Marty Mcfly Blue Strings
Posted : admin On 06.11.2019.Aside from the time travelling Delorean and coveted hoverboard, the Back To The Future franchise featured another simpler, yet equally futuristic design - self-tying laces.During Back To The Future II, Marty McFly, played by Michael J. Fox, puts on a pair of Nike High Tops that automatically tighten and adjust to fit his feet - using so-called power laces.Nike released a limited range of McFly's Nike MAGs with manual laces in 2011, and now designer Tinker Hatfield has revealed the power laces will arrive in 2015.Scroll down for video. ShareRumours about the technology have been circling since 2010 when Nike applied for a patent for ' automatically lacing trainers.'

Thank you guys for listening! Please subscribe and share! Lyrics: Raw is our music, Pure our hearts, Honesty is a virtue we behold. Of all the places that I have been to, And the faces that I have. It is briefly heard in Back to the Future (1985) when Lorraine Baines is in the car with her future son Marty McFly. The song is also played during the movie Bad Lieutenant and another Harvey Keitel movie, Mean Streets. Paul Simon wrote a song called 'The Late Great Johnny Ace' and released it on his Hearts and Bones album. In the early 2000s.
It said: 'The automatic lacing system provides a set of straps that can be automatically opened and closed to switch between a loosened and tightened position of the upper.' The article further includes an automatic ankle cinching system that is configured to automatically adjust an ankle portion of the upper.’The Back To The Future-inspired Nike MAG range was then launched in 2011. The announcement about the power laces was made by Nike designer Tinker Hatfield, pictured, yet he did not expand furtherOnly 1,500 models of the High Tops were made, and every pair was auctioned off on eBay.A total of $6million (£3.5million) was raised from the sales of these shoes, and all the proceeds went to the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research.San Francisco-based inventor has already created her own self-tying laces, a prototype which she says will 'tide you over until Nike comes out with something more polished.' Using an Arduino microcontroller, Bevin fitted a sensor to a Nike High Top.When a person steps into the shoe, a force sensor reads the pressure of their foot and activates two servo motors, which apply tension to the laces, tightening the shoe.A touch switch can be used to reverse the servos.
Doc (Christopher Lloyd).Character Analysis Crazy Is as Crazy DoesThere's nothing more obnoxious than the overblown 'You're so crazy' comment when you do perfectly natural things like pick out all the blue M&Ms out of a bag because they taste the best, or think, or maintain the loud opinion that will eventually be remembered as being as genius as Beethoven.But even if these weren't completely sane things to do (this is your cue to pat our head and say, 'Yes, yes. Perfectly normal.' ) they wouldn't be crazy.Crazy would be strapping an odd-looking contraption onto the head of a complete stranger in an attempt to read his mind. Or trying to rip plutonium off a bunch of heavily armed nationalists. Or running out of a room screaming, '1.21 jigowatts!

Marty Mcfly Costume
1.21 jigowatts!' While tearing at your wild mass of white hair.Yeah, Dr. Emmett 'Doc' Brown is entirely his own brand of crazy. It's the reason he only has, seemingly, a single friend, and why he's basically an outcast from the rest of society. He's clearly good at what he does—it isn't likely someone's going to draw up the blueprints for a working time machine by accident—but there's a definite madness to his methods.First off, he looks crazy. If we were walking down a sidewalk and this nutso started walking toward us, we'd cross to the other side of the street.
He's sporting a hairstyle only worn by Albert Einstein and a handful of serial killers, his eyes are bugging out of his head like some kind of and the guy wears goggles like they're going out of style.But more than his appearance, it's the way he behaves that would probably lead us to believe that the loony bin was short one loony. His movements are spastic and erratic, he screams more often that he speaks, and he really likes to play with his hair.So why does Marty need all this crazy in his life? Well, look at his family. Check out his browbeaten father, who is a typical slave to The Man. Or his desperate housewife mother.
His brother and sister who couldn't be any more normal, or less interesting.But Marty doesn't want typical. He has dreams of being a rock star, of breaking away from the daily grind and living a life outside of small-town America. He craves excitement and welcomes 'crazy,' which is why it doesn't bother him that his best bro is kind of like an extra from. One Smart CookieIf Doc were only crazy, he and Marty probably wouldn't have much of a friendship.
(Oh, BTW, it's quietly established why Marty and the Doc are friends in the film's first scene: Marty uses Doc's equipment as a sound system for his guitar.) If all Marty was seeking was someone on the fringes of society, he'd be just as well off making nice with that drunk, homeless guy who wakes up on a park bench at the end of the movie.But Doc isn't just crazy. He's also crazy smart.Okay, so quite a few of his inventions turn out to be duds. But he's not a complete hack. The guy invents time travel, for goodness sake. And yes, it took a fall off the toilet and a bump on the head to give him his 'vision.' But he's determined:DOC: It's taken me almost thirty years and my entire family fortune to realize the vision of that day.Yeah. This guy has devoted himself absolutely to creating his time machine.
Procrastination is not one of Doc's vices.While Marty may have his fair share of street smarts, he's not a brainiac by any stretch of the imagination. So this is a little bit of opposites attracting. But it's also because he wants to be smarter. He takes an active interest in Doc's experiments; he doesn't just consider him a buddy.Don't be fooled by his impressive string of consecutive tardy passes—there's a real desire within Marty to better himself, and sitting at the feet of a guy like Emmett Brown is one possible way to accomplish the feat.Within the framework of the story, Doc's braininess comes in handy for more than just creating the time machine in the first place (without which there wouldn't have been much of a story).
He also has a large hand in helping Marty figure out how to get his parents together:DOC: Now remember, according to my theory you interfered with your parents' first meeting. They don't meet, they don't fall in love, they won't get married and they won't have kids. That's why your older brother's disappeared from that photograph.

Your sister will follow and, unless you repair the damages, you'll be next.Not only does he somehow understand the magical disappearing photo angle of time-travel, he knows how to generate the electricity he needs to fuel the DeLorean, and how to preserve the space-time continuum by not revealing too much about the future (even if, ultimately, he doesn't listen to his own good advice). A Friend 'Til the EndSo are Doc's sizeable noggin and unusual antics all he's good for?Of course not. When you boil everything down, this is really a buddy movie.
It's got plenty of bells and whistles to distract from that idea, but without Doc and Marty's unconventional friendship, nobody goes back in time and nobody needs to find a way to get back.Just as we root for Marty because he's a basically good guy who looks out for his friends and loved ones, we root for Doc for the same reason. When the Libyans are coming up on them, Doc separates himself from Marty and takes those bullets, in hopes that his friend will manage to survive.When Marty shows up in 1955, Doc exerts a tremendous amount of time and energy to help this kid—who he doesn't know from Adam—get back to where he came from. And their good-bye, which takes place only one week after 1955 Doc meets Marty, is sincerely heartfelt.Even as the movie ends, Doc is still concerning himself with Marty's welfare by checking in on his future self and kids. He's like a weird-looking, time-traveling, gadget-loving Fairy Godmother.