Star Wars Despecialized Rar
' This version is a scan of the original Technicolor 35mm print done by a group of fans. Star Wars (later retitled Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope ) is a 1977 American film written and directed. The first installment in the film series, it stars, and., and co-star in supporting roles. The film's plot focuses on the, led by (Fisher), and its attempt to destroy the 's space station, the. This conflict disrupts the isolated life of farmhand (Hamill), who inadvertently acquires a pair of that possess stolen for the Death Star. When the Empire begins a destructive search for the missing droids, Skywalker accompanies (Guinness) on a mission to return the plans to the Rebel Alliance and rescue Leia from her imprisonment by the Empire.'
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To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. Really interesting how much work they've put in and dedication those guys have to this project. I have never had a dog in this fight - I've seen each OT movie exactly twice (once in junior high and once more recently since my girlfriend had never seen them). And I couldn't tell you which version I saw either time. The first was on VHS and the 2nd whichever DVD versions Blockbuster had. But looking at photos of the comparisons the Despecialized 2.5 looks the best in every frame.
It's also interesting to see how many unnecessary additions were made to the backgrounds in the BluRay version. If I was going to watch them again, it would definitely be the Despecialized 2.5 version. I love that there are nerds out there who love this movie so much that they'll spend this much time and do such painstaking craftsmanship to bring people the originals back.
Star Wars Despecialized Harmy
I hate to go all old manish yelling at clouds but I showed my kids Labyrinth yesterday to show them my first real exposure to David Bowie and they were wowed by the puppetry and old school special effects. We watched the making of and they loved how much work went into bringing the characters to life from choreography to little people being in costumes and being part animators of the puppets to even the funny trick of the eye that they used to make a piece of the labyrinth seem to go on for miles. I know you can't necessarily go back and undo the need for CGI but I really feel like movies lost their magic because of the over-reliance on CGI. Watching the Despecialized takes me back to those halcyon days of my youth where things on the screen looked real and still do, even if they're puppets.
I plan on showing them the making of Return of the Jedi real soon. It was something I used to sit and watch over and over for hours. The stuff Team Negative 1 put out is 1080 because they're getting 35mm prints and scanning it themselves, then doing cleanup on it. Their goal is to give the fans the experience of watching the films on film, how it originally was. So there might be some scratches or stuff like that that they leave in their releases because they feel that's how it would have been when you saw it originally in the theater. Harmy is trying to give the fans the best quality versions of the originals, but without the Special Edition stuff. He was using the officially released blurays as his main source material, then using either the GOUT (the DVD that some of you have of the original trilogy), TV broadcasts, vhs transfers, and film scans to patch over Special Edition changes.
Star Wars Despecialized Trilogy
The blurays were 720p, so that's why Harmy has only released 720p versions. I watched Harmy's Decrapified ANH 2.5 last night from the HDMI out in my laptop to my receiver/TV. It looked outstanding. Even though it's 720 I can't imagine it looking much better than it did on my 4K 55' Samsung.
There was almost too much detail. It was great th see it in its true form again. And yeah, confirmed that it's a better overall movie than the new one. They way the drama builds, how the characters are introduced and developed, the comedy relief, the small characters along with the big characters, and the emotional impact of the big moments, clearly shows why Lucas was considered such a talented director, despite some shortcomings.