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enommaz

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Join date
17-Sep-2004
Last activity
23-Aug-2010
Posts
11

Post History

Post
#65561
Topic
Fans/Devotees, lets plan a serious strategy for next release
Time
September 21, 2004 is tomorrow....The Special Editions are in backrooms waiting to be put on shelves in our favorite stores, there's nothing we can do about that now. Star Wars fans(both old and new school), it's time to seriously develop a strategy/strategies on how we can get the original version on the market (new school, your release is here) for the possible 30th anniversary release. Both schools should put away there differences(for now) and form a plan that will honor us both. I feel we need help from all sources. I feel our approach should be professional, courteous, and to the point. originaltrilogy.com(may the force bless) we need more sites like this.

I'm also a serious fan of Superman The Movie and I look at what the fans did to get Warner Bros.(Lucas is a different kind of monster I'm beginning to see) to release, the extended cut of STM. Although some of us didn't get exactly what we wanted(I wanted a 2-disc theatrical/extended release)I believe most were satisfied with the product. They are now trying to get Warner to release The Donner cut of Superman II. I believe fans devised a friendly written assault, directed towards the CEO'S of Warner Bros. with e-mails and physical letters(atleast with SupermanII.)

Fans/Devotees it is time for the next phase, faith must me optimal, effort must be serious, I will admit, I have no idea on how this is to be done, but the best movements usually start that way. Threaders, start your engines.

MANTRA: THE ORIGINAL TRILOGY WILL HAVE ITS DAY (repeat often)
Post
#65518
Topic
For fun...What would be in your Star Wars DVD package?
Time
I just had an idea, adding to the customiziation of DVD's. The name would be DVD-C ( Digital Versatile Disc-Customized.) Maybe in the future, film studios wil develop sites with an incredible wealth of information, providing a complete listings of every extra, documentary, still photograph, featurette, trailer, tv spot, every sound option from mono, stereo, DTS, 5.1 surround , etc... every version of a film evermade, Director's Cut, Theatrical Release, etc...ever made.

We the consumer/fans of any film (including Star Wars) could select any feature(s) or version(s), sound format(s), etc...we wanted in our sets/non-sets.

Customizing would be EXPENSIVE, and a heavy encryption would have to be placed for piracy.

I'm imagining that a customized set/non-set would range anywhere from about $50.00(basic single disc) to $500.00(the unimaginable super-set). You could also have the option of designing your own cover-packaging ( which would be included in the price if you choose studio-select images.) or for the artist in you a $100.00 -$300.00(depending on set/non-set size) more you could download a special software program from the studio and totally customize your packaging which would in turn be sent back to the studio and created.)

What would a Star Wars fan do with this? Thread up baby!
Post
#65493
Topic
The 2004 DVDs will be Limited Edition! No more to be produced after Dec 2004!
Time
Thanks for the info RATLSNAKE. If you (or anyone) want to know what studios mean by Limited Edition. Go to:

dvdangle.com

find DVD EDITORIAL

click on the message:

04/14 - 5:30 Pm Reissues, re-releases, and new treatments: The skinny on the home entertainment phenomenon of releasing multiple versions of the same movie.

Some interesting info here.
Post
#65464
Topic
INTERVIEW WITH GEORGE LUCAS (on Fox News)
Time

I read this article dated 09-19-2004. A reviewer on Amazon.com posted this web address so you can read What George Lucas has to say about the DVD set, and about we the fans. Here is the address:

www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,132871,00.htmil

Stay informed, and keep the faith.

 

Mod Edit: a working link to the above article can be found here:-

‘Lucas on ‘Star Wars,’ Filmmaking and His New DVD’ - 19th September, 2004…

https://web.archive.org/web/20070523094518/https://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,132871,00.html

 

SAN RAFAEL, Calif. — George Lucas never figured on a 30-year career as a space pilot. Once “Star Wars” (search) shot into hyperspace, though, he found it hard to come back down to Earth.

Making its DVD debut this week, Lucas’ original sci-fi trilogy – “Star Wars,” “The Empire Strikes Back” and “Return of the Jedi” – began as an experimental foray into old-time studio moviemaking for Lucas, whose first two films had been far removed from usual Hollywood sensibilities.

Lucas’ sci-fi satire “THX 1138” had been a commercial dud, but the energetic “American Graffiti” with its driving soundtrack and multi-character point of view scored with audiences, giving the director clout to try something bigger that had been on his mind.

“I’d already started this other idea, which was to do a kind of a classic action adventure film using sets,” Lucas said over lunch at his 2,600-acre Skywalker Ranch (search). "I’d never worked on a set, I’d never worked at a studio. Never made a traditional movie. So I said, 'I’m going to do this once, just to see what it’s like, what it’s like to actually design everything, work on a soundstage, do an old-fashioned 1930s movie.

“And I’ll do it in that mode from the 1930s Saturday matinee serials, using kind of 1930s and '40s sensibilities, and I’ll base it on sort of mythological motifs and icons. I’ll just put it together in a modern form, and I’ll have fun. That’s how I got into that. I did it because it was an interesting move into an area that I thought I’d never go into.”

Three decades later, Lucas is preparing to launch the last of his six “Star Wars” films. Next summer brings “Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith,” (search) completing the prequel trilogy that tells the story of young Anakin Skywalker’s metamorphosis into the villainous Darth Vader of the original three films.

