Product details: - Product group: DVD
- Edition: DVD
- Publisher: Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment
- Format: AC-3, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
- Release Date: 2006-09-12
- Starring: Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, Billy Dee Williams
- Audience rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
- Encoding: Region 1
- Run Time: 136 minutes
- Studio: Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment
- Aspect Ratio(s): 2.35:1
- Manufacturer: Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment
- Brand: Star Wars
- Package Dimensions: 7.5 x 55 x 75 inches
Luke Skywalker tries to bring his father Darth Vader back to the light side of the force, while the Rebel army saves his friend Han Solo from Jabba the Hut. Genre: Science Fiction Rating: PG Release Date: 20-FEB-2007 Media Type: DVDCustomer reviews: A great ending to a great trilogy!, 2008-10-17 So what about the Ewoks, it's always been for kids. And this is the weakest of the three, only cause the rest are so great! See it.
To restore freedom to the galaxy, 2008-09-05 RETURN OF THE JEDI was the STAR WARS film which thrilled me most as a kid. I loved the ewoks, though now I find them to be a bit irritating. I loved the scenes in Jabba's palace, though now I think the use of Jim Henson's Creature Workshop was a bit over the top. I loved and still love the fast paced action sequences and the climactic lightsaber duel at the end. Looking back, I now prefer EMPIRE STRIKES BACK, A NEW HOPE, and even REVENGE OF THE SITH to this one. But JEDI still ranks high in my book, if for no other reason, it was just downright fun. And it still is.
The Special Edition of this film did little more than bog it down with a lot of useless junk. I refer primarily to the musical (using that word rather loosely) interlude in Jabba's palace. I'm sure I laughed at it first time I saw it in theaters in 1997, but since then only irritated feelings have I felt for that scene. The celebration scenes at the end were fine, but I don't think anyone ever missed their absence. Superimposing Hayden Christensen's image in "spirit" next to Alec Guiness and Yoda at the end seemed to me rather bizarre. Luke "saved" his father. When this happened his father did not bear Hayden Christensen's image but that of actor Sebastian Shaw. So why do we see a young Anakin at the end of the film instead of the old, dying man who got "redeemed"?
All this to say I don't think RETURN OF THE JEDI is worth watching in the special edition format; which makes me all the gladder that it has now been presented to us as we saw it in its original form in 1983.
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