in the new version of Return of the Jedi Darth Vader screams "Noooooo" as he picks up the Emperor and kills him.
in the new version of Return of the Jedi Darth Vader screams "Noooooo" as he picks up the Emperor and kills him.
mkiker2089 wrote:It just basically comes down to one thing, George Lucas is surrounded by yes men and is losing his grip on reality. The same thing happened to Howard Hughes before his yes men had him killed off.
Philistine. You probably don't even care that Han shot first.Dave Ryan wrote:I'm amused that a 5 second sound change can not only "ruin" a 2-hour-long piece of visual storytelling, but "ruin" someone's "childhood".
Get a f---ing life, people.
Jim_Thomas wrote:Philistine. You probably don't even care that Han shot first.Dave Ryan wrote:I'm amused that a 5 second sound change can not only "ruin" a 2-hour-long piece of visual storytelling, but "ruin" someone's "childhood".
Get a f---ing life, people.


stypee wrote:I don't understand... why should we care?
Dave Ryan wrote:I'm amused that a 5 second sound change can not only "ruin" a 2-hour-long piece of visual storytelling, but "ruin" someone's "childhood".
Get a f---ing life, people.
Dan Mancini wrote:Dave Ryan wrote:I'm amused that a 5 second sound change can not only "ruin" a 2-hour-long piece of visual storytelling, but "ruin" someone's "childhood".
Get a f---ing life, people.
I'm amused that nerds everywhere are livid over a 5-second sound change to an already altered version of RotJ that said nerds already purport to despise. If they believe that Lucas raped their childhood by removing the Yub-yub song 14 years ago, then buying this Blu-ray set means they and their childhoods are askin' for it.
cdouglas wrote:I think we need to set some parameters for what constitutes "childhood rape," too. Did George Lucas really rape your childhood, or did he just run his fingers through your childhood's hair in a creepy and inappropriate manner?
Steve T Power wrote:Seriously though. If he would just offer the original versions, all of this indigestion could be avoided.
Not that I really care... much.
Dan Mancini wrote:Steve T Power wrote:Seriously though. If he would just offer the original versions, all of this indigestion could be avoided.
Not that I really care... much.
I'd love to have the originals...even just in standard def (provided the transfers are anamorphic). And Lucas would make a crapload of dough if he released them...which is why, given the frequency with which he's accused of being motivated solely by greed, I find it so amusing that he keeps taking a pass on the cash in order to extend his middle finger to nerdom.
Anyway, I'd like to have them just for nostalgia's sake, and also for the surreal joy of seeing my 6-year-old scoff at them for how rickety they'd inevitably look when compared to the SEs.
In related news, blinking Ewoks or not, the Blu-rays will be mine.
mkiker2089 wrote:It just basically comes down to one thing, George Lucas is surrounded by yes men and is losing his grip on reality. The same thing happened to Howard Hughes before his yes men had him killed off.
Dave Ryan wrote:I'm amused that a 5 second sound change can not only "ruin" a 2-hour-long piece of visual storytelling, but "ruin" someone's "childhood".
Get a f---ing life, people.
People who alter or destroy works of art and our cultural heritage for profit or as an exercise of power are barbarians, and if the laws of the United States continue to condone this behavior, history will surely classify us as a barbaric society. The preservation of our cultural heritage may not seem to be as politically sensitive an issue as “when life begins” or “when it should be appropriately terminated,” but it is important because it goes to the heart of what sets mankind apart. Creative expression is at the core of our humanness. Art is a distinctly human endeavor. We must have respect for it if we are to have any respect for the human race.
These current defacements are just the beginning. Today, engineers with their computers can add color to black-and-white movies, change the soundtrack, speed up the pace, and add or subtract material to the philosophical tastes of the copyright holder. Tomorrow, more advanced technology will be able to replace actors with “fresher faces,” or alter dialogue and change the movement of the actor’s lips to match. It will soon be possible to create a new “original” negative with whatever changes or alterations the copyright holder of the moment desires. The copyright holders, so far, have not been completely diligent in preserving the original negatives of films they control. In order to reconstruct old negatives, many archivists have had to go to Eastern bloc countries where American films have been better preserved.
In the future it will become even easier for old negatives to become lost and be “replaced” by new altered negatives. This would be a great loss to our society. Our cultural history must not be allowed to be rewritten.
There is nothing to stop American films, records, books, and paintings from being sold to a foreign entity or egotistical gangsters and having them change our cultural heritage to suit their personal taste.
I accuse the companies and groups, who say that American law is sufficient, of misleading the Congress and the People for their own economic self-interest.
I accuse the corporations, who oppose the moral rights of the artist, of being dishonest and insensitive to American cultural heritage and of being interested only in their quarterly bottom line, and not in the long-term interest of the Nation.
The public’s interest is ultimately dominant over all other interests. And the proof of that is that even a copyright law only permits the creators and their estate a limited amount of time to enjoy the economic fruits of that work.
HGervais wrote:I guess the question I have is, how many of the Star Wars fans who bitch & moan about every change Lucas makes is still there with a freshly minted copy of whatever upgrade in his/her hand on release day?
