

#BIFF TANNEN ACTOR MOVIE#
Among many improvisations of the set, I coined the term ‘butthead,’ as well as ‘Make like a tree, and get out of here.’ The third movie was my favorite, since I got to learn western skills like riding, roping, quick draw, and shooting a six-shooter, a great adventure for a guy from Philadelphia. There are many tiny plot points hidden in the movies, but I don’t know what they are. The Delorean was an inferior automobile, and nearly impossible for a person of normal size like myself to enter and exit. The manure was made of peat moss, cork, dirt, and a food agent that made it sticky. The hoverboards didn’t really fly, we were hanging by wires from a crane. The sequels were shot ‘back to back,’ never before attempted by a movie studio. The first movie was shot in 1984 and ‘85. Eric Stoltz originally played Marty, but was fired due to performance issues. Crispin Glover is unusual, but not as unusual as he sometimes presents himself. I was in all three ‘Back To The Future’ movies. Fox is nice”, “I coined the term ‘butthead,’” and “I don’t talk about the movies much because I’m busy with standup comedy and music performances.” Tom Wilson - who now focuses on standup comedy - is asked about the film trilogy so frequently that he simply hands out copies of an answer sheet to curious fans. While Donald Trump may not have been the sole inspiration for Biff Tannen, some fans can't help but draw comparisons between the two.THE actor who played Biff Tannen in the Back to the Future movies has a unique way of dealing with overly inquisitive fans. Tom Wilson, the actor who played Biff, also said that his performance was not based on any specific real individual. However, we examined a bit of the history behind the movie and found that Gale was likely exaggerating about Trump's importance to the character when he made those comments. These sorts of jokes have become quite common over the years and have even warranted responses from the cast and crew of the iconic movie.īob Gale, the screenwriter for the Back to the Future films, told The Daily Beast in 2015 that Biff was based (entirely or in part) on Donald Trump. It is not hard to put two and two together. He’s been handed the keys to fortune, he’s unrepentantly used that fortune exclusively for himself, and he’s even become a public advocate for plastic surgery for women in his family.

There’s a very specific analog between Biff Tannen, the bully and bad guy in almost every timeline in Back to the Future Part II, and a certain political figure (Donald Trump) who is rather popular in the United States right now. The answer is that this item catches people's attention because it play on the long-running humorous notion that President Trump and Biff Tannen share a number of personality traits: But why would anyone care? Is it that unusual to see four men standing in a line? This meme used genuine images to show that President Trump stood in a similar pose to the fictional character Biff Tannen in the movie Back to the Future. The bottom portion of this meme is also a genuine still from the 1985 film Back to the Future, taken from a scene in which Biff Tannen and his crew of bullies enter the diner to pressure George McFly into finishing their homework for them: The same four men pictured in this viral mashup can be seen in a video of the exchange from The Guardian: This still image appears to have come from a controversial moment during the event when President Trump reportedly insulted reporter Cecilia Vega, saying: "I know you're not thinking, you never do." The top picture originated with a press conference held in the White House Rose Garden on 2 October 2018, during which President Trump touted a new trade agreement with Canada and Mexico. In October 2018, a meme comparing President Trump and various politicians to Biff Tannen and other characters from the popular Back to the Future film franchise began circulating on social media:īefore we get to the "why" of this meme (isn't this a fairly common pose in both the movie world and in reality?), let's look at the very basic claim: Are these images real?