Fans have eagerly awaited the first three “Star Wars” films on DVD, a release Lucas initially intended to delay until he finished “Episode III.”

Some will be miffed that the original theatrical versions are not included in the “Star Wars” boxed set, which features only the special-edition versions Lucas issued in the late 1990s, with added effects and footage, including a scene between Harrison Ford’s Han Solo and crime lord Jabba the Hutt in the first “Star Wars.”
 

AP: Why did you change your mind and decide to put the original three movies out on DVD now?

Lucas: Just because the market has shifted so dramatically. A lot of people are getting very worried about piracy. That has really eaten dramatically into the sales. It really just came down to, there may not be a market when I wanted to bring it out, which was like, three years from now. So rather than just sit by and watch the whole thing fall apart, better to bring it out early and get it over with.
 

AP: Why did you rework the original trilogy into the special-edition versions in the late 1990s?

Lucas: To me, the special edition ones are the films I wanted to make. Anybody that makes films knows the film is never finished. It’s abandoned or it’s ripped out of your hands, and it’s thrown into the marketplace, never finished. It’s a very rare experience where you find a filmmaker who says, “That’s exactly what I wanted. I got everything I needed. I made it just perfect. I’m going to put it out there.” And even most artists, most painters, even composers would want to come back and redo their work now. They’ve got a new perspective on it, they’ve got more resources, they have better technology, and they can fix or finish the things that were never done. … I wanted to actually finish the film the way it was meant to be when I was originally doing it. At the beginning, people went, “Don’t you like it?” I said, “Well, the film only came out to be 25 or 30 percent of what I wanted it to be.” They said, “What are you talking about?” So finally, I stopped saying that, but if you read any interviews for about an eight- or nine-year period there, it was all about how disappointed I was and how unhappy I was and what a dismal experience it was. You know, it’s too bad you need to get kind of half a job done and never get to finish it. So this was my chance to finish it.
 

AP: Why not release both the originals and special editions on DVD?

Lucas: The special edition, that’s the one I wanted out there. The other movie, it’s on VHS, if anybody wants it. … I’m not going to spend the, we’re talking millions of dollars here, the money and the time to refurbish that, because to me, it doesn’t really exist anymore. It’s like this is the movie I wanted it to be, and I’m sorry you saw half a completed film and fell in love with it. But I want it to be the way I want it to be. I’m the one who has to take responsibility for it. I’m the one who has to have everybody throw rocks at me all the time, so at least if they’re going to throw rocks at me, they’re going to throw rocks at me for something I love rather than something I think is not very good, or at least something I think is not finished.
 

AP: Do you pay much attention to fan reactions to your choices?

Lucas: Not really. The movies are what the movies are. … The thing about science-fiction fans and “Star Wars” fans is they’re very independent-thinking people. They all think outside the box, but they all have very strong ideas about what should happen, and they think it should be their way. Which is fine, except I’m making the movies, so I should have it my way.
 

AP: After “Episode III,” will you ever revisit “Star Wars”?

Lucas: Ultimately, I’m going to probably move it into television and let other people take it. I’m sort of preserving the feature film part for what has happened and never go there again, but I can go off into various offshoots and things. You know, I’ve got offshoot novels, I’ve got offshoot comics. So it’s very easy to say, “Well, OK, that’s that genre, and I’ll find a really talented person to take it and create it.” Just like the comic books and the novels are somebody else’s way of doing it. I don’t mind that. Some of it might turn out to be pretty good. If I get the right people involved, it could be interesting.

Post
#64998
Topic
It is truly a matter of time
Time
Star Wars (the original trilogy) will have its day on DVD, the way the fans want. I don't believe in coincidences, I believe everything happens for a reason. This 'Special Edition' is here for a reason, and I have no doubt that George Lucas will be made to see in a way that only he can, that the trilogy he created, the original, the one that gave him the ability to make these newer versions he so parades now, was his finest work.

I'm impressed by how so many have come together for this cause, keep the faith....and watch.
Post
#64993
Topic
an idea...Star Wars Trilogy as a SUPERBIT release
Time
I also heard about this new technology just yesterday called BluRay.

Here is the address if you're interested in knowing about it:

http://www.blurays.info/

I think the fans/devotees next move should be to take their frustrations about this and focus it into the next DVD incarnation of Star Wars Trilogy(the original of course). I remain hopeful that the original versions will be released, fans must continue to exercise their faith. If we lose faith, then Lucas' misunderstood vision of film preservation prevails.
Post
#64947
Topic
an idea...Star Wars Trilogy as a SUPERBIT release
Time
I think an idea wold be to have the Star Wars Trilogy (original trilogy) get the SUPERBIT DVD treatment.

The release for the set could be September 20, 2005. If it was released this way, and on this date, it would be almost like a second chance at birth for Star Wars on DVD. I think SUPERBIT technology could bring the Trilogy up a level in regards to sound and picture quality. It would also be a first for SUPERBIT DVD's (I believe) to release a boxed set (making the DVD release special again.)

Would this be a format the fans/devotees would be interested in?

If this release was possible, and didn't offer andy 'extras' or 'bonus materials' except maybe trailers and tv spots, would fans/devotees find this release acceptable?

For more about SUPERBIT DVD's go to this site:

http://www.sonypictures.com/cthe/superbit/