Flixville
Home | Profile | Collections | Friends | Preferences | Help   

Star Wars Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980 & 2004 Versions, 2-Disc Widescreen Edition)

Composing a Review

Enter your review text here. There are some locations in Flixville where the Tagline you provide might be used instead of the Full Review (the Rotator view on your profile, for one).

Remember, all Reviews are public. Any review you write can be seen by anyone that happens across the Review. We take steps to keep your Collection data concealed as you specify, but Reviews are wide open.

Formatting

HTML tags will be stripped. But you can still format your review:

Using Italics

Surround the text to italicize with '*' (asterisk) characters.
Entering *the cinematography* will produce the cinematography.

Using Bold

Surround the text that should be bold with '_' (underscore) characters.
Entering _lousy contrived dialogue_ will produce lousy contrived dialogue.

Using Links

To create a link to another page, do not use the official html syntax. Instead, use
'[ ]' (brackets) and a '|' (pipe), like so:
Entering [Flixville|http://www.flixville.com] will produce Flixville.

Star Wars Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980 & 2004 Versions, 2-Disc Widescreen Edition)

Parental Guidance Suggested  - 129 minutes

Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment

2006-09-12

Region 1


Directed by:

  Irvin Kershner

Starring:

  Mark Hamill
  Harrison Ford
  Carrie Fisher
  Billy Dee Williams
  Anthony Daniels

Format:

AC-3,  Closed-captioned,  Color,  Dolby,  Dubbed,  DVD-Video,  Subtitled,  Widescreen,  NTSC


Purchasing:

  Usually ships in 24 hours  $19.98  $14.99

Similar interests:

  

Own this video? Log into Facebook or signup for more




Ownership

Flixville:20(2.58% of users)
Facebook:20(3.45% of fb users)

Ratings

Flixville:5(avg 4.60 stars)
Facebook:5(avg 4.60 stars)

Description:

The 2006 limited-edition two-disc release of The Empire Strikes Back is not only the first time the movie has been officially available by itself on DVD. It marks the first-ever DVD release of Empire as it originally played in theaters in 1980. What does that mean exactly? The film is without the various "improvements" and enhancements George Lucas added for the theatrical rerelease in 1997 as well as the DVD premiere in 2004. So no more of Ian McDiarmid (the Emperor) replacing Clive Revill with slightly revised lines, or Temuera Morrison rerecording of Boba Fett's minimal dialogue.

What do you lose by watching the 1980 version? Dolby Digital 5.1 EX sound, for one thing (only 2.0 Surround here), and digital cleanup. But for home-theater owners, the biggest frustration will be from the non-anamorphic picture. On a widescreen TV, an anamorphically enhanced (16x9) picture at a 2.35:1 aspect ratio will fill the screen with the exception of small black bars on the top and bottom. The original edition of Empire, however, on a widescreen TV will have large black bars on the top, the bottom, and the sides unless you stretch the picture (and distort it in the process, especially considering the substandard picture quality). If you're watching on a standard square-shaped (4:3) TV, though, you won't notice a difference.

Yes, it's true that serious home-theater lovers who want spectacular sound and anamorphically enhanced picture can always watch the 2004 version of the movie also included in this set. But chances are good that they already picked up the trilogy edition of all three films, so their decision to buy the 2006 two-disc edition depends on how much they want the original film. The official LucasFilm stance is that this is an individual release of the 2004 version of The Empire Strikes Back, and the 1980 version of the film is merely a "bonus feature." Common speculation is that the only reason the original versions are seeing the official light of day at all is to undercut the booming black market for the laserdisc version. Star Wars fans will have to decide for themselves if that's worth the purchase. --David Horiuchi

Star Wars Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980 & 2004 Versions, 2-Disc Widescreen Edition) Wall

No one has said anything... yet.