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s7en

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14-Oct-2004
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1-Nov-2019
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Post
#251487
Topic
Moth3r's OT.com forum enhancement filter!
Time
Didn't expect to have to do this again so soon:

Follow the above instructions but use this line in the "Matching Expression" box:

<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="97%">*<b>timbox129</b>[br]*<img src="i/dominant/trans.gif" border="0" height="2" width="1">[br]

You need to manually change the square brackets in the two instances of [br] above to HTML-style braces < >


Bye bye tim.

Although I doubt this'll be needed soon as the sock timbox seems to be on a mission to get itself banned.

Post
#250695
Topic
Lucas Interview from 1979 - Alan Arnold's 'Once Upon a Galaxy' book
Time

I’ve been dipping in and out of Alan Arnold’s ‘Once Upon a Galaxy’ book again recently, and thought this was worth sharing:

Once Upon A Galaxy: A Journal of The Making of The Empire Strikes Back
Alan Arnold. Sphere Books Ltd 1980

pages 172-183

Thursday July 19 [1979]

When someone tells you he has put everything he owns into an enterprise and that if it doesn’t succeed he’ll be millions of dollars in debt, what are you to say? When he adds: " I’m willing to take that risk because I started with nothing." all you can feel is humility, which is what I felt when George Lucas talked to me today.

In a world that pays mainly lip service to principles, when politicians are so partisan and the language convoluted (priests now talk of “do-gooding” with disdain), it is refreshing to sense integrity in the air again - and talk with a man who puts his money where his dreams lie. I was looking forward to my interview with him.

George Lucas: This is my third trip to London for Empire. I see the dailies in the United State on videotape, and I’m constantly talking to Kersh and Gary over the phone.
The first thing I do when I arrive here is catch up on the cut film. Because of the time pressure, my main concern as this point is to work on the second cut while the editor works on the first cut. That way, when we’ve finished we can be six weeks ahead of ourselves.
Kersh is worrying primarily about the specific moment or scene he has to deal with, and what I’m constantly keeping my eye on is the whole picture and how it’s all fitting together. But one of my primary concerns is special effects, because that part is the trickiest. That’s where I think my experience on the first film will be of most use. It’s the area, in addition to the editing, where I can contribute most effectively

Alan Arnold: Did the sets, when you saw them, relate satisfactorily to what you’d conceived of as a writer?
GL: Some did, some didn’t. Ralph McQuarrie, Joe Johnston, and I worked on the designs and the paintings of the sets and then turned them over to Kersh, Gary and Norman Reynolds. When I was over here on the first two trips, I sort of monitored the sets and put in my two cents worth, but the designers went off on their own interpretations. The designs are fairly close to my conception, but there are differences, some of which are improvements.

AA: It must be a curious experience for a writer to see what he has written translated from words into an actual physical state.
GL: It’s a very interesting experience. This is only the second of my pictures that I haven’t directed [More American Graffiti (1979) was the first]. It has been a unique experience to write down something the way I thought it should be, explain to the director how it was supposed to be done, describe the ambience, and then have it come out completely different from the way I’d thought of. It’s and interesting experience, and I can now see why screenwriters go crazy.

AA: What causes these differences in interpretation?
GL: It’s caused by the fact that no two people are the same, and no two people see with the same eyes. I can know exactly how something should be, but somebody else will have a completely different point of view. It’s like describing an accident after if happens. Five people can see the same accident, but each will describe it a different way. Similarly, the nuances in a script, no matter how articulate it is, can go in so many directions.

AA: Surely, as a writer, the translation to film cannot always come up to your expectations.
GL: Well, sometimes. But that happened more on the first film than on this one. With Empire, since I am a step away from it, I didn’t expect as much, yet it’s turning out much more like I imagine than did the first one. I had much higher expectations of the first film, and we were working under much greater duress.
I think Kershner is feeling similar to the way I felt on the first film; he feels that it’s not coming up to his expectations. When you’re on the set, trying to get things to happen each day, while everything’s falling apart around you - the robot won’t move or some technical thing malfunctions - then you’re compromising day by day and dying a thousands deaths.
On this picture I haven’t seen all the suffering, I’ve just looked at the film and said “Oh, that’s turned out great” or “That scene could have been a little better,” but I wasn’t there watching Kersh suffer, struggling to get it better.

