drf wrote:George Lucas said that he liked the 2004 SEs...
He also liked the CGI changes, but that doesn't mean they're the version that's correct.
drf wrote:Also, the "original theatrical version" releases that Lucasfilm FINALLY released are also said to have horrible colors compared to earlier releases, almost as if they said "Here, you stupid preservationists, take it!".
That's pretty much the only reason it was released. And it was taken from the 1993 laserdisc. Naturally its colors will be different from the 2004 restoration.
(of course, I've read that some bootlegs of the 1993 laserdisc look better than that and is anamorphic.)
drf wrote:The one thing that really bugs me is the people who think that just because something is professional, that means it's correct.
I'm certainly not saying it's 110% correct either (I still have issues with the
Peter Pan restoration, but they're minor). I'm merely saying that when it boils down to which one I'd put my trust in, it's more than likely going to be professional restoration teams because that's what their career is in doing. They would/should know far more about film restoration than (once again) a group of fans, no matter how well-informed they think they are and no matter what kind of sources they acquire.
Using a non-Lowry example, I'll take the Warner Brothers and Richard Donner restoration/reconstruction of
Superman II over the fan-created "Restored International Edition" because even though the fan version was able to acquire several notable sources for their version, it is still amateur work compared to what an officially-sanctioned version would be.
And going back to
Star Wars, I've seen portions of the Phantom Edit, and while I agree, it makes some of the movie more bearable, it still doesn't make it the right/correct/proper version. A novelty, if anything.
(Then again, fan edits are different from preservationist edits, but it's still the same concept: a group of people who think they can do better than the official version.)
Albert