*** Urgent Star Wars DVD News ***
#41
Posted 13 September 2004 - 12:26 AM
Ray Barnsbury
#43
Posted 13 September 2004 - 01:55 AM
K.M. :?
#44
Posted 13 September 2004 - 02:01 AM
Vaders voice has been re-processed throughout the entire film to get him to match the sequels.
Re processed or re-recorded by James Earl Jones?
K.M.
#45
Posted 13 September 2004 - 02:01 AM
Neil
#46
Posted 13 September 2004 - 02:27 AM
Original Mix vs 2004 Re-Mix
M4AFile
1.07 MB
If I open it with itunes it doesn't show up or play.
Wait,I disabled a iPod Service and iTunes Helper from the task manager,maybe that's it.
K.M.
#47
Posted 13 September 2004 - 05:30 AM
#48
Posted 13 September 2004 - 05:33 AM
#49
Posted 13 September 2004 - 02:10 PM
Neil
#50
Posted 13 September 2004 - 02:11 PM
#51
Posted 13 September 2004 - 04:11 PM
Why is this an urgent announcement?
Lucas butchered Williams score...geez what a surprise.
With this, and your poll I think you are just putting oil on an already to long burning fire.
Star Wars is dead, killed by it's father.
It's time for you to move on and embrace the genius of the LOTR trilogy.
As much as this pisses me off I have to agree with Steef here. Ok the DVD's are bad....er.......
Justin -Wondering what exactly Neil was expecting....
#52
Posted 13 September 2004 - 05:14 PM
I may hate the new re-mix to Superman - The Movie but at least it's consistent and competent. It doesn't have the drastic swings in quality that this track does. This sounds like a scratch track and not a completed work. We should all be thankful that Paramount handled the Indiana Jones re-mix last year. If Lucasfilm had done it, I don't know what we would have wound up with.
Neil
#53
Posted 13 September 2004 - 05:23 PM
#54
Posted 13 September 2004 - 05:34 PM
Oh yeah, this sound "bites".Just heard the soundbite. Ouch. :?
Neil
#55
Posted 13 September 2004 - 05:45 PM
Forget (you dont need to forgive) the DVDs, It will help you.
I'm saying this as a friend, not as SW SE nerd.
#56
Posted 13 September 2004 - 06:21 PM
So you find all of this acceptable? Interesting.Neil, get you laserdisc player, play your Star Wars laserdisc and soothe a little please.
Forget (you dont need to forgive) the DVDs, It will help you.
I'm saying this as a friend, not as SW SE nerd.
Neil
#57
Posted 13 September 2004 - 06:39 PM
When the X-Wing fighters do their first dive towards the Death Star and the music builds up to a crescendo (1:11 into "The Battle of Yavin" on the RCA CDs) the music inexplicably is dialled down to silence during the grand charge. After a few moments it's brought back up a little, but the damage has been done and the scene and score continue to play out, only not as powerfully as they should.
This pivotal action moment has been dramatically destroyed and is certainly cause for a recall. The true unfortunate part about this is that it is merely the icing on the cake for a set that is riddled with amateurish, offensive, disturbing and incompetent sound work through out the entire picture.
Neil
:cry: :cry: :cry: :cry:

Loretta
You are a strong black woman who has a very easy time controlling your man. You usually hurt your husband while having sex with him.
#58
Posted 13 September 2004 - 07:23 PM
I'm certainly not what would be considered a purist but this is a little much.
I mean I'm not against the changes to the films when they enhance it not cut out something that has been there for more then 25 years!!! Something this drastic is just horrid. That moment was always one of my favorite moments in the entire movie and now CRAP!!
Brian99_1 - who will have to deal with his VHS versions and rember that moment with the cd's
#59
Posted 13 September 2004 - 07:36 PM
So you find all of this acceptable? Interesting.
No one is saying that Neil. Just remember that for some people, Star Wars is a non-factor in their lives.
- Biff Tannen
#61
Posted 13 September 2004 - 09:16 PM
Having heard that file now, I concur with Neil about what has happened. It is as if some of the music was sacrificed at the expense at showing off the new 5.1 mix. Sure, the sound effects and dialogue are much crisper now -- but at what cost? I would like to think there was a mistake in the mixing process somewhere (this kind of thing has happened before). But it seems like wishful thinking right now.
