The following are partial
lists of changes in Star
Wars re-releases. The commercial success of
Star Wars has given
George Lucas the opportunity to alter his
original trilogy, which is composed of
Star Wars Episode IV: A New
Hope,
Star Wars Episode
V: The Empire Strikes Back, and
Star Wars Episode VI:
Return of the Jedi. Many changes were motivated by George
Lucas's desire to make the original films closer to his vision for
them, although he directed only one of the films.
The new versions made heavy use of
CGI technology and other new
production techniques that emerged in the two decades after the
original trilogy was produced. Other changes enhanced the
cohesiveness of the films and eliminated
continuity errors between the
original trilogy and
the three prequels (produced in the late 1990s and early
2000s). The changes are controversial, with opponents claiming that
these changes detract from the character arc of the films and tend
to be more distracting than expedient.
In a
September 2004 CNN article,
Lucas claimed that the original films were "25 to 30 percent" of
what he intended. Despite this statement, the original films were
massively popular and regarded as "groundbreaking", and many of his
changes have met with lukewarm reception. Along with obvious
changes to various scenes, the re-releases improved the visual and
audio quality of the films.
Changes to
Star Wars films after the theatrical release
are not always limited to the original trilogy. In the release of
The Phantom
Menace DVD, two deleted portions were either partially or
completely restored. According to
Lucasfilm, the 2004 Special Edition is the
canonical version of the original
trilogy, even though the original, unaltered theatrical editions
were first released on DVD on September 12, 2006.
George Lucas on the special editions
"An Expanded Universe", American Cinematographer magazine, February 1997.
Re-releases
Here is a list of all re-releases.
VHS/Betamax/CED editions
These are
pan and scan versions of the
original theatrical releases of the original three films.
None of the original releases of
Star Wars on
VHS,
Betamax, and RCA's
CED contained the line uttered
by C-3PO "The tractor beam is coupled to the main reactor in seven
locations. A power loss at one of the terminals will allow the ship
to leave." This line was not in the original
Dolby Stereo mix, which was the soundtrack used
on all early video releases. In 1985
Ben
Burtt re-mixed the soundtrack and the line was heard for the
first time on home video. Due to technical and cost limitations,
the
CED editions of
Star Wars are presented time-compressed (sped up by 3%)
from its original 121-minute length to 118 minutes to fit one
double-sided two-hour disc.
In the
United
Kingdom
and throughout Europe,
widescreen VHS versions of the original
three films were released in 1991. An
advert before the films explained how widescreen
showed more of the picture. They were re-released in 1994 with
different artwork and released a third time as THX versions in
1995. The VHS reissue in 1995, which was the last available release
of the Pre–Special Edition trilogy prior to the 2006 DVD release,
utilized
THX digital remastering to enhance the
picture and sound quality on all three films.
Laserdisc editions
Due to technical limitations, most pan and scan versions of
Star Wars and
The Empire Strikes Back are
presented time-compressed (sped up by 3%) from their respective
121- and 125-minute lengths to fit one double-sided 2-hour disc.
Letterbox versions of the original
theatrical releases of the original three films have also been
released.
The initial 1989 North American widescreen release of
Star
Wars suffered from a shrinking
aspect ratio. The master that was used
was the Japanese subtitled
Laserdisc, in
which the image appeared higher in the screen to allow for
subtitle. For the North American
release, it was shifted down, and a black bar was put up to cover
the unused parts. However, as the film progresses, the image creeps
up on the screen moving underneath the top bar, causing the image
to become increasingly wide. By the time the film reaches the
Battle of Yavin scenes, the image has widened from 2.35:1 to
2.55:1. This problem was fixed in the 1992 re-issue of the disc.
The original shrinking LD has the
CBS/Fox logo on it, but the fixed edition has
the newer "
Fox Video" logo on the jacket.
The C-3PO line about the tractor beam can be heard on this
laserdisc.
In 1993, the
Star Wars Trilogy: The Definitive Collection
box set was released. This version featured the original trilogy on
9
CAV discs, widescreen
transfers, THX remastering, audio commentary tracks, assorted bonus
features, a copy of the hardcover book
George Lucas: The
Creative Impulse, and for
Star Wars IV: A New Hope, a
new surround sound audio mix created from elements of the
70 mm 6 track magnetic, 35 mm Dolby Stereo optical and
35 mm optical mono mixes.
Initial versions of this box set were missing approximately 10
seconds from
The Empire Strikes Back. Fox Video offered a
replacement disc, and this mistake was corrected in later
pressings. The final
Laserdisc edition of
the original trilogy was released in 1995, sourced from the 1993
masters.
1997 Special Editions (Theatrical, Laserdisc and VHS)
In
1997, Episodes
IV,
V, and
VI were re-mastered and theatrically re-released as the
"Special Editions". For the re-release, in addition to extensive
clean-up and restoration work, Lucas also made a number of changes
to the films in order to "finish the film the way it was meant to
be" (as Lucas claimed in a September 2004 interview with the
Associated Press).
Many of Lucas's changes for the Special Editions were cosmetic,
generally adding special effects which were not originally possible
e.g. adding the cut scene of Boba Fett in Episode IV. Other
changes, however, are considered to have affected plot or character
development. These changes, such as the change referred to by fans
as "
Han shot first", have proven to
be controversial.
2004 DVD release
In 2004, in addition to an extremely extensive high-definition
digital cleanup and restoration job by
Lowry Digital Images, the
original trilogy films were
changed once again for their release on DVD on September 21, 2004.
In these new versions of the films, a few changes which had been
made for the 1997 Special Editions were removed and fresh changes
were made to the films. With this release, Lucasfilm created a new
high-definition master of the films, which will be used in future
releases as well.
Two of the most notable of these new changes include new footage
shot during the filming of
Revenge of the Sith:
- The first is that of Ian McDiarmid
portraying Palpatine, which has been inserted into The Empire
Strikes Back, replacing the original performance (voiced by
actor Clive Revill and portrayed by an
uncredited actress wearing a specially made mask, with chimpanzee
eyes superimposed over her own) recorded for the film.
- The other alteration was to a scene at the end of Episode
VI, when the spirits of Obi-Wan
Kenobi, Yoda and Anakin Skywalker look upon the Rebels'
celebration. Sebastian Shaw,
the original actor who played Anakin in this scene, was replaced by
new footage of Hayden
Christensen, the actor who played Anakin in Episodes
II and III. This act was confirmed by Lucasfilm
itself in the featurette "Return of the Jedi: What has changed?",
as seen on the official website to commemorate the 2006 DVD
releases.
