Poor Mr. Preston.


The sad, pathetic, hangdog look on his face as his son's best friend's dad gets to bang his hot ex-wife always makes me feel sad for the dude. Plus, I'm guessing most of his performance ended up being cut out of the film (the same actor, J. Patrick McNamara, had a much larger role in the original). This should've been called Mr. Preston's Bogus Journey.

reply

Plus Mr. Logan was such an uptight ass, whereas Mr. Preston seemed like a nice, easy-going sort of guy. I didn't think Mr. Preston deserved to end up the loser out of the two of them.

reply

Mr. Logan didn't necessarily come out unscathed. Thanks to Ted possessing him, he was made to look like a complete ass in front of all of his co-workers. And according to the end credits Missy left Mr. Logan for Chuck De Nomolos.

See you guys at the 10 year prison reunion - Ben Richards

reply

Yeah I feel the same way, not fair he got the raw end of the deal. It's ironic how Bill and Ted are lifelong best friends yet their dads couldn't possibly be any more different. I like Bill's dad...he was probably like a liberal hippie from the 1960s-70s who by 1988-91 was a mellow easygoing middle aged dude, while Ted's dad was an uptight disciplinary @sshole cop. I wonder what made Missy want to jump to him? lol.

reply

That also made me sad to see Missy marry the butthole cop Mr. Logan.

Movies 4 life.

reply

He didn't have much of a role in the original movie. He had one scene and then shows up at the report.

Prof. Farnsworth: Oh. A lesson in not changing history from Mr. I'm-My-Own-Grandpa!

reply