AA: It must be a relief to have a quality craftsman at work, though.
GL: These films are incredibly difficult to make. Normally, a director is concerned mainly with character and with telling a story. In the Star Wars films that is important, but equally important are all the details. They’re like little time bombs all over the set, thousands of them, and if you don’t catch one it could do you in. When the shot moves around and there’s some little thing that isn’t right, it could take the audience completely out of the movie. In a normal film there isn’t that thin edge. Reality, the reality of the world we know, is a tangible presence in most films. The viewer is there, it’s real. But in a film like this, where we’re creating a world that doesn’t exist, it’s very easy to puncture a viewer’s sense of reality by a missing or wrong detail.

AA: It must be easier now for you to know your way around the worlds you created.
GL: Yes, it was harder on the first film. I didn’t quite know the world that was being created. It was very hazy to start with, but as it became clearer, ore concrete, I had a stronger base of reality to work with. But now I know what Luke Skywalker looks like; I know how lightsabers work; I know what Darth Vader’s appearance should be. On the first film I didn’t really know all these things. Should Luke be a young intellectual or just a crazy kid? Should Darth Vader be big and tall? How does Han Solo react to danger? That sort of thing. Those decisions, and hundreds more, were made before and during the first picture.

AA: Therefore, perhaps, this film should have been simpler to make than the first.
GL: I don’t think you can use the word simpler. These films are exceptionally complicated. In terms of the script, the magnitude of the two pictures is fairly similar. There are a few more set on this one but not that many more. The locations are about the same in terms of the amount of time spent on them and the proportion of the film they’ll fill in screen time. No, the advantage this film has over the first relates to the fact that the crew knows what kind of film we are making, as well as the fact that a lot of them worked on the first film. They know more what to expect, how to do things, whereas on the first film we were experimenting all the time.

AA: Then why has Empire taken longer to make?
GL: People work in different ways. That has a lot to do with it. In order to finish shooting in seventeen weeks - which is what it took to shoot Star Wars - you have to push very hard. Sometimes that is very difficult, and it depends on who is doing the pushing. Somebody’s got to do it.

AA: I said to Kersh the other day that he’s a director who changes his mind at the last moment.
GL: That takes up time.

AA: But I don’t think he’s notoriously equivocal, do you?
GL: No, we hired him because his reputation is one of him being a fast director. And a very good one. I just don’t think he’s come up against anything quite so complicated before. You reach a point where it’s so big that it’s very hard to keep hold of.

AA: So you felt the need to make this one bigger and better than the first.
GL: I don’t think we’re trying to make it bigger. We’re obviously trying to make everything better. I think we’re just trying to make it as good as the first one. If we can get that far, I’ll be happy.

AA: Does the fact that you’re not directing have its satisfactions, or do you sometimes wish you were?
GL: Generally, I enjoy not directing. It’s a great relief and a lot of pressure off me. That is the good side. I’m not nearly as emotionally distressed as I’d be if I were directing. Once in a while, when I’m on the set, I get a little restless as if I were directing, wishing I could go in there and get it done. I like what Kersh is doing creatively. I don’t have a strong feeling of wishing it were being done another way (well perhaps once in a while), and I much prefer that somebody else do the work.

AA: If you were directing do you think you could speed up the process?
GL: I think I could

AA: Do your new business interests conflict with creative matters?
GL: I don’t know whether they conflict. To operate a large corporation I’ve moved into the business world, which is a new experience and one I’m learning from and enjoy. I get another perspective, and although there are worries I didn’t have before, they don’t conflict with other things.

AA: Do the worlds and the characters take you over and begin to write themselves?
GL Yes. The first script was just murder to write, just awful. It took me two years. Most of it was simply finding my way through that world. Now I’m much more immersed in the world. When I did the story for the second film, it was easier because it’s really part of the Star Wars story. The first script was really one of six original stories I had written in the form of two trilogies.
After the success of Star Wars I added another trilogy. So now there are nine stories. The original two trilogies were conceived of as six films of which the first film was number four.

AA: So the stories became easier to write.
GL: Yes, the stories became easier. The problem was coming up with the scenes and making the scenes work. Sometimes what I had in mind in the story didn’t always work dramatically. That’s were the real struggle come. I hired Leigh Brackett to write the screenplay, but tragically she died right after completing the first draft. Faced with the situation that somebody had to step in and do a rewrite, I was forced to write the second draft of this screenplay. But I found it much easier that I’d expected, almost enjoyable. It still took me three months to do, but that’s a lot different from two years. I also had the advantage of Larry Kasdan coming in later to do a rewrite and fix it up.

