T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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340.1 | | 12138::WEISSMAN | | Thu Sep 30 1993 13:56 | 3 |
| Bladerunner
The Last Picture Show
Brazil
|
340.2 | CE3K | 38110::PHILLIPS | Music of the spheres. | Thu Sep 30 1993 14:05 | 4 |
| Most versions of "Close Encounters Of The Third Kind" being sold these
days have some additional footage.
--Eric--
|
340.3 | Lots of Movies | 7299::PETERS | Be nice or be dog food | Thu Sep 30 1993 15:08 | 8 |
| All of the supermans
all the star Treks
Sparticus
Lots of recut r's come out with uncut unrated versions.
Basic Instinct
Body of Evidence
Wild Orcids
Jeff Peters
|
340.4 | | 6240::TAI | | Thu Sep 30 1993 15:30 | 4 |
| Fatal Attraction (original ending)
Terminator II (new coming THX LD release)
JFK
|
340.5 | I'll be looking for some of those! | 18155::LAING | Soft-Core Cuddler*Jim Laing*223-4793*PKO3 | Thu Sep 30 1993 16:01 | 5 |
| Of those listed, it would be interesting (and helpful) to know if they
are available on VHS, LD, or both (I guess that could get confusing,
since it may differ in various countries, and change over time) ...
Jim
|
340.6 | interesting | 42110::CABEL | | Fri Oct 01 1993 09:48 | 16 |
| I'm interested also . The STAR TREK films I-V what extra footage do
they have . The ones I have seen say un-cut but they seem to be just as
long as the ordenary pan and scan versions .
other listings are:-
ALIEN
BLADERUNNER
AIRPLANE I&II
JFK
DANCES WITH WOLVES
CONAN THE BARRBERIAN
STAR WARS sage
......./ED...
|
340.7 | Laserdiscs | 29052::WSA038::SATTERFIELD | Close enough for jazz. | Fri Oct 01 1993 15:12 | 9 |
|
Depends on how you define special edition of course. There are hundreds fitting
your description on laserdisc, including most of the Criterion Collection.
LD's are a different market than tapes and special editions are much more
common because of that.
Randy
|
340.8 | | 45239::ALFORD | lying Shipwrecked and comatose... | Mon Oct 04 1993 08:54 | 7 |
|
Re: .4
> Terminator II (new coming THX LD release)
any idea what extra bits this will have in it ?
|
340.9 | | 29563::WSA038::SATTERFIELD | Close enough for jazz. | Tue Oct 12 1993 15:20 | 19 |
|
re .8
I was given a 8" preview disc at my local laserdisc store. It shows various
bits from the restored material. Among other things it includes what looks
like a dream sequence with Conner.
I picked up the new _Star Wars: The Ultimate Collection_ set the other day.
It's really, really nice (as it should be for $250). It comes in a terrific
black box, the three films are individually packaged and theres a nice
pamphlet describing the film contents and a hardback book on George Lucas. The
films themselves are THX remastered and the video and audio are incredible.
They are CAV of course and include lots of extras, including interviews with
Lucas and other creative personnel.
Randy
|
340.10 | 250$ Wow!!!! | 24728::WOOD | | Fri Oct 15 1993 11:40 | 8 |
|
Now this is a person who loves the movies. I bet Those disks would look
great on my 48 inch surround sound tv.
-=-=-R~C~W-=-=-
|
340.11 | Where's the movie I saw at the movies? | 51219::GARLICK_N | | Tue Oct 19 1993 04:32 | 37 |
| Basically, I think these are a mistake.
While it is interesting to see the extra footage, more often than not
it ruins the pacing and structure of what was already a good movie. For
example, although I think the scene in which we learn about Ripley's
daughter in 'Aliens' adds considerably to the emotional impact of the
film, none of the rest of the scenes do. They're interesting, but not
vital. The same goes for the interior of the spaceship in 'Close
Encounters'. The film peaks with Roy deciding to go in; anything after
that is just decoration. And as for releasing 'Godfathers I, II and
III' in one huge chronological movie, all I can ask is why? The
structure of the original films (especially II) very precisely
positions scenes in relation to each other. So if in the original, Vito
does something cruel, this is played off against an equally cruel act
of his son. Put them all into chronological order and you lose a huge
chunk of the films' impact.