#62
Posted 13 September 2004 - 10:07 PM
I have limited web space and don't want to upload too much. All I can recommend is that you get iTunes or an AAC plug-in for WinAmp.To back up my claim that this is an incompetent mix I have made this file.
Could you please make mp3 or some other format of this files?
Neil
#63
Posted 13 September 2004 - 11:51 PM
As to the clips themselves... This reminds me of when I first saw the Hayden head switch. Come on George, if you're going to insist on changing everything, at least do a competent job. The way the quality suddenly drops in that second clip is awful, did they have a chimp supervising the remix?
I don't understand the change in the first clip at all... Why anyone would want to dial out such an effective part of the score is beyond me.
- Danielle
#64
Posted 14 September 2004 - 12:50 AM
Look, if you were raising your children, and everybody started stepping in and saying you were doing a bad job and you should do this and not do this, you'd probably be offended. Yet, that's far more serious than a friggen' movie. At least some would have a point, especially if the kid grew up bad. Yet, you people are taking it more serious than that. Why?
I'm not thrilled about some of those changes, yet others don't bother me at all. Some sound completely acceptable, others seem lousy. Obviously, mixing out Williams music is low, but what can we do? We already own the CDs, the original versions, we know that he's done this before (every movie ever made has edits, I gave up caring all that much a while ago). We all own the originals on VHS or LD and have bootlegs of the original versions (or are seeking them*) so in the end... who really cares? Why does it matter? Is Star Wars your religion? Your parents? Is God being killed or something? Or your mom or dad being forever altered? I don't get the anger and hatred... it makes no sense to me. It even baffles me and almost makes me welcome the changes... the anti-bandwagon part of me. LOL
Anyways... i'm still getting the set, and I want the old versions to*. Gasp! I can enjoy all three or four versions!? LOL It's more to watch to me.
-Chris
PS: *= Hello? Someone with some high quality DVD-Rs from the original and 1997 laserdiscs please contact me, I want both versions to accompany my new DVD set when it's released. Trade or pay you for the cost... don't matter to me... contact me!
#65
Posted 14 September 2004 - 01:39 AM
K.M.
#66
Posted 14 September 2004 - 02:14 AM
Anybody answer this yet?
Vaders voice has been re-processed throughout the entire film to get him to match the sequels.
Re processed or re-recorded by James Earl Jones?
K.M.
#67
Posted 14 September 2004 - 02:52 AM
Neil
#68
Posted 14 September 2004 - 03:52 AM
Now, I may have noticed it, but shrugged my shoulders and think to myself that it STILL isn't as bad as what happened to Williams score on the prequels, especially AotC. I recently have begun to like that score more and more and the music editing throughout that movie is utterly atrocious. Like someone else said... it seems as if it was done by a chimp. There is no edit on the Classic Trilogy DVDs that comes close to the first and only edit of AotC (TPM as well, but lesser so). Any one of us on this website would have done a better job for FREE! If they paid someone to do that, it's a bad, bad joke.
In fact, most people will cheer at the louder SFX. In all the world, the only people who would notice or care will be likely only be found on this website (or a handful of other film score websites). it may be a shame, but in the overall picture, it doesn't matter much. I just wonder if Lucas is ashamed that he acts like a corrupt corporation like he says in that documentary? Hard to tell, but he's at least aware of it by his own words.
#69
Posted 14 September 2004 - 08:49 AM
#70
Posted 14 September 2004 - 09:47 AM
So you find all of this acceptable? Interesting.Neil, get you laserdisc player, play your Star Wars laserdisc and soothe a little please.
Forget (you dont need to forgive) the DVDs, It will help you.
I'm saying this as a friend, not as SW SE nerd.
Neil
See why you need to relax? You didnt understand a shit of what i meant.
Not caring about the star wars saga anymore is not acceptiong the changes - you do not like and dont have to see those movies anymore or pay for them. You just stick with your previous versions. And as i said, i was not speaking about forgiving Lucas, you can be angry with him forever.
Luke, who was talking about this with his brother and though some enhacements have been made over the SEs, the sound and music issues are invelievable awful. If the sound is never corrected in subsequent re-releases, i'm nowadays not sure if i would like to buy the set.
In the dolby surround 2.0 track happens the same?