AA: Among the new creations in the movie is one of the oddest the saga has yet introduced - Yoda. What are your feelings about him?
GL: He’s been a great concern right from the beginning. I started designing Yoda with Joe and Ralph. We worked for about four months before coming up with a design we liked. You can see the progression of Joe’s drawings to Ralph’s paintings, see the character’s look improving, acquiring more personality, until, I think, Yoda is now how we want him to be.

AA: Well, we’ll meet him soon when we begin to shoot on the swamp planet of Dagobah. Are you going to use that set for the next movie, too?
GL: Dagobah does appear in the next film. What we’d hoped to do was shoot the set now, having built it, to save having to build it up again. But time has gotten so tight we really can’t do that now. We’re just going to have to wait and rebuild the set for the next picture.

AA: Does that worry you?
GL: Well, yes. I’m faced with a situation where everything I own, everything I ever earned, is wrapped up in this picture. If it isn’t a success not only could I lose everything, but I could also end up millions of dollars in debt which would be very difficult to get out from under. It would probably take me the rest of my life to get back even again. That worries me. Everybody says “Oh, don’t worry, the film will be a huge success” and I’m sure it will be, but if it is just one of those mildly successful film sequels, I’d lose everything. It has to be the biggest grossing sequel of all time for me to break even.

AA: You’ve always acted on that kind of faith, haven’t you?
GL: Well, most of this filmmaking effort is so I can create a dream, a dream I’ve had for a long time, which is to build a research retreat for film. The amount of money needed to develop a facility like that is so enormous that the money I have doesn’t amount to anything. You need millions and millions of dollars to build such an operation. The only way I can do it is to create a company that will generate profits.
There’s a world of difference between the money making abilities of corporations and those of individuals. For an individual to make two or three million dollars is a big deal. He’d feel very wealthy and secure. But most corporations have to make thirty or forty million dollars a year in order to feel secure. No matter how much money I make individually, I don’t think I’d ever have enough to compete on a corporate level. To take care of just the overhead of a company, to pay all the employees every year, costs several million dollars. I couldn’t direct enough films fast enough to pay all those people. So I had to develop a company.

AA: Although you’ve diversified, the Star Wars films are at the heart of it all
GL: Yes, they are the core, which is why I have to concentrate on them. I don’t want to spend the rest of my life making Star Wars pictures, but I do want to get them set up so that they’ll operate properly without having to get completely involved in all of them. They’ve got to be self generating to support the facility.

AA: So it’s vital that Empire be successful.
GL: It’s important that this film have the quality of the first one so it doesn’t look as though we are skimping, which is what a good many sequels have done. I want people to realize we put the highest quality in every picture, that the quality’s not going to drop. That’s the challenge.

AA: Escalation of cost seems to be a disease in moviemaking on this scale.
GL: The problem is that pictures of this kind are very difficult to make. I can’t stress that enough. The number of people involved, the amount of materials involved, the decision-making that costs money every day - all these are horrendous compared with a normal movie. It’s logistically and technically so complicated that if you don’t know what you’re doing you can get into trouble very quickly. Fortunately on the special-effects side, which is where Star Trek and Black Hole got into trouble, we’re very secure. At ILM I have extremely good people working for me. They know exactly what I want, and they do a terrific job. I have control over the special effects, so I feel confident that we’re not going to be in any trouble there. The only problem I have now is the speed of production. That’s the only thing that’s costing us any more money. Otherwise everything is going along very well.

AA: What has been you’re reaction to the many imitations of Star Wars?
GL: It was to be expected. I don’t mind imitation. It is a form of flattery, but I do object to outright copying that tries to convince the public that this or that is part of the Star Wars saga. I think that is very, very wrong. There’s a line between just doing something similar, and doing something that is trying to copy directly.

AA: Do you find that there is always a conflict between cost and quality in filmmaking?
GL: Yes, and I feel the quality of the film we’re making now is as good as the first film. The issue is always one of time and money. On Star Wars I had a tendency to use only what I needed, and since nobody realised the movies potential, they only gave me what I needed. Now the expectations are higher. So when Kersh asks for something, he gets a little more than he asks for, and it’s that little more that translate into millions of dollars.

AA: Can you put a stop to it?
GL: It’s not something you can stop. I’m sort of half-businessman, half-filmmaker right now and I get very concerned, even more than Gary, because as executive producer I’m paying for it. The director worries about making the movie and doesn’t have to care about any of the other things. Well, I care very strongly. Unless you’ve got somebody at the helm on a day-to-day level trying to cut everything down, it just doesn’t happen. Gary is trying but, ultimately, Kersh is the one in the driver’s seat, and he just isn’t of the same school as I am. It’s understandable. Most directors aren’t. They’re concerned about making movies, not about saving money. They just want to do the best job they possibly can and make the film as good as possible - which is what they’re paid to do.

