:51:00
1.21 gigawatts.
:51:04
Great Scott!
:51:07
What the hell is a gigawatt?
:51:10
How could I have been so careless?
:51:13
1.21 gigawatts!
:51:14
Tom, how am I going to generate
that kind of power?
:51:17
It can't be done, can it?
:51:19
Doc, look.
All we need is a little plutonium.
:51:23
I'm sure that in 1985 plutonium is
available in every corner drugstore...
:51:27
...but in 1955, it's a little hard to come by.
:51:29
Marty, I'm sorry,
but I'm afraid you're stuck here.
:51:34
Doc, stuck here? I can't be stuck here.
:51:36
I got a life in 1985.
:51:38
-l got a girl.
-ls she pretty?
:51:41
Doc, she's beautiful.
:51:43
She's crazy about me. Look at this.
:51:45
Look what she wrote here.
:51:47
That says it all.
:51:50
Doc, you're my only hope.
:51:53
Marty, I'm sorry, but the only power source
capable of generating...
:51:56
...1.21 gigawatts of electricity
is a bolt of lightning.
:52:01
What did you say?
- A bolt of lightning.
:52:03
Unfortunately, you never know
when or where it's ever going to strike.
:52:09
We do now.
:52:15
This is it!
:52:17
This is the answer.
:52:19
It says here that a bolt of lightning...
:52:21
...is going to strike the clock tower
at 10:04 p.m. next Saturday night!
:52:29
If we could somehow harness
this lightning...
:52:33
...channel it into the flux capacitor...
:52:38
...it just might work.
:52:40
Next Saturday night
we're sending you back to the future!
:52:45
All right. Saturday's good.
:52:47
I can spend a week in 1955.
l can hang out. You can show me around.
:52:51
That is out of the question.
You must not leave this house.
:52:53
You must not see or talk to anybody.
:52:55
Anything you do can have repercussions
on future events. Do you understand?