Anyway, is there a possibility of the dialogue to be impossible to restore at some places? If that was the case i thik they should have kept the old mix :?

I hope Episode III is Called 'Revenge of the Sith'
#71
Posted 14 September 2004 - 10:39 AM
Bah... I'll hear it next week on the DVDs themselves. And these apparent problems don't bother me much. Anythings better than full-screen factory VHS's of the original versions and the Special Editions, and widescreen versions taped off TV, which are the only versions that I have now. Sheesh, guys... can the sound quality be bad than a 10 year old VHS tape that has ben watched more than a few times? Even when I get DVD-Rs of the laserdisc editions, I'll still want this DVD set, the picture quality on the commercials alone beats the living crap out of my VHS tapes.
#72
Posted 14 September 2004 - 09:01 PM
#73
Posted 14 September 2004 - 10:54 PM
Yes, the meddling with the music is very shameful, but, I really don't have a great problem with the voice differences. In fact, I probably would nopt have noticed if not for this thread. it isn't something that bothers me at all. The music edit bothers me, but if that'sthe only time that music was dialled out, then I can't complain without feling like a little kid who lost an M&M when there's more in the bag.
#74
Posted 14 September 2004 - 11:42 PM
#75
Posted 15 September 2004 - 12:07 AM
Again, I have the original mix first then five seconds of silence and then the 2004 re-mix.
Neil
#76
Posted 15 September 2004 - 12:22 AM
I guess restoring all the elements meant that they had to use various sources. The 35mm and 70mm versions of the original versions had different mixes or different takes of the looped dialogue. And some of that mix-and-match found its way into the SE editions. And perhaps they did that once again, even incorporating new stuff when the old was unuseable. (I'm just guessing on the reasoning behind all this and might be off.)
Sound changes or the lack of the original mix has not stopped me getting a lot of my all-time favorite films, whether it's Jaws, Superman, or The Godfather series. Sure, it's jarring to hear the new mix and no longer being able to hear a lot of the "signature" elements that I remember like the back of my hand. Even the restored Vertigo was criticized for having new foley effects and the old ones tossed away. But I always thought the use was subtle enough not to be an issue, and that they went to the trouble of finding period equipment so it would sound authentic.
As a Star Wars fan, though, I still have to support the franchise that changed my life 27 years ago, which is why I am still picking up the new set, regardless of the little and not-so-little changes made to the trilogy. But I have also decided to have the best of both worlds. I am going to take the plunge and get ahold of these originals on DVD, even if it is a .... you know, unofficial release.
May the Force be with all of us!
#77
Posted 15 September 2004 - 01:54 AM
I've pointed out missing music. I've pointed out wildly inconsistent dialogue passages. What about sound effects? Here is a clip where a sound effect is totally missing! Just before Threepios line, "I would much rather have gone with Master Luke than stay here with you." there should be some sort of alien sound effect. It almost sounds like an early version of E.T. purring. I don't know where this effect went to, but it was heard even in the 1997 mix.
I always thought that is the sound effect for the droid detector on the wall as they enter. This alerts the bartender to say "We don't serve their kind here." The droid detector is the silver box on the wall with the blue light in the shape of a cross (if I remember correctly).
If turning down the music over the death star wasn't bad enough.
#78
Posted 15 September 2004 - 01:57 AM
Neil
#79
Posted 15 September 2004 - 02:23 AM
Here is a clip where a sound effect is totally missing! Just before Threepios line, "I would much rather have gone with Master Luke than stay here with you." there should be some sort of alien sound effect. It almost sounds like an early version of E.T. purring. I don't know where this effect went to, but it was heard even in the 1997 mix. As I said in my initial post, this smacks of incompetence.
Neil
Uh,now I bet your the only one in the entire world who noticed that one.
K.M.
#80
Posted 15 September 2004 - 02:29 AM
Maybe. Even the new uncredited sound mixers didn't catch it. What a pity.Here is a clip where a sound effect is totally missing! Just before Threepios line, "I would much rather have gone with Master Luke than stay here with you." there should be some sort of alien sound effect. It almost sounds like an early version of E.T. purring. I don't know where this effect went to, but it was heard even in the 1997 mix. As I said in my initial post, this smacks of incompetence.
Neil
Uh,now I bet your the only one in the entire world who noticed that one.
K.M.
Neil
0 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users