AA: It’s why you must at moments feel you want to get in there and direct the picture yourself.
GL: There’s not much I can do. I can help Kersh when he lays out a scene, which is the same sort of thing Gary’s been trying to do. I think Kersh is doing a great job. I had a time problem on the first film, too. It took seventeen weeks and we had been scheduled for thirteen which admittedly was impossible. But I’m used to making films in a much shorter time. American Graffiti was made in twenty eight days. I’m not used to everything going as slowly as it does. It has a tendency to drive me crazy, although not as much on this picture as on the first, despite the fact I have infinitely more at stake in this one.

AA: Time is money in any situation, but in the film business it’s such big money.
GL: Most directors can make a technically good movie if they have enough time and money. There is a theory that monkeys could be Picassos given enough paint and allowed to go with it long enough. They’d duplicate all Western art. In movies give someone $150 million and fifty years to make a film, and the odds are good that they’ll make a professional movie. The real challenge is to do it for a minimum amount of money in a reasonable amount of time. When I look at films I can tell one that cost $30 million, but if you can make a film that looks as good but only cost $15 million, then you’ve accomplished something.

AA: Francis Ford Coppolla was indulged on Apocalypse Now wasn’t he?
GL: He indulged himself. I was going to make that picture for $2 million; he made it for over $30 million. It could have been done in a year; he took four. Apocalypse cost so much money, much more than the picture we’re doing now, that it simply doesn’t make economic sense. And I worry about breaking even! Our chances are ten times better than his. If I were Francis, I’d be extremely worried.

AA: You’re saying that talent shouldn’t be pampered in this way.
GL: I believe in discipline. I believe you must learn your craft. The craft of filmmaking is very difficult, very technical, and very involved. I become impatient with people who aren’t the best craftsman, who don’t know their job, who aren’t really on top of things. I appreciate professionalism. I feel strongly that it’s the absolute foundation of directing. In whatever kind of film you’re talking about there is the content, the art, and the craft. The craft is getting your work done on time every day, getting all the stuff you need, overcoming the adversities. It’s like being a gladiator and having to go into the ring each day. You have no idea whether you’re going to go up against three men, one giant man, or two lions. Everyday there are impossible problems. And one of the first things you learn at film school is that there are no rules. Filmmaking is making the impossible happen every day, and there are no excuses.

AA: You continue to suggest a division within yourself, between the artist and the practical man, the craftsman and the dreamer.
GL: Yes, I have two sides, one creative and one practical, but I separate them. I accept and enjoy my practical side. It doesn’t get in the way of the creativity; it is a part of it.
People have said my films have no content, but the truth is they have much more content than most critics realize. People usually don’t look beyond the surface of pure entertainment. For a film to be thought of as having content, it must have spelled out in bold letter, “Look at the content.”

AA: Putting yourself at risk financially may be a good creative discipline.
GL: My nature is to do everything myself. I like to be the editor, the cameraman, the art director, and so on. Inside, I’m simply a craftsman and if I weren’t a filmmaker I’d probably be a painter or a cabinetmaker.

AA: I’ve thought of you as a toymaker, if not a puppeteer.
GL: I remember George Cukor saying to me once, “you refer to yourself as a filmmaker. I’m a director. A filmmaker is like being a toymaker.” I replied that a director sounds like somebody who runs a business. I’d rather be a toymaker.
My inclination is to make my own films. At first I was able to do that. I made films using very small crews. If something went wrong in the art department, I would just go fix it myself. On Star Wars I couldn’t do that. I tried to be in complete control, but it almost killed me. It was just too difficult and I was miserable because I agonized over things not turning out my way. But I had to step back. If I were ever going to create on that scale again, I told myself, I would have to do it through others. That isn’t easy.

AA: Do you ever wish you’d let it stop at Star Wars?
GL: At first I was contemplating selling the whole thing to Fox to do whatever they wanted with it. I’d just take my percentage and go home and never think about Star Wars again. But the truth of it is I got captivated by the thing. It’s in me now. And I can’t help but get excited when something isn’t the way it’s supposed to be. I can see that world. I know the way the characters live and breathe. In a way they have taken over.

AA: So you decide to continue the saga.
GL: When I was in film school, I was into very abstract kind of filmmaking. I want to get back to it. Which brings me again to the research center. That is really the core of my drive to make this work. Movies cost a lot of money. You can’t just go out and make them, no matter how rich you are. You have to devise a mechanism, a funding machine that will allow you to make movies. Nobody has been able to accomplish this very well except by means of government subsidies. In the U.S. there are few subsidies. Not even the studios have the money to finance films without concern for their commerciality. So, I learned the system and I beat it. Now I want to use it to make the kind of films I’m interested in, regardless of their commerciality.

