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#2321 |
New Member
Aug 2011
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I am tired of having this same old debate about the theatrical version so lets establish what we know that is NOT arguable!
GEORGE LUCAS SAID IT COULD BE DONE BUT WOULD BE TOO EXPENSIVE! SO UNLESS ANY OF YOU ARE ARGUING ABOUT HOW OBSCENE THE COST WOULD BE YOUR ARGUMENT IS GARBAGE! One question you should be asking is, what about the effects that haven't been changed? How were those cleaned up? They were cleaned up because they saved all the original elements to be recomposited digitally, now digital compositing may get some people worked up but you know what? I think at this we'll take what we can get. It would be the old effects being recomposited and that's what matters. You say movies like Apocalypse Now and The Godfather aren't the same because there are no optical effects that have dirt built into the frame. Well fair enough but there's an example people are forgetting. BLADE RUNNER! Optical effects from around the same time and the film was a box office disaster, yet they still inexplicably pulled out a stunning Blu-Ray release! Are you really trying to argue that George Lucas, head of ILM, THX, Skywalker sound, the ultimate in film technology can't figure out how to restore a total of 9 minutes of old optical effects yet still retaining a fair picture quality? Why are you trying to argue on his behalf? I don't get it! |
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#2322 | ||
Banned
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#2323 | |
Senior Member
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#2324 | |
Special Member
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#2325 |
Blu-ray Ninja
Oct 2008
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I don't want the "unaltered" film in any pedantic, literal sense. I want the original film, the one I never had a problem with before 1997. Recompositing opticals, cleaning up the effects seams, removing the scratches and dirt, all of that is MILES away from inserting new scenes and ruining existing ones.
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#2326 | |
Special Member
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#2327 |
Senior Member
Apr 2009
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Yeah, VERY generally speaking. Generally speaking, Roseanne is as hot Angelina Jolie. Hey, they're both alive aren't they?
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#2328 | |
Special Member
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#2329 | |
Special Member
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#2330 |
Banned
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More than likely, the original, 1977 theatrical release of "Star Wars" no longer exists. It had degraded like crazy by the time Lucas started writing the prequels in 1994, so he cleaned it up as best he could. This created a new print, which was altered from the original '77 version. After that, Lucas made some additional changes, which resulted in the 1997 Special Editions. Then, in 2004, Lowry Digital Images created an HD master likely based on the SE, and now in 2011, Lucas has this new version which has been confirmed by Matthew Wood as being based on the 2004 version. So, to the best of my knowledge, here's how things are at the present time...
1977 theatrical version (likely unrecoverable) Mid-1990s cleaned version 1997 Special Edition 2004 DVD Edit 2011 Blu-Ray Edit, based on 2004 version Now, I'm just guessing here, but I think what most people are referred to by using the term "unaltered" is the second of those five options. The problem is, they're using the wrong term. A truly unchanged release would be equal in quality to the deteriorated 1977 reels, which would almost certainly look horendous in SD, let alone HD. |
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#2331 |
Senior Member
Apr 2009
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#2334 |
Blu-ray Ninja
Oct 2008
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Do you have a good source for this? I find it very hard to believe that Lucasfilm would just toss irreplaceable material. Keep in mind that digital technology, especially for movies, has come a long way since the mid-90s, and a lot of what was impossible/impractical in terms of restoration work in the 90s is no longer so. As I understand, the most serious problem was Kodak's defective CRI film that they used for many effects shots, which faded very rapidly. It was also used in Close Encounters and I hear that looks fine though i haven't seen the disc. The actual camera negative has much better archival life (the same film was used for Alien, Blade Runner, ESB, and pretty much every hollywood movie between 1976 and 1981), and physical damage like scratches and dirt are relatively easy to fix these days.
Last edited by 42041; 08-25-2011 at 01:29 AM. |
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#2338 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Most people don't believe that the 1977 version doesn't exist in negative form. I think there's a good possibility it doesn't exist, if Lucas cut it up at some point to create newer versions. But that doesn't mean that prints don't exist and at the very least, the Library of Congress probably has one (they definitely have a print - the question is what version it is) and I'm willing to bet that Lucas has one. So while it will never look as good as it once did, theoretically, you could re-release the 1977 version by restoring one of those prints. |
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#2339 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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You gotta love the outright lies regarding the 2004 release from the StarWars.com website.
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#2340 | |
Banned
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I have the same level of proof as those who claim that Lucas has secretly hidden a pristine copy of the '77 version from the public. Both are opinions; that's why I used the phrase "more than likely". I was writing from the following point of view: "why would a director go through so much trouble and expense, to create a high-quality copy of a degraded film, store it in digital form to preserve it indefinitely...and still keep the wrecked version around? there's no further use for it."
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