Although the vocals of
Boba Fett were
relatively minor to begin with, they were altered for the sake of
consistency and continuity. The 2004 edition no longer has the
original voice of
Jason Wingreen, but
rather the voice of
Temuera
Morrison, as the prequel films fleshed out Boba as a clone of
Jango Fett, portrayed by Morrison with
his distinctive New Zealand accent. In the DVD releases, the
lightsaber blades were upgraded to look more like they do in the
prequel trilogy, but they are still not quite near their quality.
This is most evident in
A New Hope, during Luke's training
on the Falcon and Obi-Wan's fight with Vader.
2005 re-release
In 2005, the 2004 Special Editions were again released on DVD;
however, this time they were repackaged and sold as a three-disc
set that did not include the bonus materials disc. This was done to
provide a more affordable trilogy set. Labeled only as the
"
Star Wars Trilogy: Episode IV, V, VI" this set was also
billed as a "Limited Edition". As of 2007, copies could still be
found on many store shelves.
2006 DVD release
On September 12, 2006, the original trilogy was re-released on DVD
for a limited time (until December 31, 2006), though, as of April
2009, copies can still be found in stores. Each film (Episodes
IV,
V, and
VI) is packaged as a two-disc
set with the first disc presenting the 2004 Special Edition with
remastered THX sound and video and the second disc containing the
"original, unaltered theatrical release" of each film as bonus
material.
These original editions are said to be presented as they were first
shown theatrically. For example,
Star Wars has the 1977
opening crawl (before
"Episode IV: A New Hope" was added and other adjustments made for
the April 10, 1981 re-issue). However, the video transfer is
derived not from original masters, but from the 1993 Laserdisc
transfer (aside from the original
Episode IV opening
scroll taken from a best available original 1977 print), meaning
that the film's 2.35:1 Panavision format is
letterboxed into a non-
anamorphic 4:3 video frame (appearing that way
even on widescreen televisions).
Also, instead of using the original sound mixes from the initial
theatrical releases, the 'bonus' DVD presentations use the 1993
laserdisc remixes (presented in Dolby Digital 2.0 stereo). However,
the Spanish and French audio tracks on the
Star Wars DVD
appear to be based on the original theatrical mono sound mix for
the film (originally the most widely-heard original theatrical
sound mix in 1977, now a rarity),
not the Definitive
Collection version. Certain sound effects from the 1993 mix are
missing (such as all of the "exploding glass" sounds when Luke and
Han blast the various cameras and such in the Death Star's
detention center), and certain sounds have been added (such as
metallic clicks when
R2-D2 and
Chewbacca press buttons on the
Millennium Falcon's holographic
chessboard).
Luke Skywalker also says
"Blast it,
Wedge, where are
you?" during the final battle on the alternate language tracks,
something he only said in the theatrical mono mix. In all other
versions of the film, he says, "Blast it,
Biggs, where are
you?"
The French and Spanish audio tracks for
The Empire Strikes
Back 2006 DVD also feature a different sound mix (apparently
based on the initial 70 mm mix from 1980) than the 1993
Definitive Collection mix. This alternate mix features additional
sounds that were not heard on the 35 mm and subsequent home
video versions, but which were later reincorporated into the 1997
and 2004 mixes. Such sounds include additional
R2-D2 beeps when Yoda rummages through Luke's
supplies, which are missing from prior mixes, and additional
TIE fighter engine sounds in the
establishing shot of
Darth Vader's
Star Destroyer (after
Luke Skywalker beheads the illusory Vader on
Dagobah), which are missing from the prior
35 mm/home video sound mixes.
This set was dubbed a "Limited Edition", with the original
"unaltered" movies being included as a second "bonus disc", and the
"default" movie was the 2004 edition. As of today, copies can still
be found on most store shelves. The only extras included on the
"Bonus Disc" were an Xbox demo of
Lego Star Wars II: The
Original Trilogy and a trailer for the game. Each movie
disc had identical bonus content. A box set of the 2006 DVDs with
new artwork was released on November 4, 2008.
2007 3-D edition
At a ShoWest convention in 2005, George Lucas demonstrated new
technology and stated that he is planning to release all six films
in a new
3-D film format, beginning with
either
A New Hope or
The Phantom Menace in 2007.
In January 2007, StarWars.com's
Questions & Answers
section stated that Lucasfilm was busy with other upcoming media
such as the
Star
Wars live-action TV series,
Indiana Jones
and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull and media related to
the 30th anniversary of Star Wars. Thus the release was postponed
indefinitely.
High Definition edition
It has been widely rumored that
Lucasfilm
plans on re-releasing the 6-film saga in
Blu-ray Disc format with many new features and
changes; however, John Singh, spokesperson for Lucasfilm, has
denied there are any plans. He was quoted as saying "Lucasfilm Ltd.
has no plans to release any of the
Star Wars movies on
Blu-ray. Listings on Amazon.com or any other Web site are purely
speculative and erroneous." At
Comic-Con 2009, the head
of fan relations at
Lucasfilm,
Steve Sansweet stated in an interview that
the company was looking at releasing an ultimate
Star Wars
boxset on DVD and Blu-ray.
Changes
Here is a partial list of the changes made to each of the original
trilogy's films.
Pre-Special Edition
Although not as obvious as the 1997 Special Edition re-release of
the original trilogy, there were still some alterations made
between versions.
Star Wars
- The line "Episode IV: A NEW HOPE" was added to the opening
crawl from 1981 onward. The new opening crawl also capitalized the
word 'Rebel' in 'rebel spies', which was not capitalized in the
original 1977 opening crawl.
- The film was initially released in 70mm
6-track audio; further work on the soundtrack continued for the
wider 35 mm release with a 2-track Dolby Stereo (matrixed 4 channel) optical
soundtrack. A mono mix was produced later for exhibition in cinemas
with no Dolby Stereo support, which contains some changes from the
stereo version. Most video releases until the Special Edition were
based on the stereo mix.
- Alternate takes of C-3PO's dialogue are used in the mono sound
version.
- The line "close the blast doors!" was added to the mono
release.