Post
#250681
Topic
Moth3r's OT.com forum enhancement filter!
Time
I think its time this was bumped again. This forum may not have an ignore list yet, so here's the next best thing.
After seeing too many threads derailed by boris - why the hell did the Star Wars HD thread turn into verbal diarrhoea about Jurassic Park and LOTR? - I've had to start running this again. I recommend other people who feel the same do too.

Follow the above instructions but use this line in the "Matching Expression" box:

<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="97%">*<b>boris</b>[br]*<img src="i/dominant/trans.gif" border="0" height="2" width="1">[br]

You might want to up the byte limit.


Guaranteed to clean away 99% of the technical misinformation/bullshitting posted to this site.
Post
#250524
Topic
Preserving the...<em>cringe</em>...Star Wars Holiday Special (Released)
Time
With Laserman's recent talk of the 'blackmagic' process for x0project
Then stealing an idea from the astronomy boys, try to treat it as a multipass capture of the same source (which it basically is) and create a composite image throwing away noise and gathering detail to get a final result that is a lot cleaner and more detailed than any of the individual laserdisc transfers are on their own.

which sounds similar to the method Citizen used for his PAL captures.

Has anyone considered this sort of approach to create an optimum version of the holiday special?
Any ideas how much potential gain there be from combining various different versions of holiday special together with some sort of fame averaging?
This is assuming that the various sources could be alligned to match eachother.

And by extension could comibing audio from different version yield a better audio track? Is there such a thing as 'audio average' different sources together?



Post
#250523
Topic
Wanted: Isolated Score for the Prequels
Time
Very curious: EP2 Ultimate Edition Soundtrack petition
According to a reliable source from John Williams Fan website the 2CD set of the Attack of the Clones Soundtrack is 'completely finished'... but Lucasfilm refuses to release it! The CD has around 40 + minutes of extra material mostly from the beginning of the movie. It does exist and it was about to be released very early-on but Lucasfilm said no to it.


Ingo Sucks, you'll be happy to know you don't need video to tackle this, as its essentially an audio project. All you need is copy of the audio track from the dvd's to align the music tracks to, and a capable audio editing program - and maybe a copy of something like ifoedit. As you're already playing the soundtracks on your computer I can't see any issue stopping you from having ago yourself.
Post
#247710
Topic
STAR WARS: The Torrents thread
Time
Browsing the indexes of some the major trrnt sites there something called "Recut of the Sith" & "Recut of the Clones", anyone know their origin or more about them?

Following one of those trrnt links to a certain bay reveals these details. Looks like they were created by the guy who posted them 'RetardedPuppy'
Here's what he says about the edits.

"Star Wars Episode III - Recut of the Sith

About 30 minutes of the movie have been removed. Nothing is added.

Recut to get rid of as much of the horrible, horrible dialogue as was possible. I also removed most of the Padme scenes. It makes the movie better. The first edit doesn't happen until after the Chancellor is rescued. Also, I'd get rid of Hayden Christensen if I could. He's such a bad actor.

INFO

File Size - 777mbs
Widescreen
Screen Width - 576
Screen Height - 256
Duration - 1:50:14
Audio Bit Rate and Codec - 128mbs Lame mp3
Video Codec - Xvid

Send any comments to colonelangus at sympatico.ca

Enjoy"




"Star Wars II - Recut of the Clones

Sorry to those who were downloading the first copy. I had to take down the first copy because the audio was out of sync in some parts. This is the same copy but with the audio fixed. Again, sorry.

About 26 minutes of the movie have been removed.

Recut to rid the movie of as much of the boring scenes and horrible dialogue as was possible. The terrible love story between Padme and Anakin has been removed almost entirely. They are horrible actors. The story is intact. The movie flows better this way.