Steve T Power wrote:I think it's all a big gag. Lucas just having a gas. He hates nerds, he probably hates Star Wars. He leaked two little 10 second clips and then sat there giggling his ass off when the Interwebz imploded. If there had only been a blip, they'd be dismissed as a hoax, if there were a deluge, they would be left in. All to get the "Big Bang Theory" crowd bitching and moaning. It's really kinda funny when you think about it.
Chris_Sax wrote:Steve T Power wrote:I think it's all a big gag. Lucas just having a gas. He hates nerds, he probably hates Star Wars. He leaked two little 10 second clips and then sat there giggling his ass off when the Interwebz imploded. If there had only been a blip, they'd be dismissed as a hoax, if there were a deluge, they would be left in. All to get the "Big Bang Theory" crowd bitching and moaning. It's really kinda funny when you think about it.
Yeah, your theory sounds totally plausible.
Kenneth Morgan wrote:I'm not getting all hysterical about this. I just don't understand the reason for making these latest changes. It's not a case of "I didn't have the budget for it the first time" or "I didn't have the technology the first time". I don't get it.
Seems to me he should just say, "They're done," put both the original and final versions out in the best condition possible, and move on. Or just flat out remake the OT from square one.

Attrage wrote:I don’t get it, do the new blu rays NOT contain the original unaltered 1977, 1980 and 1983 movies?? I have special edition DVDs of all three OT movies and they contain both the originals and the “revamped” CGI ones he re-released. Personally I prefer the unaltered ones. They were the ones I saw as a kid.
Attrage wrote:I remember reading something when they were re-released theatrically that Lucas’ reasoning behind the CGI “enhancements” was that modern technology was allowing him to make the films better reflect his original vision.
While I can understand this in principle, I can’t help but find it a little pretentious as well. I was of a similar mind when James Cameron was quoted as saying that he waited 10 years or whatever to make Avatar because technology was not advanced enough to “realise his vision”. In Lucas’ defence, at least back in 1977 he went ahead and made the movie using the technology available to him at the time. The thought that any artist believes the world needs to catch up to their “vision” needs a bit of a reality check, I think. Even in this whizz bang day and age, I still believe story is the foundation. If you can achieve both, fine, but technology should always come second to telling a great freakin story!
mavrach wrote:There's nobody demanding any of this that I can see.
mavrach wrote:Attrage wrote:I remember reading something when they were re-released theatrically that Lucas’ reasoning behind the CGI “enhancements” was that modern technology was allowing him to make the films better reflect his original vision.
While I can understand this in principle, I can’t help but find it a little pretentious as well. I was of a similar mind when James Cameron was quoted as saying that he waited 10 years or whatever to make Avatar because technology was not advanced enough to “realise his vision”. In Lucas’ defence, at least back in 1977 he went ahead and made the movie using the technology available to him at the time. The thought that any artist believes the world needs to catch up to their “vision” needs a bit of a reality check, I think. Even in this whizz bang day and age, I still believe story is the foundation. If you can achieve both, fine, but technology should always come second to telling a great freakin story!
Yeah that was Lucas' original statement. Always wondered why he didn't redo the 1997 CGI with better CGI. But that's crap because technology didn't prevent Greedo from shooting first, Luke screaming while falling, etc. But you're right about story coming first and that's what Lucas has lost. He's of the mindset that more effects shots makes for a better movie.
Andrew Forbes wrote:mavrach wrote:There's nobody demanding any of this that I can see.
Sadly, there is a large portion of the paying public that does prefer the flashier effects and couldn't care less about alterations to the characters.
Steve T Power wrote:Getting bent out of shape over what sort of noise Obi-Wan makes when he scares off Sand People? Really now?
mavrach wrote:I guess my problem with this subject is that if you say anything opposed to Lucas at this point, you're branded a loser who's apparently dedicated his life to all things Star Wars, and acts like the changes are so horrible and should just get a life. Yes there certainly are a lot of those types, but we can discuss Star Wars objectively too.
I just think it's damn bizarre to see a director continually tweak his work in some effort to perfect it. Why anybody would want to do this is beyond me. And when is he going to start tweaking the prequels??
And is there anybody out there who actually is in favor of any of these changes in any release? There's nobody demanding any of this that I can see.
mavrach wrote:And when is he going to start tweaking the prequels??
Chris_Sax wrote:I don't feel raped by this, so why don't we leave aside the question of whether or not I need to get a f'in life, man, and you and Dan can give an honest answer to this question- is this NOOOOOOOOOO stupid?
Chris_Sax wrote:Are most of the changes George has made to the originals stupid?
Chris_Sax wrote:Do they make the films better or worse?
Dan Mancini wrote:and some are major improvements (removal of the Ewok song).
mavrach wrote:Andrew Forbes wrote:mavrach wrote:There's nobody demanding any of this that I can see.
Sadly, there is a large portion of the paying public that does prefer the flashier effects and couldn't care less about alterations to the characters.
I know that unfortunately, practical effects & stuntwork is going out the window in lieu of cartoon action. But I meant is anybody asking Lucas to update his effects in his older movies?
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