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The future is today — if "Back to the Future" is to be believed.
The celebration of the so-called "Back to the Future" Day on Wednesday marks the date — Oct. 21, 2015 — that the characters Marty McFly, Emmett "Doc" Brown and Jennifer Parker famously traveled from 1985 to 2015 in the sci-fi film trilogy's second installment in 1989.
"Back to the Future Part II" envisioned a colorful 2015 with flying cars, hoverboards and self-tying shoelaces. While those doodads are hardly prevalent today, the film did accurately tease the rise of such technology as flat-screen televisions, biometric scanning and hands-free gaming. It also predicted the Chicago Cubs winning the World Series — an actual possibility with the Cubs contenders in the real-world playoffs, although maybe not for long.
"Back to the Future" Day is being celebrated Wednesday with an appearance by the original cast at a Lincoln Center screening in New York, as well as several fan-centric events and more than 1,700 theaters hosting screenings across the country. (Michael J. Fox is scheduled to be a guest on ABC's "Jimmy Kimmel Live!")
"Back to the Future" filmmaker Robert Zemeckis' trilogy has left a lasting impression on pop culture in the 30 years since the original film debuted, spawning a theme park attraction, video game and animated series.
Beginning Wednesday, the town of Reston, Virginia, is ceremoniously changing its name to Hill Valley, McFly's fictional hometown. The Washington West Film Festival will feature a marathon screening of the trilogy Wednesday and a Sunday screening of the original film, with appearances by stars Christopher Lloyd and Claudia Wells, as well as screenwriter-producer Bob Gale.
"Back to the Future" Day will be celebrated in Southern California during the four-day "We're Going Back" fan event. The festivities will occur at locations featured in the film series, including a tour of the Hill Valley town square on the Universal Studios lot, an "Enchantment Under the Sea" dance at the Hollywood United Methodist Church and a screening in the parking lot of the Puente Hills Mall, where McFly famously blasted off in Doc Brown's time-traveling DeLorean.
The "We're Going Back" fan event will also host the premiere of "Back in Time," a documentary about the franchise's legacy featuring interviews with such notables as Michael J. Fox and Steven Spielberg. The documentary will also be released digitally Wednesday.
Other celebrations include a re-creation of Hill Valley on Thursday in Fillmore, California, where part of the franchise was filmed, and Million McFly March, a gathering of fans dressed as McFly that will begin at the Burbank, California, location of Burger King depicted in "Back to the Future."
For those who don't want to leave home, the trilogy is exclusively streaming on Amazon Prime, and Universal is releasing a special edition trilogy box set in light-up packaging resembling Doc Brown's flux capacitor.
NEW YORK (AP) —
A career criminal wanted by police in the shooting of a gang member last month was arrested and expected to be charged with fatally shooting an officer during a gunfight on a pedestrian bridge after stealing a bike, authorities said Wednesday.
Tyrone Howard, suspected of killing New York Police Department Officer Randolph Holder on Tuesday night, had been arrested 20 times for offenses including drug possession and robbery, authorities said. He's been sentenced to state prison twice since 2007 on drug possession and sale convictions, state records show.
Howard, 30, had also been wanted in connection with a Sept. 1 shooting in Manhattan, said James O'Neill, the NYPD's chief of department. Investigators suspected Howard had shot at a member of the East Army gang, but he wasn't arrested because he skipped out on court dates and police couldn't track him down at his home, O'Neill said.
He was out of the hospital and in police custody Wednesday. Charges against him were pending. It was unclear if he had a lawyer.
Holder was the second New York Police Department officer killed this year and the fourth slain in the past 11 months, said Police Commissioner William Bratton.
"That's about as bad as it gets," Bratton said at an emotional news conference at Harlem Hospital early Wednesday.
Dozens of Holder's fellow officers stood outside the hospital and saluted as the ambulance carrying their fallen colleague left. Afterward, many embraced one another.
"Tonight, he did what every other officer in the NYPD does when the call comes — he ran toward danger," Bratton said. "It was the last time he will respond to that call."
The fatal shooting happened as Holder and his partner responded to a report of shots being fired at around 8:30 p.m. near a public housing development in East Harlem, in north Manhattan. When they arrived, a man and other witnesses said his bike had been stolen at gunpoint and the suspect fled with a group of people along a footpath heading north on the FDR Drive, adjacent to the East River.
