Star Wars 1977 Original Version Exclusive Site

One of the most baffling additions in the Special Edition is the scene where Han steps over Jabba’s tail. Setting aside the fact that it ruins the reveal of Jabba in Return of the Jedi , the CGI in that scene has aged like warm milk. In the 1977 version, that scene doesn’t exist. Han goes from the cantina straight to the Falcon. The pacing is tighter. Jabba remains a mythic threat you don’t need to see yet. The original cut trusted the audience’s imagination.

The 1977 film is a landmark of 1970s filmmaking, representing the pinnacle of practical effects and storytelling of that era.

1977 original version (now known as Episode IV: A New Hope ) is widely considered the "holy grail" of cinema preservation. Unlike the versions available on Disney+ or Blu-ray, the original cut is famously

May the force be with your search. You’re going to need it. star wars 1977 original version exclusive

However, Lucasfilm sourced this version from a 1993 LaserDisc master. It was non-anamorphic, meaning it appeared as a small widescreen box surrounded by thick black borders on modern televisions. Despite the poor video quality, these 2006 DVDs have shot up in value on secondary marketplaces like eBay, serving as the only legal digital option for purists. Fan Restoration Projects

However, film historians counter that the 1977 version is the film that changed the world. It is the version that captivated a generation, launched the blockbuster era, and revolutionized visual effects. When historians study the film in 100 years, they will want to study the version that won the Academy Awards, not the version updated decades later.

Starting in 1997 for the film's 20th anniversary, George Lucas began a series of permanent "enhancements." He famously stated that the technology of the 70s didn't allow him to achieve his full vision. While some changes were subtle clean-ups, others—like the insertion of a CGI Jabba the Hutt or the sprawling digital cityscapes of Mos Eisley—fundamentally altered the pacing and aesthetic of the film. One of the most baffling additions in the

Layers of film combined mechanically, resulting in slight "matte lines" around spaceships.

Because Lucasfilm has refused to release an official "exclusive" original version, the fans took over. is arguably the most important fan restoration in film history. A collective of archivists located original 35mm theatrical release prints, scanned them in 4K resolution, and painstakingly restored each frame by hand.

The 1977 version begins immediately with the Star Wars logo and the crawl. The subtitle "Episode IV: A NEW HOPE" was not added to the crawl until the 1981 theatrical re-release. Han goes from the cantina straight to the Falcon

Finding this version is a hunt for cinema’s Holy Grail. Here is the definitive guide to what makes the 1977 original exclusive, why it has been erased from official circulation, and how you can still experience it.

How to find information on the .

11 comments
g.fosbery
A superb idea, even magical. Copyright people everywhere will be tearing their hair out with this one but in the end, all music belongs to all of us and this just made it all that more accessible.
Australian
I agree it's a brilliant idea. I believe it is misleading to say "the analysis of the recordings is performed in the cloud". Far more accurate to say on the vendor's servers. But indeed a clever way to stop people reverse engineering and copying their propriety software.
walshlg
Helooooooo, there are a lot of us Android users out here. Can anyone here me, please release this for android too
Jason Brown
Must have for ANDROID PLEASE!
montvilleguy
Just downloaded. Does not work well at all. Check reviews on iTunes. One time out of ten you get something that is a reasonable facsimile of what went in, the rest of the time it will take major liberties with the melody. Hopefully future releases will actually work. Too bad. Nice idea.
David Redpath
Shazzam and the like must be lusting after this tech - hum it play it music discover is finally here!
Alan Wells
The melody is the easy part.
Luigi Risi
Does anyone know about a device that listen to your music and writes down as scorecleaner does, or better?
Scorecleaner is good , but it has problems analyzing certain music. Besides, it doesn't recognize chords.
Janet Bratter
Seems if you want to add harmonies you could record the melody then listen to a playback on headphones while singing the harmony part into this app ('which I'm hoping is also available for my iPod touch and iPad . I'm a professional musician and know that overdubbing in the studio is how this is done. You could create multiple harmonies in this way. (Maybe the hip hop/rapper types will finally try making real music with this app instead of the monotonous, no melody, "the mic is my instrument" way so many of them do these days...)
yong54321
For android user, you can use this app to detect chord or polyphonic music. Https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.appspot.musictranscription
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