![]() ![]() Rise of the Beasts stars Hamilton actor Anthony Ramos alongside Judas and the Black Messiah's Dominique Fishback and is planned as the beginning of a new Transformers trilogy. and is set to take place between the events of Bumblebee and Bay's initial entry into the series. The movie is being directed by Steven Caple Jr. A seventh film in the series, titled Transformers: Rise of the Beasts, is currently slated for a Jrelease date. 1984 saw both the debut of the Marvel Comics series as well as the first Transformers cartoon, which catapulted the franchise into the mainstream.īay and Spielberg's Transformers spawned four sequels all directed by the former, as well as a Bumblebee spin-off film helmed by Travis Knight. Then Marvel editor-in-chief Jim Shooter was tasked with crafting a backstory for the figures, with further character design and creation duties being given to writer Dennis O'Neil. The Transformers franchise has been a staple of pop culture since the 80s when Hasbro purchased the rights to the Japanese toy lines Micro Change and Diaclone. Lois is already willing to throw herself from a building, despite there being no chance of survival if shes wrong. One example is at the beginning of the Donner Cut where Lois jumps out of a window to force Clark to reveal his secret identity as Superman. But it does make the point that if fans are willing to put in the time and effort to restore the version of "Star Wars" they want in their collections, why should it not be sold officially? Your move, Disney.RELATED: Sony Believed Racism Would Kill Bad Boys' Overseas Box Office, Says Michael Bay The theatrical version of Superman II is undoubtedly better in how it handles Lois Lane. Star Wars has around 174,000 frames."Ĭlearly, this fan release of the film is not legal and will most likely be shut down by Disney and Lucasfilm lawyers soon. Manual cleanup alone took an average of one minute per frame. "Why did it take over three years to complete?" YouTube user The Star Wars Trilogy wrote in its video description. Unlike the fan-made " Star Wars Despecialized" edition which is made using multiple sources including the laserdisc, Blu-ray, 16mm print transfer and various audio dubs, this "Silver Screen Theatrical Version" from Team Negative One is from the 35mm theatrical print of "Star Wars." But what also is most impressive are Team Negative One's videos showing how they managed to transform the 35mm print into a version comparable to, and in some cases, better than the official Blu-ray release. This restored version shows scenes that die-hard fans care about deeply, like Han Solo shooting Greedo first. ![]() If you don't mind scratches and poor sound quality, the unrestored versions of the films from laserdisc were made available as bonus material on a 2006 DVD release.īut in this new version made by fans calling themselves Team Negative One, each frame has been painstakingly restored from a 35mm theatrical print of "Star Wars." The high-def print was released on a movie message board in January, under the name "Silver Screen Theatrical Version," according to Movie Mezzanine blog. A group of ambitious fans who call themselves Team Negative One decided to restore and release the original version online.įans can already legally buy Episodes IV, V and VI on DVD and Blu-ray, but those are actually the special editions that Lucas altered. Luckily, you don't need to go to the dark side to get back those precious original moments. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |