![]() Thanks to the fabulous artwork it’s easy to tell who each of these characters are, especially as not all of the cameos are named.Īfter leaving Hollywood, the action jumps forward again as Biff returns to Hill Valley. This chapter is actually a lot of fun, and manages to get a load of cameo appearances in, including Charlton Heston, Marilyn Monroe, and even John Wayne (who gets to knock Biff out in one punch). Whilst Biff funds the films Bernie spends the money on himself, drawing out the process and using Biff’s stupidity against him in order to get more and more money.īy the end of this chapter Biff has cottoned on to Bernie’s ploy and manipulates into getting the man killed by mobsters after deciding that Hollywood isn’t the place for him. This is the start of Biff’s descent into being more than just a high school bully, as he learns that there are worse people in the world than himself, that he is capable of not just murder, but covering up that murder, and most importantly, that you can get away with a lot of things with enough money. The next jump sees Biff having made millions from his gambling and trying his hand at branching out into Hollywood, starting up a film studio with a very, very shady producer/director Bernie Kessoff. Anyone hoping that Biff may have just been one bad apple and that his grandmother was a nice old lady are in for a rude awakening as we see that she’s even worse than Biff. With a series of escalating events getting further and further out of the young Biff’s control he ends up with his grandmother dead, killing someone, and learning that he has to be sneakier with the almanac. This chapter gives us a good look into Biff’s home life, and the grandmother that raised him. The shortest chapter in the book, it’s also one of the wackiest, as we discover that old Biff accidentally traveled back to the Jurassic Period before getting the DeLorean back to 1955. Not a great deal happens, other than a raptor stealing the book and getting promptly hit over the head with a cane by Biff, but it’s a silly little excursion that adds a little extra spice to proceedings.įrom here we jump to 1955, where we get to see Biff discovering that the book actually works, and making his first win using it. The first chapter actually follows the old Biff from the future, the one who traveled back in time to give his younger self the almanac. This structure allows the writer to skip across decades to focus on the important points in Biff’s story, to showcase the highlights that are the most important. The book is split into several chapters, each one exploring a different aspect of Biff’s history, of his development into the monster that we saw in the film. Thanks to being co-written by Bob Gale, the co-creator and co-writer of the Back To The Future films, this doesn’t feel like some writers version of events, but the actual true events of that timeline from the series creator. ![]() It’s one of the darker moments of the whole Back To The Future trilogy, one that is only explored in brief snippets through pieces of dialogue and displays in the Biff Tannen Museum.īack To The Future: Biff To The Future explores the events of this timeline, it shows us how Biff went from being an idiot high school bully to an idiot billionaire bully. ![]() Anyone familiar with Back To The Future will remember the alternate timeline from the second movie, the one where Biff Tannen has been given a sports almanac from the future and has built a business and gambling empire.
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