INFO

Widescreen
File Size - 856mbs
Width - 720
Height - 304
Duration - 1:56:33
Audio - 128kbs Lame mp3
Video - Xvid

All comments are welcome, good or bad

Enjoy"





Post
#240333
Topic
Any Star Wars TV stuff coming up?
Time
On tonight in the UK:

From Star Wars to Star Wars: The Story of Industrial Light and Magic
Sky Three: Friday, September 1 2006 (19:00 - 20:00)

The history of the special effects company founded by director George Lucas during work on 1977 blockbuster Star Wars. Developing ground-breaking visual techniques and revamping existing methods, the company soon carved a niche in movie-making history, and remains the most renowned effects unit in the world. Presented by Samuel L Jackson, with contributions by award-winning film-makers Steven Spielberg and James Cameron
Post
#240151
Topic
Any Star Wars TV stuff coming up?
Time
Time Trumpet
BBC 2: Thursday, August 31 2006 (22:00 - 22:30)

Just watched this, they did a priceless bit about George Lucas funeral. 'He died in 2008 but had his funeral delayed twenty years until the technology was right.' Complete with a CGI'd up funeral with various star wars characters and robotic walking coffin.
Hope someone sticks this on Youtube.


If you're wondering what this show is about: BBC Time Trumpet webpage
Very much in the mould of The Day Today or Brass Eye, albeit without Chris Morris.
Post
#227928
Topic
20 years ago, would anyone believe...
Time
That Darth would no longer be Lord Vaders name but a (second) title.
That the Emperor was also a Darth.
That Vader was in his 40's and Alec Guinnesses Kenobi was in his 50's going by the prequels.
The the Empire was only as old as Luke and Leia.
That a Death Star takes 20 years to build.
That Jedi's are dull celibates.
That the Force and the Jedi would become stuff of ancient myth in only two decades.
That all alien races can speak speak perfect english, albeit with dodgey accents.
That there would be a whole army of robots more effeminate than C3PO.

That there would be more star wars movies after Jedi.
That as adults they'd still be buying star wars toys
Post
#212714
Topic
Info &amp; Offer: I have Star Wars SEs on Digi Betacam tape, you want my dvd tranfers?
Time
Thanks for the upload djdd, I look forward to grabbing this.

Like russs15, I've also got around disc corruption problems in the past by trying different drives. The other trick I've found is DVD Decrypter can be very good at dealing with hard to read discs - there are several different I/O settings for reading a disc, and some of these are more robust when attempting to read problem discs. It may take a lot of retry attempts, but its helped me recover precious seemingly corrupt discs a few times.

Just a thought.
Post
#185891
Topic
Kenner Commercials DVD (Released)
Time
Yep it was stated in the nfo file that it was corrupt, after the newsgroup release it hit torrents so I would guess that the torrent one is also corrupt.


Indeed, although it could be a case of vice versa. I have the DVD from the 'sladinki' site torrent from April 1st 2005, and this version has no .nfo file. Although, by the sounds of it the .nfo file re-iterates the issues I raised in the sladinki thread. I'm curious to know which came first, torrent or newsgroup release - when did it hit the newsgroups?

[edit, after Number20's mention of BLAK10] I always wondered if Rarities 3 was in fact Rikters disc. Is there anyone with both discs who can say how they compare?
Post
#185870
Topic
Kenner Commercials DVD (Released)
Time
Its hard to know how long the rarities 3 disc was supposed to be originally. The the torrent that was available was from a DVD bought at a stall, according to the guy who posted it, the bought 'original' was also 56 minute long. It still doesn't account for why the torrented 1.95GB image file tries to burn a 4GB disc though, resulting in two corrupt VOB files that are apparently 0.99GB, but in fact contain NO data. OCP, I re-authored your disc slightly to remove those phantom VOBs, and filled up the spare space with the DVD-ROM stuff.

[edit] Jambe, I've just checked the babyhum discs, and you're right, its only the clapperboard one that has the Palitoy ads. My bad. Doh!

Here's the full rundown of whats on the rarities 3 DVD - apologies for the length of this post:

Star Wars Rarities 3: NTSC
Running time: approx 55 mintes.
Contents: Star Wars related commercials
Kenner - Star Wars circa 1970's:
-12 inch collection - Leia, Luke, Vader, Chewie
-Death Star playset
-Landspeeder
-Remote control R2-D2
-Tatooine playset
-Dewback
-Action figures - jawa and droids
-Darth Vader's Tie Fighter
-12 inch collection - c3po
-Droid Factory playset
-Cantina playset
-Sandcrawler
-Troop Transporter
-Collectors Case - lunchbox style case
Kenner - Empire era - circa early 1980's
-12 inch collection - Boba Fett and Darth Vader
-Darth Vader case
-Action figures - IG-88, Bossk, Lando
-Bossk offer
-Action figures - Bespin guard
-Hoth playset
-Star Destroyer playset
-Millenium Falcon
-Survival Kit offer
-Yoda puppet
-Tauntaun
-Snowspeeder
-Millenium Falcon
-Twin Pod Cloud Car
-Action figures - Lando, Bespin Han, Ugnaught, Lobot
-Darth Vader carry case
-Turret & Probot playset
-Action figures - Bespin - Cloudcar Pilot, Lobot, Bespin Guard
-Action figures - FX-7
-4-Lom offer
-Action figures display stand
-Slave 1
-Falcon and Snowspeeder
-Action figures
-Admiral Ackbar offer
-Action figures - C3po removable limbs
-Action figures - X-wing pilot
-Micro Collection - Bepsin
-Micro Collection Hoth
-Micro Collection all
-Wampa
Kenner - Jedi era - 1983 onwards
-Action figures - with C3po and Chewie live action segment, C3po narration
-Action figures
-Nein Numb offer
-Jedi Premiere contest
-Micro Collection x-wing and tie fighter
-Micro Collection death star
-Micro Collection hoth
-Rebel Transport
-Action figures
1990's
-vhs trilogy
-Micro Machines
-Kenner Action figures
-Kenner Action figures
-Corn Pops offer
all the above have seperate chapter stops.
-Various - 20 minutes, no chapter stops. Featuring:
.Exlcusive Han Solo Stormtrooper disguise - Kellogs Fruitloops offer
.Darkhorse comic - Kellogs Applejack cereal offer
.Star Wars customizable game cards
.'Special Effects - Anything Can Happen' now showing at Museum of Science and
Industry IMAX trailer, includes star wars special edition effects
.Kenner - Shadows of the Empire - CGI 'trailer' - Kenner figures and vehicle
.Micro Machines Millennium Falcon Sweepstakes - win a gold star destroyer
.Shadow of the Empire - N64 game ad
.Original Empire Sountrack ad portion
.Jedi transfers set - Presto Magix
.Star Wars cookies - Pepperidge Farm. R2D2 shaped cookies. cool.
.Kenner Star Wars - Return of the Jedi collection - Jabba playset, C3po Gammorean .Guard
.Empire soundtrack again
.Kenner - Star Wars collection - with C3po and R2D2 narating
.Shadows of the Empire - multimedia trailer
.Star Wars customizable cards game again
.Star Wars novels - Kevin Anderson - 'Dark Sabre'
.Kenner - Shadows of the empire - Xizor, Boba, Slave 1, Luke, Dash Rendar, .Outrider
.Kenner - Power of the Force - Kenner figures, Snowspeeder
.Kenner - Power of the Force - vehicles, Lightsabre, X-wing,
.Micro Machines Action Fleet Death Star playset
.Lightsabre - Jedi - Luke and Vader electronic light sabres
.Shadow of the Empire
.Pepsi - Vader versus theatre usher - special edition release
.Taco Bell - special edition release - Feel the Force promotion
.Star Wars - special edition preview ad
.Taco Bell - toys spec edition tie in
.Pizza Head Show - Pizza Hut ad
.Fox Star Wars Trilogy Sweepstakes - win a private screening of all three special edition movies
.Star Wars - Special Edition trailer
.Micro Machines - Boba Fett head playset
.Micro Machines - mini action sets
.Micro Machines - Action Fleet
.Taco Bell - 7 collectibles ad
.Doritos - 3d motion cards
.Micro Machines - Boba Fett and mini action playsets
.Taco Bell - toys ad, another one
.Star Wars Days at Disneyland - Star Tours ad
.Taco Bell Intergalactic Draw - win lifesize Vader (sans Dave Prowse) or Stormtrooper
.Darth Vader voice changer
.Imperial Assault handheld game - with Vader joystick
.Taco Bell - really pushing their toys now
.Space Shooter Falcon, Vader's Tie Fighter and Battle Belt
.Star Wars novels - Shadows of the Empire
.Star Wars Wonder World tanks
.Super Return of the Jedi - Super Nintendo
.Star Wars Trilogy Special Edition vhs boxset
.Kenner - Power of the Force vehicles and figures
.Kenner - Power of the Force A-wing, Vader's tie fighter, Emperor, Hoth Rebels
Post
#182003
Topic
Need video/audio help for a fan-edit, please [SERENITY: EE]
Time
Just to throw an extra potential spanner in the works, some PAL releases are based on bad NTSC -> PAL bad conversions, which results in that sort of interlacing. Many of Tartan's asian DVDs releases in the UK are shoddy PAL conversions from an interlaced NTSC master, rather than being taken from a true PAL transfer. It means some of the original NTSC interlacing is retained, and can also result in some weird motion/speedup problems where the video appears to be dropping or doubling frames because of it.