I like to see the extra footage, and I don't mind paying the extra cash
for the films (which is probably what the studios had in mind in the
first place), but I'd like the chance to see the original film without
necessarily having to see the additional scenes. Put them at the end,
as has been done with 'Fatal Attraction', 'Alien' and 'The War Of The
Roses'. Put them at the end with all the extras. Or do what The Criterion
Collection have done with 'Close Encounters': make the laserdisc
programmeable. In other words you, the viewer, can decide whether you want
to see the extra footage or not.
It used to be that I sat in the cinema and wondered what a
widescreen movie was going to look like on TV when half the picture was
missing and the network censors had hacked it to pieces. Now I sit
there and wonder whether I'll be able to buy a copy of what I'm seeing
or whether I'll have to put up with what somebody else has decided to
add for my 'increased viewing pleasure'.
Nick
|
340.12 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Tue Oct 19 1993 10:55 | 18 |
| > <<< Note 340.11 by 51219::GARLICK_N >>>
> -< Where's the movie I saw at the movies? >-
All movies are contrivances, balanced by compromises among artistic,
commercial, technical, and other considerations.
Why is the movie you saw at the theatre *>THE<* movie? It's just *>A<* version
of the raw materials that were available and useful to the creators
of the endeavor at the time.
Movies go into pre-release and get changed based on early audience reviews.
Which is the real movie?
Movies get edited for pace and panorama for the change from large to small
screen. Why can't the director re-edit a large screen version to optimize it
for the small screen?
Which is the real movie?
- tom]
|
340.13 | Ya | 24728::WOOD | | Tue Oct 19 1993 11:15 | 9 |
|
I would think that most Extended versiions are the the directors
cut or in other words, what you would have seen if the studio bosses
had not snuck they're weasel noses in.
-=-=-R~C~W-=-=-
|
340.14 | Define "origional"? Define "normal"? | DECWET::HAYNES | | Tue Oct 19 1993 19:46 | 19 |
| Not to mention that often the movie that comes out in video is an
edited version, a few seconds cut here and there, which don't seem like
much but shorten the amount of tape used. Superman The Movie was one, I
hadn't realized it until I happen to go to see it on the big screen
again a couple of years ago that the helicopter scene was considerably
longer, not additional scenes, but a few seconds added to spots, and
since I have noticed the same thing in several video's I've seen. So
the "origional version" is really in the eye of the beholder. You can
figure "origional" to be the unedited footage before they chop it up
for the movie, the video version, the edited version which "adds" the
origional footage that was cut out, or whatever.
My personal opinion is I accept the version I see in the movie theater
as the origional version, the video as the "public release" version, and
additional added footage as the "origionally intended" version.
To each his own.
MBH
|
340.15 | Oops! | DECWET::HAYNES | | Tue Oct 19 1993 19:47 | 2 |
| Forgive my spelling of original as origional, a fallback of years past.
|
340.16 | More is sometimes a lot less | 51219::GARLICK_N | | Thu Oct 21 1993 04:02 | 41 |
| Points taken.
'Where's the original movie?' is a good question and, as we're sitting
on the edge of interactive video, one that may become even more
academic. (I've heard that 'Demolition Man' had an extra two days
tacked onto the schedule to cover footage for the interactive version,
which, if I understand the whole business correctly, I'm not going to
see in the cinema.)
And if we're talking about films restored to the way they were 'meant' to
be seen, I have to admit that I think Sergio Leone's first cut of 'Once
Upon A Time In America' is brilliant. I originally saw the US 2 hour
'chronological' version and it was atrocious. The 3+ hour version he
delivered to the studio (and which was shown in Europe) is superb. I
also like the restored version of 'Lawrence of Arabia' and 'The Abyss'.
I do admit that there are times when the practice works.
But, as I said originally, I think it's not a good idea. Chopping,
changing and adding often leads to less satisfactory versions than the
original. Just because it was shot doesn't mean that we have to see it.