- C-3PO's tractor beam line was added to the mono version (this
line was also included in the 1997 special edition and 2004 DVD
versions).
- The line "Blast it, Biggs, where are you?" from
the original stereo sound version was changed to "Blast it,
Wedge, where are you?" for the mono
sound releases.
- Beru Lars is
voiced by a different actress in the mono version.
- The 1985 VHS release features a digitally remastered sound mix
supervised by Ben Burtt, which contains
C-3PO's tractor beam line. Another remix was produced for the 1993
Definitive Collection Laserdisc, which
removes the line again.
The Empire Strikes Back
The 70 mm version included a large number of changes from the
35 mm version that was more widely seen.
- After the Probe droid lands and moves left, there is an optical
wipe to the overhead shot of
Luke on his Tauntaun.
- After Luke wanders through the snow and falls face down, there
is an optical wipe to Han instead of a straight cut.
- The bacta tank scene starts on a
close-up of Two-One-Bee and pans right to a close-up of Luke in the
tank. It then cuts to FX-7 extending its arm to the tank. There is
no cut to Leia, Han and 3PO observing.
- In the snow battle scene, when Luke drops into the snow after
throwing a charge into the Imperial walker, the AT-ST in the
background has no atmospheric depth. It looks too close and
small.
- In the Emperor scene, the hologram of the Emperor is already
present in the first shot—it does not "tune in" gradually.
- The Imperial Fleet establishing shot, after the evil tree
scene, has a different TIE fighter sound effect.
- When Luke falls from Cloud City into the Millennium
Falcon, the Falcon's radar dish is not added to the
shot.
- The telepathy between Luke and Vader during the "Hyperspace"
cue has straight cuts instead of quick dissolves.
- On Hoth, right after C-3PO tells R2 to "Switch off", R2 gives
out a little "blurp".
- When Luke finally collapses in the snow, he lets out a grunt as
he lands on his face.
- Han says "until I can get the shelter up" instead of "until I
can get the shelter built."
- Luke says an additional "Ben... Dagobah..." just before Han
says, "and I thought they smelled bad on the outside."
- When C-3PO tells Luke "It's so good to see you fully functional
again", Luke replies, "Thanks, 3PO."
- The line "Headquarters personnel report to Command Center" is
repeated three times instead of two.
- The line "The first transport is away!" is said in a different
voice altogether.
- When R2 is being loaded into Luke's X-Wing, C-3PO says the word
"and" before saying "do take good care of yourself."
- Han's line "Transport, this is Solo. Better take off, I can't
get to you. I'll get her out on the Falcon" is followed by, "Come
on!"
- In the asteroid field, after C-3PO says, "Oh, this is suicide",
he says, "There's nowhere to go."
- In the scene where R2-D2 is spat out by the bog beast, Luke
says "You're lucky you don't taste very good," instead of "You were
lucky to get out of there."
- Yoda makes a frightened "AAHHH" sound just before Luke says,
"Like we're being watched", and points his blaster at him.
- Yoda says the word "Run" before "Yes. A Jedi's strength flows
from the force." The following lines "But beware the dark side.
Anger, fear, aggression. The dark side of the force are they.
Easily they flow, quick to join you in a fight" are also much
louder and clearer.
- In Cloud City, after C-3PO says "That sounds like an R2 unit in
there. I wonder if it..." he says "Hello?" only once instead of
twice.
- Before C-3PO gets shot, a different voice says "Who are
you?"
- While C-3PO is on Chewie's back when they enter the carbon
freezing chamber, the line "Now remember, Chewbacca, you have a
responsibility to me, so don't do anything foolish" is louder and
heard more clearly.
- During the duel, when Luke knocks Vader off the platform, Vader
lets out an "ooooh!" instead of an "aaargh!"
- Lando's line at the end, "Luke, we're ready for takeoff", is a
different take.
- In the final scene, there is no tracked music from "Yoda and
the Force".
1997 Star Wars Trilogy Special Edition
Special coverage on CNN in 1997
notes that Lucas spent $10 million to rework his original 1977
film, which was roughly what it cost to film it originally. Three
million dollars of that was spent on the audio track for the
special edition. Lucas also spent $2.5 million each on Episodes
V and
VI. All of the films have newer versions of
the 20th Century Fox and Lucasfilm production logos.
The following is a partial list of changes:
Star Wars
- Additional dewbacks and search teams are
visible as the Stormtroopers
look for the missing droids. An Imperial transport can be seen
taking off in the background.
- A shot of an evening Tatooine sky that pans down to show the
opening of the scene in which R2-D2 is wandering through the hills
before he is captured by Jawas.
- A revised Jawa sandcrawler. The sunset progression has been
enhanced, having the sky darkened, and at the end, adding stars to
the newly darkened sky. The scene where R2-D2 is captured has been
tinted red to resemble a sunset.
- A new digital matte painting of the sandcrawler and extended
sky were added when the Jawas are setting up shop in front of the
Lars farm. Artificial zooming in is also present. More vaporators
have been added, but they disappear in subsequent shots.
- A new look at Ben Kenobi's
hut.
- Skeletal Remains of Aunt Beru and Uncle Owen were
enhanced.
- Mos Eisley is bigger and busier.
- Dash Rendar's ship the "Outrider" can be seen taking off in the
background when Luke's landspeeder enters the city.
- The blur under the landspeeder (created by smearing petroleum
jelly on the lens cover to obscure the view of under the
landspeeder) is taken out.
- A short pause of the camera features a Jawa being bucked from
its Ronto mount.
- New aliens are seen in the Cantina.
- In Han’s last line to Greedo, "Yes, I’ll bet you have", the
word "yes" is excised from the audio track, though Han’s mouth is
still seen forming the word.
- In the cantina, Greedo now fires first as
Han dodges the shot; then Greedo is shot by
Han.
- A CGI version of
Jabba the Hutt confronts Han Solo in the Millennium Falcon's launch bay, and
new dialogue was recorded in the Huttese language.
- A new scene in the Mos Eisley docks of the Falcon
taking off.
- The Death Star docking bay is revised to be more consistent
with the one seen in Return of the Jedi, most notably in
the overhead shot when the Millennium Falcon has landed.
- The aforementioned line uttered by C-3PO, where he describes
the tractor beam's power systems, is
put back in. (It was deleted in the previous stereo sound
versions.)
- New superimposed shots of the Stormtroopers in the Death
Star.
- The flashes of blaster impacts on the Imperial officers were
removed.
- When Han Solo is chasing a squad of Stormtroopers on the Death
Star, instead of running to a dead end, he ends up at a hangar bay
with seemingly hundreds of Stormtroopers and officers. Laser fire
was increased in the next scene where Chewbacca approaches the corner.
- "Close the blast doors!" is put back into the scene where Han
and Chewbacca, pursued by Stormtroopers, jump through the doors as
they close.
- A scene between Luke Skywalker
and Biggs
Darklighter, just before the Battle of Yavin, has been
inserted.
- R2-D2 flying in the astromech droid port of Lukes' X-Wing
starfighter now has more clearly blue markings - they were black in
earlier editions due to limitations in the blue-screening
process.
- New digital shots of the X-wings and Y-wings taking off from
Yavin (in the original version, they just appeared as white
flashes) and approaching the Death Star.
- New, additional, and revised dog
fighting and attack run scenes during the battle at the Death
Star.
- After Red Leader's unsuccessful trench run, the line "He's on
your tail!" was added to the film.
- When the proton torpedoes enter the exhaust port, a scorch mark
where the previous shots hit is present. The scorch mark was
present in the original theatrical release, but was removed during
pan and scan cropping for the home
video releases.
- The shot of the Rebel fighters flying away from the Death Star
has been revised.
- The Praxis effect shockwave (so
named for a similar effect seen in Star Trek VI: The
Undiscovered Country) was added to the destruction of the
planet Alderaan and that of the Death Star.
- The matte paintings (or cardboard cutouts) of the members of
the assembly on the left and right sides of the Throne Room at the
end of the film, when Luke, Han, and Chewie approach the throne,
have been digitally replaced with real humans.
- James Earl Jones is now
credited.
- 'Luke's Theme' is partially repeated in the ending credits
music to make room for the Special Edition release credits.
The Empire Strikes Back
- The opening battle sequence was cleaned up.
- New scenes on Hoth with a redesigned
wampa ice creature, including showing the
full-body wampa screeching in agony following the loss of its limb.
Two close-up shots of the original wampa mask are still
noticeable.
- When Luke Skywalker heads to the
exit of the wampa's cave, his lightsaber's deactivation sound is
heard, even though the blade does not retract.
- The blaster bolts of the TIE fighters have been made more
green.
- A shot of Darth Vader's Star Destroyer has additional TIE
fighters; one appears to follow a non-linear path.
- The TIE fighter that collides with an asteroid and blows up has
additional sparking added to it.
- The Millennium Falcon casts a digitally created shadow
on the asteroid. Though the surface seems to grow closer, the
shadow remains the same size.
- The scene where the Slave I
follows the Falcon out of the Star Destroyer's floating
garbage includes a newly created CG shot of it pursuing the
Falcon.
- At the entrance shot of Cloud City, the Cloud Car was replaced
by a Tibanna refinery. (The Tibanna refinery is almost panned and scanned out of the full screen DVD
version. The right side of the refinery can be seen briefly in the
full screen DVD version if played on a
PC.)
- New and additional shots of Cloud
City.
- Several wall panels have been digitally replaced with windows
to show more of Cloud City.
- Luke's line, "You're lucky you
don't taste very good", after R2-D2 is spat out by a Dagobah swamp slug, is changed back to the original
"You were lucky to get out of there."
- Lando Calrissian says
"Attention" twice (instead of once) when he speaks on the Cloud
City PA.
- Shots of people listening to Lando on the PA ordering the evacuation of
the city are added.
- Luke screams as he jumps off the
platform in Cloud City (the scream is
actually lifted from the Emperor's death
scream from Return of the
Jedi)
- Darth Vader's terse-but-forceful
line, "Bring my shuttle", is changed to the more benignly-toned
"Alert my Star Destroyer to prepare for my arrival", a line
originally recorded for A New Hope; a wide-angle CGI
visual is added, showing Vader boarding his shuttle. This short
added scene is spliced directly into the action surrounding Leia,
Lando, and Chewie's attempt to rescue Luke as he dangles from a
weather vane below Cloud City. The music track that has become
known as "Rescue from Cloud City / Hyperspace" — a track that, in
the film's original version, begins from the moment Vader cuts off
Luke's hand and continues until Vader storms off of the bridge of
the Executor after the Millennium Falcon escapes
into hyperspace — is also now spliced, in a manner corresponding to
the insertion of the short added scene. Specifically, for
approximately 5 to 10 seconds, music originally played at the
moment Vader informs Luke of his parentage (itself an earlier part
of the "Rescue from Cloud City / Hyperspace" track) is
incongruously inserted.
- A new shot of Darth Vader's shuttle heading toward his star
destroyer.
- A digital hatch has been added to replace the white light that
appears when Lando opens the outer hatch to rescue Luke.
- A new scene with Darth Vader landing
in the docking bay of his Star
Destroyer is included, taken from an outtake from Return of the Jedi — like the
footage of Vader boarding his shuttle, this short scene is
similarly spliced directly into the action surrounding the
Millennium Falcon's escape from Bespin, and the music
accompanying the added footage (both a few short seconds of music
taken from the very beginning of "Rescue from Cloud City /
Hyperspace" and then a few seconds of the same music that was used
during the shuttle-boarding footage insertion) likewise cuts
incongruously into "Rescue from Cloud City / Hyperspace".
- "The Imperial March" is partially repeated in the ending
credits music to make room for the Special Edition release
credits.
Return of the Jedi
- A new Jabba's Palace Band musical
number, 'Jedi Rocks' replaces 'Lapti Nek'. Some other footage is added from the
extended music video of Lapti Nek. The puppet of female alien
singer Sy Snootles is replaced with a
new CGI version.
- Nine new characters were added to the Max Rebo Band: Joh Yowza, Umpass-stay,
Ak-rev, Barquin
D'an (Figrin D'an's son), Doda Bodonawieedo, Greeata Jendowanian, Lyn Me, Rappertunie, and
Rystáll.
- Additional scene of Oola in the Rancor
pit. (Oola is played by Femi Taylor
reprising her role fourteen years after the original films. Taylor
was cast in the new scenes after her brother had been talking to a
friend that was working on the special edition who had mentioned
that they were working on scenes featuring the dance scene in
Jabba's palace. Taylor's brother mentioned that she was in the
original and was in better shape than she was when she shot the
original scenes, as a result she was cast, with a number of shots
of her new dance moves edited into the original footage with no
noticeable difference in her body within the 15 years between the
two shots.)
- Boba Fett is briefly shown flirting
with Rystall and Lyn Me, Max Rebo Band dancers, at Jabba's
palace.
- Additional scenes on Tatooine of a herd
of Banthas before heading to the Pit of
Carkoon.
- The Sarlacc now has extra CG tentacles
and CG beak at its center.
- When shooting the sarlacc tentacle, Han says "It's all right, I
can see a lot better now" rather than "It's all right, trust
me".
- CGI rope has been added around Han's ankles as he dangles from
Jabba's skiff above the Sarlacc.
- In the original version, a flight of four TIE fighters appear
from behind the camera flying toward the Death Star and disappear a
second before the scene changes to the Emperor's arrival. This is
corrected and the fighters continue heading toward the Death
Star.
- As with the destruction of the first Death Star, the second has
a more pronounced explosion.
- At the end of the trilogy after the Empire is defeated, scenes
of celebration on Bespin, Tatooine, and Coruscant
are shown in addition to the original and new celebration scenes on
Endor. The musical theme "Ewok Celebration" (often referred to as
"Yub Nub") during this sequence has been replaced with an entirely
new John Williams composition, "Victory Celebration".
- During the end celebration, a brief shot of Luke hugging
Wedge Antilles was inserted.
- "Parade of the Ewoks" is partially repeated in the ending
credits music to make room for the new Special Edition release
credits.
Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace DVD
Release
- Sebulba's
subtitles during his enraged talk with Anakin originally read, "You
won't walk away from this one, Skywalker... you slave scum!". For
the DVD, "Skywalker" was removed from the subtitle, since Sebulba
does not actually say Anakin's last name in the scene.
- Watto's celebratory cry of "Sebulba!" is
removed.
- The podracing sequence is extended. Such enhancements include a
scene with Anakin facing off with Gasgano, Anakin losing
one of his engines, only to recover it, and more.
- The air taxi sequence is reincorporated.
- Orn Free
Taa's human aides are replaced by Twi'leks.
Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones DVD
Release
- Several speeders were removed from a shot during the Bounty
Hunter pursuit scene.
- New dialogue added to the scene where Anakin confesses to the Tusken
slaughter.
- After Padmé falls out of the gunship on Geonosis, a clone trooper asks if she is all right.
Her alert response of "Yes" has been changed to a more
realistically groggy "Uh-huh."
- Anakin's mechanical hand now holds Padmé's hand during the closing wedding
sequence (this was originally included in the DLP theatrical release of the film, but not in the
35 mm film version).
- During their duel on Kamino, a shot of Jango Fett headbutting Obi-Wan is removed from
the UK version of the DVD.
- Jedi Coleman Trebor confronts Count
Dooku on the lookout balcony during the battle of Geonosis. Trebor is instantly shot dead by Jango Fett. The following shot shows Jango
twirling his blaster pistol before slotting it back into his
holster. In the theatrical release, this was a solo shot of Jango,
but the widescreen version of the DVD has Count Dooku in the
foreground, smiling as Jango twirls his pistol.
- Moments before Mace Windu decapitates
Jango Fett, sparks and a slight puff of smoke from Jango's jetpack
can be seen, signifying that his jetpack malfunctioned.
Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith DVD
Release
- Despite Lucasfilm's official statement that there were
absolutely no changes made to the theatrical version of the film,
the November 1, 2005 DVD release of Revenge of the Sith
had one slight change from the theatrical cut. In the scene where a
shot transitions to Darth Vader crawling up the lava bank, the
original theatrical release used a wipe effect from the shot of
Obi-Wan and C-3PO in the cockpit of Padmé's ship leaving Mustafar
to Vader's mechanical hand grasping at the volcanic soil, whereas
the DVD instead uses a straight cut from the Padmé's ship shot to
that of Vader.
Star Wars DVD Box Set
In 2004, a DVD box set was released, along with some changes that
were made to establish a better connection between the old and new
trilogies. The 2004 DVD box set also received John D. Lowry's
digital restoration and visual enhancement treatment. The following
is a partial list of changes:
A New Hope
- Before R2-D2 and C-3PO enter the escape pod near the beginning
of the movie, a beeping sound is added when R2 pushes the switches
to open the door to the escape pod.
- When the Jawa Sandcrawler stops outside the Lars Homestead,
C-3PO says "We've stopped" before telling R2-D2 to wake up.
- The long shot of Luke's Landspeeder in the canyon (with the two
Tusken Raiders taking aim) has been improved. Now, instead of being
merely a moving white 'blob', the landspeeder is actually seen in
minute detail.
- Obi-Wan Kenobi's scream to scare
off the Sand People has been changed to a higher-pitched wail. The
old version of Obi-Wan's scream in the original and 1997 versions
sounded similar to a dewback. The new version of Obi-Wan's scream
in the 2004 version sounds similar to a krayt dragon.
- More debris has been digitally added to the scene at the
destroyed Jawa
sandcrawler.
- A brief shot of Luke's landspeeder as it enters Mos Eisley carrying Luke, Ben Kenobi, and the
droids has been redone. The pink tint is
removed from the Mos Eisley entrance scene.
- The 'Han vs Greedo' scene is redone again; this time Greedo and
Han shoot at almost the exact same moment, but Greedo is still
fractionally ahead. Han also dodges Greedo's shot more
convincingly. Additionally, Han's original line of, "Yes, I'll bet
you have" has been restored (the 1997 Special Edition removed the
word 'yes').
- An improved CGI
version of Jabba the Hutt (based on
his appearance in The Phantom Menace) now confronts
Han Solo in the scene added to the 1997
re-release. Also, when Han steps on Jabba's body to get to the
Falcon, Jabba winds up as if to punch him; in the 1997 Special
Edition, he yelped in pain.
- When the two stormtroopers exit the Millennium Falcon,
one of them now says "There's no one here."
- When the docking bay controller tries to contact TK-421,
slightly audible static can be heard over the communicator.
- The Matte painting in the
detention block has been
extended, making the corridor seem longer. The painting's
perspective has been edited to make it appear more realistic.
- The writing on the Death Star tractor beam control panel
originally read 'POWER - TRACTOR BEAM 12 (SEC. N6)' and
'INOPERATIVE'. It has been changed from the Latin alphabet to the standard Star Wars
(Aurebesh) alphabet. The word 'INOPERATIVE'
is panned and scanned out of the full screen DVD version.
- An audible bump has been added to the infamous moment where a
screen-right stormtrooper bumps his head on the door-frame when the
stormtrooper squadron breaks into the control room. This mistake
was hinted at in Episode II, when
Jango Fett - escaping from Obi-Wan on
Kamino - bangs his helmet on the closing door of the Slave I.
- Luke and Leia's echo when they are trapped in the Death Star
chasm is now more convincing.
- Despite the revised lightsaber blades, Luke's still appears out
of thin air when activated instead of extending out of the hilt and
in his training on the Millennium Falcon, the lightsaber
blade is pale green instead of blue in one shot and it later
appears to be plain white, as in previous versions.
- During the lightsaber duel between Obi-Wan and Vader, Obi-Wan's
lightsaber blade does not look like it is flickering out towards
the end of the fight, like it does in previous versions, though it
does show a noticeable shimmer of blue light.
- John Williams' score has been
flipped in the left and right rear channels and has been quieted or
eliminated from some portions of the Battle of Yavin sequence.
- The "He's on your tail!" line that was added for the 1997
Special Edition has been removed.
- The code cylinders on Grand Moff Tarkin's uniform no longer
move up and down between shots.
- The shot of the Y-Wings descending to make the first attack run
has been fixed. Originally, the two lead Y-Wings disappear when
their leading edges touch the bottom of the screen, but the third
one smoothly moves out of frame like it should. Now all three move
smoothly out of frame.
- The colors depicting the destruction of the planet Alderaan and
the Death Star have been changed.
- When the X-Wings are seen lifting off from the Rebel base
before the Death Star battle, the red planet of Yavin is now
visible in the upper right of the shot.
The Empire Strikes Back
- In the scene where Darth Vader
speaks to the Emperor via hologram, the
Emperor is now portrayed by Ian
McDiarmid (in the original film and the Special Edition, the
Emperor was portrayed by an uncredited actress wearing a specially
made mask with chimpanzee eyes superimposed over her own, with the
voice dubbed in by Clive Revill. ) A
few lines of new dialogue have been added to this scene as well, in
which Palpatine informs Vader that their new enemy is the
'offspring' of Anakin Skywalker.
McDiarmid actually filmed this scene during principal photography of Episode III.
- The lines spoken by Boba Fett are now
in the voice of Temuera Morrison,
the actor who played Jango Fett & the
Clone Troopers in Attack of the Clones. The voice was
originally provided by Jason
Wingreen.
- The lines "The first transport is away!..." and later "Imperial
troops have entered the base!..." over the Echo Base PA system are
no longer voiced by Mark Hamill.
- Enhancements were made to the shots featuring Cloud City, with additional shots of the
following day's landing at the city.
- The pink tint is removed from the entrance scene of Cloud City,
where the Cloud Car is replaced by the Tibanna refinery for the
1997 version.
- In both the original and 1997 versions, during the scene in
which Han is lowered into the carbon-freezing chamber, what was
thought to be a wardrobe blooper has him wearing his blue vest
during one shot. This was eventually discovered to be the result of
coincidental shadowing and not a wardrobe blooper, since Han wears
a jacket throughout the film, not a vest. In this release, the dark
lighting has been digitally erased.
- When Luke confronts Vader in the carbon-freezing chamber and
ignites his lightsaber, the sound from the original release is
overlapped in this scene by the sound produced by Luke's new
lightsaber in Return of the Jedi.
- During the film's lightsaber duel, when Vader jumps off the
staircase, his lightsaber blade looks more orange than red, due to
miscoloration from the film's restoration team.
- The tracked scream of Luke
Skywalker introduced in the 1997 re-release, which is heard
during Luke's voluntary fall from the Cloud City platform after his
duel with Vader, was removed. The track was actually the Emperor's
death scream from Return of the Jedi.
- In the original and 1997 versions, when Darth Vader asks if the
Falcon's hyperdrive is deactivated, Admiral Piett's rank plaque
and code cylinders are on the wrong side of his uniform (the plaque
is supposed to be on the left side of his tunic, but it was on his
right side). This is corrected and Piett has the correct rank
placement on his uniform.
Return of the Jedi
- The matte lines on the rancor have been further altered and the
effect is now more realistic.
- The dialogue spoken by Jabba the Hutt in the scene where he is
discussing the price for Chewbacca that had the subtitles added in
the 1997 Special Edition has the subtitles removed, making C-3PO's
verbal translations in the scene relevant again.
- In Anakin Skywalker's final scene, when he is not wearing his
helmet, the eyebrows of actor Sebastian Shaw have been digitally
removed, indicating what happened to Anakin's eyebrows when he got
burned on Mustafar in Revenge of the
Sith. His eyes have also been changed to blue and minor
cosmetic alterations have been made to his face to more closely
resemble the Anakin portrayed by Hayden Christensen in the prequel
trilogy.
- During the film's lightsaber duel, Vader's lightsaber blade
when he throws it on the bridge looks more pink than red, once
again due to miscoloration from the film's restoration team.
- When Anakin, Yoda and Obi-Wan appear together in spirit form at
the end of the movie, Sebastian Shaw is replaced by Hayden
Christensen, showing a young Anakin with an old Yoda and
Obi-Wan.
- Another scene of celebration, this one on Naboo, is shown after the Empire is defeated. A
Gungan, whom
many fans assumed to be Jar Jar Binks,
can be heard saying "Weesa free!" Nevertheless, Jar Jar is not
listed in the Star Wars databank as appearing in Episode
VI. The rumor of Jar Jar appearing in the film was officially
debunked in an episode of The
Force-Cast in which it was revealed that the unnamed Gungan was
voiced by assistant sound designer Matthew
Wood who also voiced General
Grievous in Revenge of the Sith.
- In the Coruscant celebration scene,
the Galactic Senate and Jedi Temple have been added to the
background. This indicates that the Jedi Temple was not destroyed
during the Great Jedi Purge, thus
carrying continuity with media released since Episode III, such as
Star Wars: The Force
Unleashed, which depicts a post-purge Jedi Temple.