Looks like the deleted scenes you're using could be suffering from the same thing.

If this is the case, I'm not sure how fixable it is. Best thing to do would be to post a sample of the video and let one of the technical wizards like MeBeJedi to take alook at it.
Post
#160422
Topic
Help Wanted: Request - 1997 NTSC Special Edition Clips
Time
Originally posted by: Hal 9000
If that's the one with the blue box and plus sign in the upper right corner, than that's what I have.

The version you have is definitely the TB release, as thats the one I sent you.

The G'Kar release is primarily in German, and the colour is slightly off compared to the TB version - ANH in particular has a slightly pinkish hue to it.

As for shareware means of converting PAL to NTSC, you could run the MPGs, or VOBs from the DVD through VirtualDubMod set the framerate to 23.976fps, and resize the video to 720x480. And for good measure replace the blackbars with the crop filter to get rid of the CanalPlus blue box logo.
You can even frameserve it directly to TMPGEnc for reencoding to MPEG2 if need be.

Post
#158625
Topic
If the Prequels had been made first would they have succeeded?
Time
I think there's a great urban myth built up around the backstory and Lucas' original 'master plan' of having everything planned out when he wrote the original trilogy. A great deal of it seems to be fan exageration, and its very rare to come across anything firsthand from the man himself.

However, in 1999, when phantom menace was came out, there was a very enlightening Lucas interview on the UK morning show 'Big Breakfast', where he spells out the extent of his original plans for the movies. Despite, or maybe because of Johnny Vaughn, its one of Lucas' more interesting interviews.

I've uploaded the most relevant bit here: http://rapidshare.de/files/8285059/lucasBB.mpg.html

Fried Gold.
Post
#147067
Topic
<em><strong>The Official Dark/Sega Special Collection</strong></em> OT LD Release Thread (Not an SE Transfer) (Released)
Time
I've just received a set of these, and very nice they look too. I'd like to see a transfer given the Citizen treatment even more now.

Long story short, I'm willing to pay-it-forward to a couple of people. So if anyone would like a set - and preferably lives in the UK - PM me.
Post
#146515
Topic
The Official babyhum Release Thread
Time
Originally posted by: digitalfreaknyc
You're losing resolution by doing that. DVDshrink re-encodes everything.


That's not necessarily true, as DVD Shrink has a 'No Compression' option, which means it'll just de/remux everything without re-encoding the video, so the quality will remain untouched. That way its just reauthoring how the disc is put together, without altering its contents.

I too like to alter the prohibited user setting on Babyhum releases, although I use IFOedit to change the PUOP settings (no lengthy reauthoring required).

Here's some info I've culled from the net:

"http://forum.doom9.org/archive/index.php/t-52555.html

Originally posted by DVD Mahn
I recently finished one of my first authoring attempts with ReelDVD. Everything went fine apart from one annoying thing. I can’t set the 'Prohibited User Operations' on my animated DVD menu in ReelDVD.

So I downloaded IfoEdit(V0.91 and V0.95) and located the PUOs ( VMGM_PGCI_UT ) and changed them to block out Stop, Pause etc. But when I preview the DVD in IfoEdit and PowerDVD I can still access the blocked out PUOs. Don’t know what I am doing wrong here. I am no expert at IfoEdit or indeed the technical side of DVD so it might be something really simple I am missing here. Can anyone help me out?

Thanks
You can disable/enable selected Prohibited User Operations options in your menus (VTS_*_0.IFO / VTSM_PGCI_UT /PGC-Menu_*) or in your video title clips (VTS_*_0.IFO / VTS_PGCITI / VTS_PGC_*). Options checked means they will be disabled and viceversa for unchecked. Press OK to exit options and you will need to save your IFO too. I have no problems in doing it this way in IFOedit 0.95 and PowerDVD.



Thanks for your help 2COOL! I had only set UPO in VTSM_PGCI_UT. But when I did the same in VTS_PGCITI it worked! Yipii! I have no idea what exactly I just did, the structure of the .IFO files are a mystery to me. But hey, as long as it works Are there any good documents on the net about the .IFO files?...

This last one took a while to discover, but setting the title playback type to '60' restores full freedom to navigate the disc. Babyhum usually has this set to '21', here's rough explanation of some of the effect different values have (and where they are located):

Video_TS.ifo
VMG_PTT_SRPT
title playback type - 21 [15] = prohibited user op. Time play or search: both yes
title playback type - 85 [55] = prohibit PPT no, prohib Timeplay search yes
title playback type - 60 [3c] = prohibited user op. Time play or search: both no"