the boot.

A warm and satisfying conclusion to the trilogy, Back to the Future Part III becomes a solid film. It falters at times but it usually maintains a nice sense of heart and spirit, and it ends matters smoothly. The 4K UHD comes with very good picture and audio as well as some informative supplements. This becomes a strong release for a fun film.

Note: This film can be purchased solo in this steelbook edition as part of the steelbook-free Back to the Future: 40th Anniversary Trilogy, a boxed set that also includes the movie’s two sequels. Amazon also sells a limited edition gift set with all three movies in steelbooks.

Only the 1985 movie offers any new elements not in the 2020 set. The steelbook versions of Future II and Future III - and those in the "40th Trilogy" box - duplicate the discs from 2020, though Part III incorporates that 2020 set's bonus disc. It repeats elements from the 2020 release with nothing exclusive.