Original Star Wars Trilogy to be released on DVD

Started by Raikus, February 07, 2003, 03:29:25 PM

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tpfkabi

I noticed they recently put out a new box set of each trilogy.
I believe the original trilogy has the original theatrical cuts as an extra, but still non-anamorphic.

I'm not gonna dig, but I'm pretty sure somewhere they said those 2 disc SE's were going to be the only source for the original theatrical cuts....so maybe that leaves hope for anamorphic restored original theatrical editions???
I am Torgo. I take care of the place while the Master is away.

MacGuffin

Lucasfilm eyes animated 'Star Wars' TV comedy
'Daily Show' scribe, 'Robot Chicken' duo behind series
Source: Variety

Lucasfilm Animation is developing a new animated "Star Wars" TV comedy series.

Daytime Emmy and Gemini Award-winner Jennifer Hill ("The Backyardians") will produce with Todd Grimes ("Back at the Barnyard") directing. Brendan Hay ("The Daily Show") will be among the writers and Seth Green and Matthew Senreich, creators and executive producers of "Robot Chicken," will have "creative involvement.

Project marks the second "Star Wars" skein created by Lucasfilm Animation. The first was "Star Wars: The Clone Wars," which premiered in 2008 on the Cartoon Network. Series is currently in its second season.

No start date or network for the comedy skein have been announced.
"Don't think about making art, just get it done. Let everyone else decide if it's good or bad, whether they love it or hate it. While they are deciding, make even more art." - Andy Warhol


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Alexandro


mogwai

There's no direct George Lucas involvment so it's must be good.

Fernando


Derek

It's like, how much more black could this be? And the answer is none. None more black.

picolas


Pubrick

Quote from: picolas on April 18, 2010, 01:44:48 AM
i will never buy the prequels.

i wonder if there's even as big a fanboy market for these atrocities as there were at the time of release.

apart from completists, apologists, and plain idiots ---- nevermind, this will sell millions.
under the paving stones.

Derek

Hard to believe they're still finding stuff for the blu-ray editions. Lucasfilm I'm sure has a team dedicated to doing just that over the past decade or so at least. Probably more along the lines of doling it out over a few releases.
It's like, how much more black could this be? And the answer is none. None more black.

ᾦɐļᵲʊʂ

I'm sure they'll have plenty of special features to add if they make some additional "making of previous editions" and "the history of star wars versions" documentaries.
"As a matter of fact I only work with the feeling of something magical, something seemingly significant. And to keep it magical I don't want to know the story involved, I just want the hypnotic effect of it somehow seeming significant without knowing why." - Len Lye

MacGuffin

You'll know when they've run out of material when they finally put out The Star Wars Holiday Special as a special feature.
"Don't think about making art, just get it done. Let everyone else decide if it's good or bad, whether they love it or hate it. While they are deciding, make even more art." - Andy Warhol


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Derek

It's like, how much more black could this be? And the answer is none. None more black.

MacGuffin

'Star Wars' Films Coming to Blu-ray Next Year
By DAVE ITZKOFF; NY Times

Though nearly 35 years of "Star Wars" fandom have yielded all kinds of memorabilia inspired by George Lucas's outer-space epic, including light saber lookalikes and wearable replicas of Princess Leia's slave costume, one holy grail has lately eluded fans: a video version of the "Star Wars" films that takes the fullest advantage of their top-of-the-line home theater systems.

That's a Death Star-sized void that Lucasfilm plans to fill shortly. On Saturday, the studio is to announce that it will release all six live-action "Star Wars" features on Blu-ray DVD in fall 2011. A boxed set containing the Blu-ray versions of the movies, spanning from 1977's "Star Wars" through the final 2005 prequel, "Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith," will mark the first time the films have been offered in a high-definition home format, and will include documentary features and previously unseen footage.

Given Mr. Lucas's exacting standards for film presentations (he founded the THX company) and Lucasfilm's embrace of digital movie technology (digital projection was used for the theatrical release of all three "Star Wars" prequels, and the last two prequels were shot digitally), many fans expected that high-definition versions of the "Star Wars" features would soon follow.

But in a telephone interview, Mr. Lucas said he had been waiting to see if the Blu-ray format would be widely accepted by home viewers.

"We've been wanting to do it as soon as we possibly could, but we just wanted to do it when enough people would be able to buy it and see it," Mr. Lucas said on Friday from the Star Wars Celebration V convention in Orlando, Fla.

When the original "Star Wars" movies were released on VHS in the early 1980s (along with other short-lived home video formats), Mr. Lucas said sales were slow to take off at first.

"We came out with 'Star Wars' right at the beginning of VHS," he said, "and we sold 300,000 copies." Within a few years, he added, "They were selling 1 million, 2 million, 10 million. So we learned from that experience that if you're too early in the marketplace, there's just not enough demand for it."

In the case of Blu-ray, at least the potential for galactic-scale sales exists: a recent report by the media firm DEG: The Digital Entertainment Group said that nearly 2 million Blu-ray players were sold in the first half of 2010, an increase of 103 percent over last year, for a total of 19.4 million such devices in the U.S.

Mr. Lucas said the versions of the first three "Star Wars" films – "Star Wars," "The Empire Strikes Back" and "Return of the Jedi" – included in the Blu-ray boxed set will be the special-edition releases that were shown theatrically in 1997 and digitally restored for a 2004 standard-definition DVD boxed set.

Perhaps bracing for the reactions of fans who decried some of the changes made to the special-edition films – like, say, an exchange of gunfire between Han Solo and a certain green-skinned bounty hunter – Mr. Lucas said that to release the original versions of these films on Blu-ray was "kind of an oxymoron because the quality of the original is not very good."

"You have to go through and do a whole restoration on it, and you have to do that digitally," he added. "It's a very, very expensive process to do it. So when we did the transfer to digital, we only transferred really the upgraded version."

And while some viewers might want the "Star Wars" Blu-ray release in time for this year's Life Day – that is, the Wookiee holiday that roughly coincides with the start of the holiday shopping season – Mr. Lucas said a 2011 release was the earliest possible date. (The boxed set will be distributed by Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment; Lucasfilm did not give pricing information or indicate if the films will also be sold individually.)

That, he said, was partly due to continuing work on the additional Blu-ray features, and partly to factors beyond his control.

"We've been working on them for quite a while," Mr. Lucas said, "but still, there are pipelines. Unfortunately, the recent releases get priority over what we call the classic versions of things."
"Don't think about making art, just get it done. Let everyone else decide if it's good or bad, whether they love it or hate it. While they are deciding, make even more art." - Andy Warhol


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Stefen

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polkablues

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