It's the one people remember most fondly. So memories distort it in to this magical thing.There's no magical pristine version of it out there. It's entirely arbitrary.i
The reality is much messier.
It's the one people remember most fondly. So memories distort it in to this magical thing.There's no magical pristine version of it out there. It's entirely arbitrary.i
That's the thing though, there is no "one". There were multiple iterations of ANH before even tESB was released. The "original" most of these people go on about, is likely the second or third version, and they have no real way of knowing.It's the one people remember most fondly. So memories distort it in to this magical thing.
The reality is much messier.
That's all I was saying. "The one" being the first version they saw, not one specific definitive version.To be clear, I'm not saying one can't be nostalgic for whatever version one happened to see first.
Everything with Star Wars us a value judgment it seemsWhere people loose me however is when they make is a value judgement.
There's the thing that won the Oscars in 1978 which is not very different from the movie that made it on to VHS and laser disc. (I'm a much bigger fan of the mono audio mix myself.)It never ceases to amuse me to see how precious people get about the "original" version of Star Wars when there's really no such animal.
If those were my options I don't think I'd watch Star Wars very much.Personally; my original version of Star Wars is a 4:3 worn out VHS copy taped off the telly at Christmas, complete with an MFI January sale ad because someone forgot to hit pause, and a pretty bad flicker in the cantina scene from when the tape got chewed up.
Oddly, I don't feel an awful lot of nostalgia towards it. I much prefer my BluRay thanks!
What is it?Re-doing Mos Eisley and Cloud City and adding Star Trek VI FX? Hard pass. That's not being "precious".
It's preferring one movie over a different movie.What is it?
Curious. Does one feel substantially different to the other?It's preferring one movie over a different movie.
I think so. Star Wars the most. Jedi the least.Curious. Does one feel substantially different to the other?
It lost Best Picture to Annie Hall!! I'm still mad!!!There's the thing that won the Oscars in 1978
Fascinating. Watching the Special Edition the only thing I felt in the movie was that it was overlong.I think so. Star Wars the most. Jedi the least.
In the case of Star Wars, Mos Eisley now really feels like it's from a different movie. I admit, the Death Star battle not as much. Star Wars has the worst changes to the sound, but Empire has the worst butchering of the music.
When we saw Jedi at the theater a few weeks ago my son leaned over to me during Jedi Rocks and said "This is new stuff, isn't it?"
It's bad enough as it is. If you see it with a live orchestra it's really awful.The adding in of Vader's shuttle returning to his ship does throw off the escape music a little bit with the Millenium Falcon.
I will freely admit to not paying attention to the music in that scene.The adding in of Vader's shuttle returning to his ship does throw off the escape music a little bit with the Millenium Falcon.
Greedo.Jedi Rocks stands out way more egregiously than anything else in Star Wars or Empire Strikes Back, save maybe the Emperor.
You're doing parenting right.When we saw Jedi at the theater a few weeks ago my son leaned over to me during Jedi Rocks and said "This is new stuff, isn't it?"
The episode number and title were in and out several times in both pre & post production, well before Lucas put it back in for the re-release.
Almost every reissue, TV broadcast, or home video release has had some kind of difference, be it editing, audio, or even the typeface for the logo. There's no magical pristine version of it out there.
It's the one people remember most fondly. So memories distort it in to this magical thing.
Where people loose me however is when they make is a value judgement.
In the case of Star Wars, Mos Eisley now really feels like it's from a different movie.
That's just a problem of raw materials. OTOH, what they should have done (if they felt the need to put Jabba back) was cut the Greedo scene back to what it originally was before they had to give it the dialog from the Jabba scene that wasn't working out. I'd still have hated it but I would have respected it more.And does anyone really believe that any editor in '76-'77 would have made the choice to have big chunks of dialogue repeated just minutes apart (Greedo/Jabba scenes)?
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