I saw this some years before Back to the Future as an Afterschool Special and I wonder if the filmmakers didn't get 'inspired' by reading Francine Pascal's book "Hanging Out with CiCi" or seeing the special because in CiCi a teen girl goes back in time to the 1940's and meets up with her mom who turns out to be a bit of a troublemaker that she is nothing like as an adult.
Also Francine Pascal wrote a series of book called 'Sweet Valley High' and the school Marty attends in BTTF is 'Sun Valley High.' EDIT:CORRECTION, it's 'Hill Valley High.' I was recently watching 'Back to the Future' again.
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Contestado por wonder2wonder
el 16 de septiembre de 2019 a las 03:52
You're right. Spielberg probably 'borrowed' the idea. Excerpt from Francine Pascal:
Side note:
I love the TV adaptation of the books: "Sweet Valley High (1994-1998)".
Contestado por autoexec.batman
el 16 de septiembre de 2019 a las 06:34
He got the idea by looking at his father's.high school yearbook and thinking that if he had met his father in high school they probably wouldn't have been friends.
Honestly, the idea of meeting your parents before you were born and discovering that they were different from what you thought is one of the obvious ideas that doesn't really require am elaborate explanation as to its source, every teenager wonders what his parents were like as teens at some point.
Contestado por Stand*Chickie
el 16 de septiembre de 2019 a las 14:51
Thank you for posting that. I wasn't aware of that, but I did think 'Back to the Future' was very similar to 'My Mother Was Never a Kid.' All the way down to Victoria's mother being strict with her and then when she meets her in the '40s she's stealing, smoking and being a bad girl.
Contestado por Marcintosh
el 18 de abril de 2024 a las 09:35
I just wanted to clarify one important point. Steven Spielberg didn't write the BTTF movies, he was just one of the producers. The films were written by Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis.