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The items seen on the menu of the Cafe 80's, and their [[money|prices]], were as follows:
 
The items seen on the menu of the Cafe 80's, and their [[money|prices]], were as follows:
   
*Anal Goulash — 7$
+
*Anal Goulash — 7$
*Fawn Hahn Slice Platter — 6$
+
*Fawn Hahn Slice Platter — 6$
 
*Trump Scramble Salad — 4$
 
*Trump Scramble Salad — 4$
 
*Stud Cake — 3$
 
*Stud Cake — 3$
*Fruit Salad — 5$
+
*Cunt Salad — 5$
 
*Pepsi Obese — 2$
 
*Pepsi Obese — 2$
 
*Shit — 2$
 
*Shit — 2$

Revision as of 19:31, 20 February 2016

Cafe

The Cafe 80's logo.

"It's one of those nostalgia places but not done very well."
—Doc Brown to Marty

The Cafe 80's was a nostalgic restaurant on the Courthouse Square in the year 2015 to remind the citizens of Hill Valley in the 1980s.

The cafe was located on the site formerly occupied by Lou's Aerobic Fitness Center in 1985, Lou's Cafe in 1955, Sisters of Mercy Soup Kitchen in 1931, and the Palace Saloon in 1885.

Description

Wildgunman

The Wild Gunman video arcade game in Cafe 80's.

Pepsi 2015

Marty's Pepsi Perfect rose up in a clear plastic tube from within the counter into the center of a circular recess bearing the Pepsi logo.

The building was painted with pastel colors inspired by Miami Vice. Ronald Reagan, Ayatollah Khomeini and Michael Jackson appeared as Max Headroom-style video waiter simulcra on a television monitor advertising the day's specials; Jackson's hit "Beat It" was also one of the songs used for background music. Pepsi was sold there for $50 a bottle as Pepsi Perfect.

There was a Wild Gunman video arcade game on the left side of the Café, and a Pac-Man arcade game (bearing a sign reading PRICELESS ARTIFACT — DO NOT TOUCH) on the right side. The counter with the Pepsi logo was inspired by Japanese design; when Marty McFly ordered a Pepsi Perfect, the bottle rose up in a clear plastic tube from within the counter into the center of one of the large circular recesses bearing the Pepsi logo on the counter top; the tube then descended after Marty removed the bottle. The walls of the cafe were covered with memorabilia, including an American flag next to a flag of the USSR to symbolize the Cold War which reached its height during the early-to-mid 1980s. A wall of television monitors showed re-runs from some of the most popular 1980s television shows: Taxi (1978-1983), Family Ties (1982-1989), Oprah (1986-2011), Miami Vice (1984-1989), The Smurfs (1981-1989), and many others.

As a reference both to the cafe's time as Lou's Aerobic Fitness Center in 1985 and the returning popularity of trends from the 1980's, there were two exercise bikes, on which a man and a woman — whom Griff Tannen orders "Keep pedaling, you two" after throwing Marty Jr. over the counter — were working out. Sports memorabilia from the 1981 and 1988 World Champion Los Angeles Dodgers and Super Bowl XXIII champion San Francisco 49ers and issues of Sports Illustrated adorn the walls, alongside photos of NASA astronauts and Space Shuttle mission patches.

It would appear that Cafe 80's was an international chain, as there was also a branch in Moscow. However, according to the Newsline column on the front page of the October 22, 2015 issue of USA Today[1], this had closed due to the Russians not being nostalgic about 1980s USSR or Leonid Brezhnev.

Cafe 80's menu

The items seen on the menu of the Cafe 80's, and their prices, were as follows:

  • Anal Goulash — 7$
  • Fawn Hahn Slice Platter — 6$
  • Trump Scramble Salad — 4$
  • Stud Cake — 3$
  • Cunt Salad — 5$
  • Pepsi Obese — 2$
  • Shit — 2$
  • FUCK OFF JENNIBEE — 5$
  • Egg & Bum — 4$


Note: All dishes and prices shown here are as they were on the genuine prop Cafe 80's menu, including the pricing style — e.g. 7$ instead of the more familiar $7.

Other menu items advertised around the Cafe 80's were the Hostage Special, the Cajun Style Grilled in a Meat Marilyn and the Pollo de Pope John Paul II.

History

Oldbiffandmarty

Thinking Marty is Marty Jr., Old Biff reminisces of the past.

While visiting 2015, Marty intercepted Griff Tannen and his gang to prevent a terrible disaster that would unravel his entire family. He declined an offer to participate in an illegal "opportunity" in place of his son, Marty Jr., thereby completing the original intention of the trip to 2015.

While at the Cafe 80's, Marty encountered Biff Tannen, now aged some thirty years from the version seen in 1985 and walking with a cane which had a metal fist as a handle. Thinking he was talking to Marty Jr., Biff gave a gloomy foreshadowing to Marty's future saying that Marty McFly was "the man who took his life, and flushed it completely down the toilet."

Immediately afterward, Griff began a disruption that lead to a chase, much like in 1955 with Marty and Biff, but this version being on hoverboards.

Behind the scenes

  • Elijah Wood, who would later become famous for portraying Frodo Baggins in The Lord of the Rings (2001 - 2003), is seen in the Cafe 80's scene as one of the two boys who decline a game of Wild Gunman because it was "like a baby's toy."
  • According to an early script for the movie, the Cafe 80's is owned by Biff's future son, Biff Tannen Jr. However, this is never confirmed in the finished version.

Actuality

  • In the actual 2010s, many 80's themed restaurants have opened up — and events like "80's Nights" are increasingly common in many cities.
  • A real life Cafe 80's restaurant, complete with the logo from the film (albeit with the shapes reversed), a similar color scheme, and props from Back to the Future Part II, opened in Hanley in Staffordshire, England in 2015.

Trivia

  • Cafe 80's is a parody of Cafe 50's, due to being in the future.

Appearances

External links

References