Note that in each of the three films, the ending credits have
remained unchanged from the Special Edition releases in 1997. Thus,
they do not reflect such changes as Ian McDiarmid's Emperor in
The Empire Strikes Back or Hayden Christensen's Anakin in
Return of the Jedi. The exception is that the format of
the ending credits was changed to that of the prequel trilogy. In
the case of pan-and-scan versions of the re-releases, the 2004 DVD
releases were pan-and-scanned differently from the 1997 theatrical
releases.
Bootleg versions, fan edits, etc.
In addition to official authorized releases, a black market exists
for other versions. These include versions of the film that are no
longer available, or versions of the original films in different
file formats. "Theatre Rips" are the only source for comparing an
actual original theater release of films to changes in recent
releases (aside from personal memory). The majority of these are
sourced from older releases of the "original" films, such as the
pre-1997 VHS/Laserdisc releases.
Bootleg versions also include
fan
modified/edited versions. One of the most well-known of these
is
The Phantom Edit, a
version of
The Phantom
Menace with certain elements removed, such as the majority
of scenes with
Jar Jar Binks that the
editor deemed unnecessary. Bootleg versions of the infamous 1970s
TV special
The Star
Wars Holiday Special remain the only source for consumers
seeking it, as Lucasfilm has yet to release the special on any
format.
Deleted scenes from Star Wars
This is a partial list of scenes that were not in a
film
version of the original trilogy or prequels. There are also changes
made to deleted scenes as well in some cases. These are included in
some home video versions, such as a specific DVD version. Some
scenes deleted from the Original Editions of the original trilogy
were modified and added back for later versions. For example, a
scene where Han Solo talks to a human Jabba the Hutt was not
included in the original theater, laser disc, or home video
versions of
Star Wars (Later renamed
Star Wars:
Episode IV A New Hope), but was modified with CGI (Jabba the
Hutt was replaced with a CGI version in the style of the Return of
The Jedi Jabba.) and included in the 1997 Special Edition.
The Phantom Menace
- When Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon first land on Naboo, Obi-Wan is seen
being chased by 2 droids on speeders. Qui-Gon destroys them by
deflecting laser bolts with his saber, in the original script,
directly following this Obi-Wan explains to Qui-Gon that the water
fried his saber (thus explaining why Obi-Wan is wet and did not use
his lightsaber to fight them himself) and Qui-Gon discusses the
lesson learned.
- Qui-Gon, Obi-Wan, and Jar Jar escape their sub before it goes
over a waterfall.
- The dawn before the podrace.
- Extended Podrace grid sequence, introducing nearly all of the
racers. (Partially added into film on DVD)
- Extended Lap 2 (Partially added into film on DVD)
- Clieg Holdfast's racer crashes after Sebulba flashes his fire
vents.
- Jawas try to salvage parts of Teemto Pagalies' racer and are
shot at by Tusken Raiders.
- Ark "Bumpy" Roose pulls into the pit stop.
- Anakin fights young Greedo. Lucasfilm confirmed this in a Press
Conference for Attack Of The Clones.
- Anakin says good-bye to Jira. Shortly afterwards, Qui-Gon and
Anakin break into a run after Qui-Gon slices one of Darth Maul's
probe droids which was following them.
- The Coruscant Sky Taxi Ride (Added into film on DVD)
- A dialogue is shown between Darth Sidious and Darth Maul.
Attack of the Clones
Note: Many of these scenes still appear in the novelization.
- Padmé addresses the Senate an hour after the first attempt on
her life.
- Obi-Wan brings the toxic dart to the analysis droids in the
Jedi Temple, who cannot identify it. He then decides to take it to
his friend, Dexter.
- Obi-Wan and Mace talk about the mystery of the missing data on
Kamino and about Anakin being able to protect Padmé while Obi-Wan
boards his Jedi starfighter. Some of the dialogue in this scene was
used in the final cut of the film.
- Extended arrival of Anakin and Padmé on Naboo.
- On Naboo, Padmé introduces Anakin to her family.
- Padmé shows Anakin her bedroom, which has holographic images of
her humanitarian work.
- Anakin and Padmé are brought before Count Dooku, requesting
Obi-Wan's release. Dooku says he cannot do so unless Naboo joins
the Confederacy, giving reasons for why he is forming the new
government.
- Padmé and Anakin are put on trial by Poggle the Lesser, who
finds them guilty. (NOTE: after the scene where they go before
Count Dooku was dropped, this scene did not make much sense and was
dropped as well)
- A group of Jedi led by Ki-Adi Mundi
and Plo Koon attempt to take over the Droid
Command Centre on Geonosis.
- A shot of Jedi starfighters approaching Geonosis.
- Additional scenes at the Battle of Geonosis. These include CIS
Tank Droids running over clone troopers and clones on speeder bikes
planting grenades on Homing Spiders.
- Anakin cuts Count Dooku's shoulder and cape with a parry of his
lightsaber, early on in their duel, after he saves the injured
Obi-Wan from being killed by Dooku.
- Dooku uses the force and grabs Obi-Wan's borrowed lightsaber
from the floor in conjunction with his own during his lightsaber
duel against Yoda, and now starts wielding two lightsabers
simultaneously for a short time until he is suddenly disarmed by
one of Yoda's parries in mid-battle and loses the use of Obi-Wan's
lightsaber, and then once again resorts to his own again.
Revenge of the Sith
Note: Only select scenes appear in the
Revenge of the Sith
DVD.
- The scene in which Bai Ling appears as
Senator Bana Breemu.
- The spirit of Qui-Gon Jinn tells
Yoda about the secret of immortality and Yoda
becomes his apprentice.
- A group of senators including Mon
Mothma meet to discuss the Chancellor's growing power. In the
scene Bail Organa expresses fear that the Republic is becoming
corrupt.
- General Grievous kills Shaak Ti who was
captured with the Chancellor. Obi-Wan and Anakin then cut through
the floor and fall near a fuel line. (This scene appears in
the
video game.)
- Shaak Ti is killed by Anakin in the
Jedi Temple Attack.
- On Kashyyyk, Yoda disguises himself as a mud monster, to escape
from some clones.
- Aayla Secura and Plo Koon's last lines are cut.
- Lieutenant Commander Lorth Needa offers General
Grievous an opportunity to surrender.
