New Back to the Future manual spills the secrets on Doc Browns Time Machine

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Fans of the sci-fi classic Back to the Future can learn a whole lot more about the blockbuster trilogy, thanks to the newly announced book Back to the Future: DeLorean Time Machine: Doc Brown's Owner's Workshop Manual. Of course, anyone who's seen the 1985 original (or the two sequels) knows the DeLorean, the car that existed only in the 1980s, transformed into a time machine thanks to Doc's breakthrough invention, the Flux Capacitor. How, exactly, does a Flux Capacitor work? Presumably, fans who read the book will finally find out.

Directed by Robert Zemeckis and executive-produced by Steven Spielberg, Back to the Future grossed a staggering $210 million during its release and launched Michael J. Fox into the stratosphere of movie superstardom. Fellow sitcom star Christopher Lloyd (Taxi) co-starred as eccentric scientist Doc Brown, who stole a teensy bit of plutonium from some terrorists to power his time machine, sending prototypical '80s teen Marty McFly to 1955. The successful sequels that followed in 1989 and 1990 brought Marty forward to 2015 and Doc back to 1855 - but left many unanswered questions and potential paradoxes in their wake.

Now, those questions are set to be answered at last, with Insight Editions set to release Doc Brown's Owner's Workshop Manual on March 30, written by none other than Bob Gale, the screenwriter who co-wrote the original and penned both sequels. The book, a collaboration with illustrator Joe Walser (a BTTF enthusiast who led the restoration of the original DeLorean from the movie), presents itself as a guide to Doc Brown's inventions, hoverboards, time trains, and more.

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