The officers caught up to a man with a bike on a pedestrian overpass that spans the highway and traded gunfire, police said. Holder, 33, was struck in the head, and the suspect ditched the bike and fled down the river path near the highway, police said. He was caught several blocks away with a gunshot wound to his leg, Bratton said.
Three others who were taken into custody for questioning were later released.
So far this year in New York, one other officer, Patrolman Brian Moore, has been shot and killed, and a suspect was charged with murder. On Dec. 20, Officers Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos were ambushed and shot to death by a man who said he wanted to kill some cops in Brooklyn.
No officers were shot and killed in 2013 or 2012. But while line-of-duty police slayings are down from a high of 12 in 1971, the four police killed in the past 11 months is more than in any 12-month period in recent years, police records show. In 1996, five police officers were shot and killed, according to NYPD statistics.
Nationwide, 31 officers besides Holder have been killed by firearms in the past year, down from 38 the year before, according to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund, a nonprofit law enforcement information clearinghouse.
Police on Wednesday searched for the suspect's gun near where Holder had been shot. They had recovered a clip and shell casings believed to have come from Howard's weapon.
Mayor Bill de Blasio said Holder, who joined the force in July 2010, had an "exemplary record" as a police officer.
"We are humbled by Officer Randolph Holder's example, an example of service and courage and sacrifice," the mayor said.
Holder was a native of Guyana. He worked in the NYPD division that polices the city's public housing developments. His father and grandfather were police officers in Guyana, Bratton said.
Flags were at half-staff Wednesday at city buildings and other structures around the boroughs to mark Holder's death. Police closed sections of streets near the scene of the shooting, forcing parents walking their children to a nearby grade school to use an alternate route.
"There's a lot of crime around here that comes from the housing (projects)," said Monica Amolina, who works at the school. "It's a high-crime area. Lots of gang activity. I always walk fast to work."
LOS ANGELES (AP) —
Millions of fans cried out in joy after they saw the latest trailer for "Star Wars: The Force Awakens," but it also left more than a few wondering where Luke Skywalker has been during all the marketing.
Twitter said there were more than 17,000 tweets a minute when the trailer aired Monday night and over 1.1 million tweets since then.
Facebook reported that 1.3 million people had 2.1 million interactions related to "Star Wars" within the first hour of the trailer screening. Even Mark Zuckerberg commented on the official fan page, writing "this looks amazing. I love Star Wars."
It didn't take a Jedi to notice that Luke Skywalker was missing from the promo.
The ads have focused mainly on new characters such as Daisy Ridley's Rey and John Boyega's Finn. But the clips also have strategically teased out the return of original characters such as Harrison Ford's Han Solo and Carrie Fisher's Princess Leia.
Mark Hamill's Luke Skywalker is nowhere to be seen — in full at least.
Fans have heard Luke's voice and seen what is presumed to be his gloved hand on R2-D2, but his conspicuous absence from the most recent trailer and the official poster had many Twitter users asking #whereisluke and wondering what that means for his character.
Director J.J. Abrams is somewhat notorious for keeping the plots to his films under wraps, and "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" has been no different.
The 2-minute, 35-second spot debuted during ESPN's "Monday Night Football" halftime and was made available online immediately after. Overnight ratings for the game show a definite viewing spike during halftime, suggesting that many tuned in solely for the trailer, not the Giants-Eagles game.
Tickets for the "The Force Awakens," out Dec. 18, went on sale earlier Monday, causing sites like Fandango and MovieTickets.com to experience intermittent crashes as a result of demand.
The initial fervor has dissipated, though, and sites seemed to be back up and running and getting fans their tickets. AMC theaters are also selling tickets for 39 "Star Wars" marathon events, where they will be showing all seven films on Dec. 17.
Sellouts have been reported for many of the Thursday night preview showings of the latest chapter. AMC alone sold out 1,000 shows in less than 12 hours but also noted that there are still nearly 4 million tickets available for opening weekend.
Ticketing sites tend to keep specifics about actual sales secret. MovieTickets.com did reveal, however, that "The Force Awakens" had accounted for a whopping 95 percent of sales on the site in 24 hours.
Fandango experienced unprecedented demand for tickets as well. They've already sold eight times as many tickets as they had for their previous record holder, "The Hunger Games."
"Movie theaters are continually adding new show times on Fandango to meet the phenomenal demand," a Fandango company statement said.