'Dances With Wolves' is great at 3 hours. At 4 I'm ready to jump out
the window. The rejigged 'Godfather' saga gets to be an endurance test,
not a treat. And 'Blade Runner', while losing that terrible narration,
has added shots that change the whole direction of the plot. (I don't
want to get into the details and spoil it for people who haven't seen
it.) One last example. In 'Aliens' (the special edition) we get to see
LV-426 before the aliens attack. We see Newt as a little girl. When the
marines arrive, after a journey so long it required them to go into
hypersleep and which they started only after there had been no messages
from LV-426 for some time, Newt is exactly the same age. How can she be
the same age? In the original version, the question never arose: the
marines arrived, they found Newt, the story unfolded.
At the risk of arguing myself in a circle, I do admit that some
special/extended versions are worth it. But I also think that more is
sometimes a lot less, and I have a feeling that as the 'Special
Editions' pile up, we're going to see a lot less.
Nick
|
340.17 | Whilest on the subject..... | DECWET::HAYNES | | Thu Oct 21 1993 14:36 | 8 |
| On the subject of edited versions, I heard over the radio that the
movie THE PROGRAM will now not have the scene with the football players
lying down in the middle of a highway, apparently some high schoolers
saw the preview scenes, and tried it. One kid was killed, the other
seriously injured. Disney for some reason takes a very dim view of
copy-cat stupidity, and ordered the scene removed.
MBH
|
340.18 | Stupidity can be fatal, natural selection | 24728::WOOD | | Fri Oct 22 1993 12:11 | 8 |
|
How can you protect people from they're own stupidity??????
It's just like TV violence, if you don't want your kids to
watch it, TURN IT OFF or remove the TV, it's just that simple.
-=-=-R~C~W-=-=-
|
340.19 | First run is it. | 17655::LAYTON | | Fri Oct 22 1993 14:17 | 15 |
| The best Director does not always make the best Film Editor. There are
many films out there that failed because they were too long. Now, they
may have been 90 minutes, but should have been 60, but who's gonna pay
to see a 60 minute movie? Shoulda been a TV show, maybe?
Many directors don't have a clear vision of their movie going in; that
vision should include "How can I state this plot in 90 minutes (or 2
hrs. or whatever) without losing essentials?"
The definitive version of the film should be the one that asks the
highest price; the first run theatre release. If the studio cuts the
film to fit the time slot, the Director, and Producer have
miscommunicated the project.
Carl
|
340.20 | Uncle Bob lives | 24728::WOOD | | Mon Oct 25 1993 13:04 | 17 |
|
I saw a show last night that relates to this topic. This show was
about T2: Terminator 2 and had an interview with James Cameron
the director. In this show they showed scenes that James had cut
out of the theatrical release. He said that when putting a movie
together, it's a learning expierence. He said not until he saw
the whole movie did he realize that he didn't need those scenes
for continuity. It was a facinating look into how a director
makes choices about what goes in/out of a movie. He said
the cut scenes would be added to the end of the LD for informational
purposes. James said a lot more about how a movie is put together
in this show but I don't remember it all.
-=-=-R~C~W-=-=-
|
340.21 | VERY interesting! | DECWET::HAYNES | | Mon Oct 25 1993 13:21 | 4 |
| I just got through watching that myself. Very facinating insights and
info.
MBH
|
340.22 | Lawrence of Arabia | 12138::WEISSMAN | | Mon Oct 25 1993 16:22 | 2 |
| The restored version of Lawrence of Arabia was actually the original theatrical
release. When it was re-released in the '70s they cut about 20 minutes.
|
340.23 | I | 42253::BOWEO | Be a virus, see the world. | Thu Oct 28 1993 06:18 | 9 |
|
Not exactly special but a bit of an anomally
I've seen two versions of Home Alone: When Kevin is in the supermarket
in one version he is quized by the check-out operator and in the other he
gets quized by the store manager.
|
340.24 | (moved from 318) | AIAG::WEISSMAN | | Thu Apr 27 1995 17:44 | 7 |
| >>Does anybody know of any other specail edition , directors cut movies
>> that are available.
These days there are lots of them in the US that typically add back in scenes
that were cut to get an R rating. But in terms of the intent of your note, two
of my favorites that pop to mind are: Bladerunner and The Last Picture Show
|