- Padmé and the Loyalists present the Petition of the 2000 to
Palpatine. He then assures the group he will discontinue his new
reorganization once the war is over.
- Additional scenes of the Separatist leaders pleading with Vader
to spare their lives.
- A scene where Obi-Wan meets with Padmé in her apartment to
express his concern about Anakin.
- During the Mustafar fight sequence, there was originally a
scene when Obi-Wan and Vader are on the Separatist control room's
table. Obi-Wan manages to disarm Vader of his lightsaber
temporarily, which accounts for why Vader is seen choking Obi-Wan
and trying to force him to cut himself with his own lightsaber in
the theatrical version.
- During the fight scene in the Senate chamber, Yoda manages to
disarm the Emperor of his lightsaber, which explains why the
Emperor is not seen wielding his lightsaber while he launches
Senate pods at Yoda in the theatrical version.
- Yoda's escape pod lands on Dagobah.
A New Hope
- While Luke is working on a machine at the Lars homestead, he
uses a set of binoculars to look up into the sky. Seeing two
starships exchanging laser fire in space, he decides to go to tell
his friends at Tosche Station. When he runs to his landspeeder, one
of the moisture parolling droids malfunctions. Luke just rolls his
eyes and continues to make his way to Anchorhead.
- Luke visits his friends at Anchorhead. He tells his friends
that he saw a space battle (between the Devastator and the
blockade runner Tantive IV) with a set of binoculars;
however, the battle is already over and his friends do not believe
him. Camie snatches Luke's binoculars and looks up to the stars
with them but misses the battle. His friends all head back into the
station, leaving Luke outside looking up at the sky.
- Biggs tells Luke he wants to defect to the Rebels.
- Han and a mysterious woman are seen carousing and kissing in
the Cantina before the meeting with Obi Wan and Luke. The intent
was to give Han a ladies-man aura. This and the preceding three
scenes listed above can be viewed on the CD-ROM Star Wars: Behind the
Magic.
- Darth Vader and Chief Bast discuss
Grand Moff Tarkin and his
ambitions (this scene was later redubbed and used in The Star Wars Holiday
Special).
- Grand Moff Tarkin, Commander Tagge, and Admiral Motti view a
schematic of the Death Star and discuss
the threat the Rebel incursion aboard holds (the scene features one
of the few wire-frame CG effects created for the film).
- After Tarkin destroys Alderaan,
Princess Leia says: "And you call yourselves humans." (A similar
line was included in the NPR radio play: "If there was any shred of
humanity in you or these twisted creatures of yours, it's dead
now.")
- Extended dialogue for Obi-Wan
during the duel. This and the preceding scene can be seen in the
documentary Empire of Dreams: The
Story of the Star Wars Trilogy.
- Biggs and Luke meet up again at the Rebel base prior to the
Battle of Yavin. Red Squadron leader Garven Dreis asks about Luke's
piloting qualifications and discusses his service in the Clone Wars
with Luke's father. The scene was partially restored for the 1997
Special Edition, although most Garven Dreis' dialogue was
omitted.
- Han and Luke are seen congratulating each other after their
successful fight against the TIE fighters while escaping the Death
Star.
The Empire Strikes Back
- A number of Wampas infiltrate the Rebel base and kill at least
one tauntaun. An image exists of a medical droid inspecting a
tauntaun carcass. The Wampa attack is mentioned and shown in the
Marvel Comics adaptation of the movie.
- While travelling through Echo Base's corridors, R2-D2 is
attacked by a Wampa. He is rescued and the wampa is killed by Rebel
troops.
- General Veers is killed when a snowspeeder piloted by Derek
"Hobbie" Klivian crashes into his AT-AT Walker cockpit.
- While fleeing Imperial troops, Han suggests they take a
shortcut through a room that has a sign on it. Leia tells him
"that's where they keep those creatures" (the wampas, which have
been confined to the room). They run off and C-3PO tears off the
warning sign, hoping the troops will mistake it for another room.
(Though never seen in any version of the film, shots of this scene
were used in Television ads and trailers for the movie, also the
door itself is visible in the movie.) Two Star Wars video games
reference this room: Star Wars: Shadows of the
Empire, and the Star Wars: Trilogy arcade
game.
- The hologram Emperor is replaced by Ian McDiarmid, to fit with the prequel
trilogy.
- Originally Luke's training on Dagobah was to include a montage
sequences showing Luke's training and pace under master Yoda's
watchful eye, from an extended run across the swamps to various
force ability exercises and using his Lightsaber against four
remotes (hovering Lightsaber training globes from Episode 4). Black
and white pictures exist of Luke training with Yoda on his back
while practicing with his Lightsaber (Mark Hamil's prop Lightsaber
hilt and rod can be seen in this behind the scenes photo). A page
outlining the montage sequences was seen in the Marvel comic book
adaptation of The Empire Strikes Back.
- In the carbon-freezing sequence, C-3PO's complete line would
have been "I'm not ready to die on the back of a demented
wookiee!" (the italicized words were deleted from all versions
of the film, but were heard in their entirety on the Story of
The Empire Strikes Back LP).
Return of the Jedi
- Moff Jerjerrod and two Royal Guards refuse to let Darth Vader
in to see the Emperor, so Vader uses his Force-chokehold on Jerjerrod, but does not
kill him.
- Just after Jabba tells Leia that she will learn to appreciate
him he pulls her closer and makes her drink from his jug.
- Right after Jabba's Sail Barge blows up, Luke, Han, Leia,
Lando, and the droids go back to the Millennium Falcon and
Luke's X-Wing (both of which are in the middle of a sand
storm).
- Darth Vader lands in the Death Star docking bay with Luke,
taking him to the Emperor. This scene was reused in The Empire
Strikes Back as Vader returns to the Executor.
Although Luke cannot be seen, Moff Jerjerrod can be seen mouthing
his lines from Return of the Jedi.
- When Luke is hiding from Vader in the Throne Room, Luke offers
Vader a chance to come and speak with him. Vader rejects the offer
saying that he would not give him that kind of advantage. Luke
throws his lightsaber to Vader and, after this, Vader realizes that
he is protecting Leia from Vader. After Vader discovers his
feeling, Luke uses the Force to take the lightsaber from Vader.
Evidence of this still exists in the final scene. As Vader talks to
Luke, he can be seen holding Luke's lightsaber.
References
External links