(added 'Appearances' section, which I omitted by mistake when creating the page — sorry about that!) Tag: rte-source |
Antiyonder (talk | contribs) Tag: sourceedit |
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==Appearances== |
==Appearances== |
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− | * |
+ | *''[[Back to the Future]]'' |
− | * |
+ | *''[[Back to the Future Part II novelization]]'' |
+ | *''[[Back to the Future: The Ride]]'' |
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+ | *''[[Back to the Future: The Animated Series]]'' |
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+ | **"[[Witchcraft]]" |
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+ | *''[[Back to the Future: The Game]]'' |
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+ | **''[[Back to the Future: The Game - Episode 1: It's About Time]]'' |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
Revision as of 15:52, 5 May 2015
Remote control was the operation of an apparatus from a distance using an electrical device, usually handheld.
History
Emmett Brown used a remote control device — which was similar to that for a radio-controlled car — to operate the DeLorean time machine, with Einstein inside, on the parking lot at Twin Pines Mall during his execution of the world's first temporal displacement on October 26, 1985.
Behind the scenes
- Doc's remote control device does not appear again in the Back to the Future trilogy. However, he does use a futuristic wristwatch-sized remote control in the Back to the Future Part II novelization to fly the DeLorean from its hiding place in 2015 and bring it to the ground, before producing the original remote control unit to manoeuver the car in front of him and Marty McFly so that they can proceed to follow Unit N11-11, with Jennifer Parker aboard, to the McFly residence in Hilldale.
Appearances
- Back to the Future
- Back to the Future Part II novelization
- Back to the Future: The Ride
- Back to the Future: The Animated Series
- Back to the Future: The Game