Star Wars - Episode IV - Trailer (original 1977)
Star Wars - Episode IV - Trailer (original 1977)
Tagi : star wars trailer original 1977 episode iv
damjan193 napisał :"Somewhere in space,this may all be happening right now"LOL i thought its some kind of parody when i heard this lol.
Marbles471 napisał :
Godzillafreak99: Wow. That's just hard to imagine. I'm amazed that the first three films could ever seem "alien" to anybody--they're institutions. For most of us, these films (especially this one) are what "Star Wars" MEANS. Just like, say, "The Matrix" means "The Matrix," simple as that. Lucas and Fox have made a big mistake by lowering the visibility of the originals, because if you don't get 'em young, you lose 'em, and films eventually become obscure.
economyones napisał :
"It is all around us." Star Wars' Strength in the Force of 'Trusting Oneself' has never been clearer here: "Parsecs of Time". (Falcon). Fully Operation Wisdom, from Shakespear to the depths of Courage and, A New Hope... "Here they come!" (Tie Fighters). Vader "did not have him now". One in Million. Chances, or course...
hjfhjhgjj napisał :
Hey They farm water...
potatowave napisał :
If you're still a skeptic, consider this: How many times today are we fooled by a brilliant trailer that may even include the hippest music (which is never heard in the feature film - MGMT comes to mind), only to find that the final flick is mostly made up of torturous and unwatchable banter, acting or action scenes picked up from cutting-room floor segments of film that never made it to the trailer?
potatowave napisał :
#6 - The most overlooked point seems to get lost though - Out of unfinished and un-scored scenes, from a movie whose expectations were grim by most involved, and a weary studio who could give a toss about some idealistic come-of-age director with a 7.5 million pipe dream of a movie about a space farmer, came a half-witted trailer who's ironic treasure lies in the fact that it would usher in the most successful movie of all time.
tastypistachio napisał :
#5 - Indeed the effects may not be what they are today, but for 1976, when most of these were being developed by the director and his team, to have proprietary technology was just completely unheard of and truly ground breaking. Not to mention that we wouldn't have the effects today if it wasn't for Lucas' leap of faith in this department. Unfortunately the subsequent trilogy became an exercise in effects muscle-flexing.
tastypistachio napisał :
#3 - Most of the film had not been fully scored, hence the unsuitable drone. #4 - Regarding the color, trust me, it was much brighter in 1977. But like most things, with age, film deteriorates and so does its color.
potatowave napisał :
Folks, we need to get a grip here and realize a few things. #1 - Trailers aren't "shot". They're cut together from whatever completed sequences the director has approved. As was the case with this original trailer, most of the movie had not even been fully edited. Hence, the disjointed nature of the trailer.
potatowave napisał :
#2 - The studio's marketing department cuts the trailer together. As was the case, the studio, the marketing department and even most of the actors were under the impression this flick was going to tank, bust, sink, etc. Perhaps if the director, Lucas, had cut it, it might have felt a bit closer to the final movie.