Star Wars 4k77 [verified] →

Posted on 11 Dec 2015 21:11 | 52489 reads | 0 shares
 

Star Wars 4k77 [verified] →

| Category | Score | Notes | |----------|-------|-------| | Image Authenticity | 9.5 | Minus 0.5 only because it’s not OCN. Best possible from a release print. | | Color Accuracy | 9.0 | Warmer than some memories, but matches surviving 1977 prints. | | Grain Preservation | 10 | Perfect. No DNR whatsoever. | | Audio Authenticity | 9.0 | Original mixes preserved; some hiss but no compression. | | Viewing Experience | 8.5 | Requires some tolerance for analog artifacts. Magical on a projector. |

If you have only ever watched the 2004 DVD, 2011 Blu-ray, or 2019 4K Disney+ versions, 4K77 will feel like an archaeological discovery. The first thing that hits you is the . It is heavy, organic, and alive. It’s not "noise"—it’s the signature of actual celluloid. The second thing: the color timing . star wars 4k77

Most 4K77 releases include the original 1977 theatrical stereo (or mono) mixes—no "Jedi Rocks," no "Victory Celebration" (which replaced Yub Nub in the SE). The dynamic range is narrower than a modern remix, but the directionality is charmingly aggressive. The lack of added bass thump reminds you this is a 1977 action movie, not a modern blockbuster. to listen on a good 2.0 or 5.1 system with no dynamic range compression. | Category | Score | Notes | |----------|-------|-------|

Lucasfilm’s official stance is that the "original" version no longer exists because Lucas made creative changes. 4K77 proves that’s a legal argument, not a physical one. The print scanned was a 1980s-era Technicolor release print—probably third-generation from the original negative, but crucially . | | Grain Preservation | 10 | Perfect