Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd are taking fans back in time with a blast from the past.
The two Back to the Future stars met up for dinner recently, with Fox, 64, posting a photo to Instagram late Saturday night showing the pair smiling together fondly as they dined out at a beach restaurant.
“Dining with my bestie at the beach,” Fox wrote. “Next year BTTF is 41. Great Scott. Chris will be [88]. That’s some serious s–t.”
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Lloyd, 87, who played scientist Emmett ‘Doc’ Brown alongside Fox’s Marty McFly in the 1985 film, jumped into the comments with a nod to one of the movie’s most famous lines, “Man, that’s heavy.”
Fans flooded the post with excitement over the duo’s reunion.
One commenter wrote, “MY DOC AND MY MARTY.”
Another joked, “Imagine casually eating food and looking over to see this table,” with one more adding, “Your movies changed history past present and future ! Thank you so much you guys.”
It has been over 40 years since Back to the Future hit theaters in 1985.
In the original film, Marty accidentally travels back in time in a DeLorean built by Doc Brown, breaks up his parents before they ever got together, and has to scramble to fix it before he wipes himself from ever existing.
The original cast of Fox, Lloyd, Lea Thompson, and Thomas F. Wilson have all remained friends over the years, with Fox and Lloyd reuniting in 2020.
In 2023, all four stars appeared together at FanExpo Portland.
Fox went on to be cast in roles such as Spin City, Stuart Little, and The Good Wife.
Most recently, he wrote Future Boy, a memoir published last year about the making of the film.
In one chapter of the book, Fox outlines how he was not the original Marty McFly pick.
Eric Stoltz filmed weeks of footage in the role before director Robert Zemeckis and producer Steven Spielberg decided to bring Fox in instead.
For years, Fox never had the chance to say anything to Stoltz about it, until he started writing the book.
Fox wrote that he finally reached out to Stoltz while working on the memoir, and the two cleared the air easily.
“With a smile, and we quickly acknowledged that neither of us had an issue with the other,” Fox wrote. “What transpired on Back to the Future had not made us enemies or fated rivals; we were just two dedicated actors who had poured equal amounts of energy into the same role. The rest had nothing to do with us.”