Amazon.com video review:
Star Wars
Again? Yes. Even though no other movie has been released as many times on
video as Star Wars (except for its sequels, The Empire Strikes
Back and Return of the Jedi), George Lucas and the folks at 20th
Century Fox have actually released a slightly different film this time. This
video followed the mega-successful 20th-anniversary theatrical rerelease, in
which Lucas personally remastered the image and sound quality of his baby.
Other revisions are more obvious, if hardly radical. Lucas enhanced several
special effects with updated computer technology--most noticeable are the
explosions and removal of matte lines during the Death Star battle finale.
And the creatures that populate Mos Eisley's spaceport--though
meticulous--are aesthetically superior improvements. The inclusion of extra scenes
(originally outtakes), however, is not an improvement. Both the meeting
between Jabba the Hutt and Han Solo, and Luke talking with his childhood pal
Biggs, do nothing to enhance character development or theme, and serve only
as distractions that preoccupy the waiting viewer. And, really couldn't Lucas
find something better to do with his time than mess around with a national
treasure? As for the video, this boasts both visual and sound enhancements.
But since Star Wars has been available with these tweaks numerous
times before, the decision whether to purchase this latest new version
depends on how badly you want to see Lucas's cosmetic surgery. --Dave
McCoy
The Empire Strikes Back
The middle film in George Lucas's enormously popular Star Wars science
fiction trilogy is a darker, more somber entry, considered by many fans as
the best in the series. Gone is the jaunty swashbuckling of the first film;
the rebellion led by Princess Leia (Carrie Fisher) suffers before the
superior forces of the Empire, young hero Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) faces
his first defeats as he attempts to harness the Force under the tutelage of
Jedi master Yoda (voiced by Frank Oz), and cocky Han Solo (Harrison Ford) is
betrayed by former ally Lando Calrissian (Billy Dee Williams). In the
tradition of the great serials, this film is left with a hefty cliffhanger.
The leap in special effects technology in the three years since Star
Wars results in an amazing array of effects, including a breathtaking
chase through an asteroid field and a dazzling, utopian Cloud City, where
Luke faces the black-clad villain Darth Vader (David Prowse, voice of James
Earl Jones) in a futuristic sword fight and learns the secret of his Jedi
father. Veteran director Irvin Kershner (The Eyes of Laura Mars,
Never Say Never Again) took the directorial reins from creator and
producer Lucas and invested the light-speed adventure with deeper characters
and a more emphatic sense of danger. The special edition expands Luke's
encounter with the Abominable Snowman-esque wampa and establishes the
creature as a tangibly more terrifying beast, in addition to refining many of
the existing effects. The trilogy is concluded in Return of the Jedi.
--Sean Axmaker
Return of the Jedi
The high-energy, special-effects-laden conclusion to George Lucas's ambitious
Star Wars trilogy delivers the final confrontation between Luke
Skywalker (a more confident and mature Mark Hamill) and his nemesis-father,
Darth Vader (David Prowse, voice of James Earl Jones), as the rebel alliance
makes its last stand against the evil Empire. The film opens with an
impressive set piece in the cave of the monstrous Jabba the Hut, who holds
both Han Solo (Harrison Ford) and Princess Leia (Carrie Fisher) for his
decadent pleasure until Skywalker comes to the rescue. The final battle pits
an enormous armada of rebel ships against the rebuilt Death Star, the
planet-killing weapon of the first film, while guerrilla forces battle Empire
soldiers on the planet below with the help of a cuddly army of pint-sized,
teddy-bear-like creatures known as Ewoks (Lucas's one concession to
merchandising) and Skywalker confronts Vader and the emperor on the
Deathstar. Director Richard Marquand invests the tale with plenty of humor
and a vigorous sense of adventure without losing the seriousness of
Skywalker's mission. The special edition adds, among other effects, more
creatures and a bouncy song-and-dance number to the Jabba the Hut scenes, and
an extended celebration that literally encompasses the galaxy at the film's
jubilant conclusion. --Sean Axmaker
Amazon.com video review: Again? Yes. Even though no other movie has been released as many times on video as Star Wars (except for its sequels, The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi), George Lucas and the folks at 20th Century Fox have actually released a slightly different film this time. This video followed the mega-successful 20th-anniversary theatrical rerelease, in which Lucas personally remastered the image and sound quality of his baby. Other revisions are more obvious, if hardly radical. Lucas enhanced several special effects with updated computer technology--most noticeable are the explosions and removal of matte lines during the Death Star battle finale. And the creatures that populate Mos Eisley's spaceport--though meticulous--are aesthetically superior improvements. The inclusion of extra scenes (originally outtakes), however, is not an improvement. Both the meeting between Jabba the Hutt and Han Solo, and Luke talking with his childhood pal Biggs, do nothing to enhance character development or theme, and serve only as distractions that preoccupy the waiting viewer. And, really couldn't Lucas find something better to do with his time than mess around with a national treasure? As for the video, this boasts both visual and sound enhancements. But since Star Wars has been available with these tweaks numerous times before, the decision whether to purchase this latest new version depends on how badly you want to see Lucas's cosmetic surgery. --Dave McCoy