@Possessed: The mispelling of ‘semi-specialization’ instead of the correct spelling that would be ‘semi-specialisation’ in the case of my releases does not suggest much respect on your part. Neither does previous comments of ‘jaundiced fleshtones’ about my semi-specialised releases that i’ve seen from you in other threads.
That said, assuming you’re not trolling, which I think you are, i’ll bite and ask you this: what do you think happens to a Star Wars print with normal looking fleshtones that is projected using a warmer 70’s projection bulb? Do you think the fleshtones on the cinema screen end up looking more red or more yellow than on the print? As far as i’m aware, when you project a film with a warm yellow 70’s projection bulb like i’ve heard Star Wars was shown with in cinemas, that makes the fleshtones more yellow, not more red.
That in a nutshell is why its okay for Leia, Luke, Han etc to look more yellow than normal, because it fits the look of the time the film was released in. The only way to get reddish sunburnt fleshtones you like would have been to shoot Star Wars through a red projection bulb when showing it theatrically. As far as I’m aware that didn’t happen so that’s why sunburnt fleshtones in Star Wars look so wrong for me, there’s no reason for a film from that time projected with a warm yellow 70’s projection bulb to look like that.