Star Wars 1977 Original Version Exclusive !exclusive! -

This feature would provide an exact digital reconstruction of the film as it appeared on May 25, 1977. Key components include: Original Visual Continuity : Includes the opening crawl without the "Episode IV: A New Hope" subtitle , which was only added for the 1981 re-release. The "Han Shot First" Guarantee

A 4K restoration presented without CGI additions, "Han shot second" edits, or modern audio tweaks.

Not the "Special Edition." Not the "1997 re-release." Not the version on Disney+ where Greedo shoots first (he didn't), or where a CGI Jabba the Hutt lumbers through Mos Eisley (he wasn't there). star wars 1977 original version exclusive

Do not settle for the Disney+ version. The real Star Wars is out there, waiting in the analog shadows.

When Star Wars premiered on May 25, 1977, it was billed simply as . The opening crawl contained no "Episode IV" or "A New Hope." This omission is crucial to the original experience—viewers were not watching a chapter in a sprawling saga, but a self-contained, high-stakes space opera. This feature would provide an exact digital reconstruction

For now, the true "Star Wars 1977 Original Version Exclusive" remains an underground phenomenon. It is a file passed from hard drive to hard drive, a secret treasure for those who value history over revisionism.

Unfortunately, Disney/Lucasfilm has buried the original theatrical version. The only official release was the 2006 DVD "bonus disc" which featured a non-anamorphic, standard-def scan of the 1993 LaserDisc. It’s ugly, but it’s the closest to the truth we have. Not the "Special Edition

Why "exclusive"? Because George Lucas famously called the original negatives "unfinished" and spent millions altering them. In 1997, he declared the Special Editions the "official" versions. The original theatrical cut has never been released on modern Blu-ray or 4K.

Explosions and laser fire were hand-inked or shot practically.

The restoration process for the involved painstaking attention to detail. Using the original 35mm film elements, a team of skilled technicians and archivists worked tirelessly to recreate the film in its original form. This meant carefully reassembling the original camera negative, precisely matching the color and sound to the 1977 release.