Download Star Wars: The Blackened Mantle (Prequel Edit / Re-write 1080p) torrent or any other torrent from the Video HD - Movies. Was Topher Grace's 85-minute recut trilogy genuinely the 'best possible edit of the Star Wars prequels given the footage released and available?' To test that claim, the creators of this film turned away from the. This three-year project was inspired by a challenge unwittingly issued by Peter Sciretta of /Film: was Topher Grace's 85-minute recut trilogy genuinely the 'best possible edit of the Star Wars prequels given the footage released and available?'
I seem to recall a 'Phantom Edit' version of Star Wars Episode I being created by fans in the wake of disappointment in the movie. Did this continue through the prequels, or did this practice stop?
If the entire prequel trilogy didn't get 'Phantom Edited', why? Did LucasArts attempt to quash this movement, or did a lack of fan interest in remaking the prequels halt the progress?
Brett White4 Answers
While Mike Nichols two edits are the most famous fanedits of the Prequel Trilogies, they are dozens upon dozens of Star Wars fanedits and many of them push the level of improvement and visual quality far beyond what Nichols achieved. Most faneditors focus on the Prequels, but some have ventured into the Original Trilogoy. There are over 60 Star Wars fanedits, and they can be found www.Fanedit.org, which is a site where faneditors of all kinds of movies (not just Star Wars) come to discuss and list fanedits.
For a list of all Star Wars fanedits, their Star Wars page is a great resource. In the interest of full disclosure, I'm a faneditor who has released edits of Episode I: Shadow of the Sith and Episode II The Republic Divided, and have Episode III in the works.
Topher Grace Star Wars Download
There are many fantastic edits out there, with a variety of approaches, due to the sheer volume of Star Wars fans out there with their own visions of how to improve the Prequel Trilogy.
Regarding your follow-up question about how Fanedit.org rates fanedits; the basic process is that anyone who has an account on the site is able to rate the edit (on a scale of 1-10 stars) and are encouraged to provide a written review. First time editors must have their first edit 'approved' in order to be formally listed on the site.
Reviewers are encouraged to evaluate the edit on both technical merit (are the edits seamless or jarring? Is the audio smooth or abrupt? How does the video quality compare to the original etc..) and terms of story (did the editor improve the story/film-watching experience? Did they try something bold and original?)
Currently the site does not provide a side-by-side comparison of each set (all Epiosode I edits, all Episode II edits etc) but there is a greatest Star Wars fanedit page, all edits on this page have received at minimum 5 votes averaging 8.3 or greater, or at least 10 votes averaging 8.0 or greater.
Due to their fame and history, Mike Nichols edits have the highest score of any traditional style edit for episodes I and II, although most familiar with the full spectrum of SW fanedits will admit they are both outdated, particularly Episode I, plus many gripe about his non-cannon style opening crawl which is a letter instead of a set-up.
Excluding Mike Nichols' work, these are some of the top rated for each episode:
Episode I
- Attack of the Federation : 8.76 (by faneditor JasonN)
- Shadow of the Sith : 8.47 (by L8wrtr)
- A Vergence in the Force : 8.08 (by ADigitalMan)
Episode II
- The Republic Divided (by L8wrtr) : 8.82
- Attack of the Clones - The Spence Cut (by Spence) : 8.6
- Path to the Dark Side - The Diamond Cut (by Diamond Wan) : 8
Episode III
- Dawn of the Empire (by L8wrtr) : 9.3 (27 votes)
- Revenge of the Sith - The Spence Edit (by Spence) : 9.4 (14 votes)
- Revenge of the Sith (Special Edition) (by Stankpac) : 9.4 (14 votes)
- Dark Force Rising (by Kerr) : 9.3 (20 votes)
Three edits deserve extra special attention in my opinion:
War of the Stars: A New Hope Grindhouse by The Man Behind the Mask (8.79 score). This is a mind-blowing edit of Episode IV. It is the most original, outlandish and bold version of Episode IV. Incorporating deleted footage, alternate sound sources and alternate angles, it creates Star Wars as you've never seen it.
Star Wars Episode IV A New Hope Special Edition Revisited by Adywan (9.93 score). This stunning edit of Episode IV took years to complete and seeks to address the staggering number of flaws that Lucas didn't address in his special edition. From color timing to improved special effects, once you watch this, it becomes your 'go-to' version of Episode IV.
Attack of the Clones: Super 8 cut by Rogue-theX. (9.27 score). Attack of the Clones in 34 minutes, as if it were a super 8 cheap cut of the film. Fun, fast and original.
Wikipedia's 'Phantom Edit' page mentions that in addition to Star Wars Episode I.I: The Phantom Edit, there was also an edit of Episode II, re-named Star Wars Episode II.I: Attack of the Phantom. Apparently, since the original release of these edits, the 'Phantom Editor' has since been revealed to be Mike J. Nichols. I have not heard of any mention of an Episode III edit.
ZootZootI think there was only the edit of The Phantom Menace - I'm sure it's still around on some Torrent networks.
Basically, any scene with Jar-Jar was carefully edited to remove this character (along with references to him) - and I think annoying things like Anakin's 'yippee' were cut out.
Bear in mind - without access to stored footage, the edit could only cut footage, not introduce new scenes.
DVK-on-Ahch-ToThere is also a cut called Episode 3.1, available through torrents, which emulates the (never to be released) cut of actor Topher Grace by placing all three movies into a single movie, taking fan editing to a rather enjoyable extreme.
Topher Grace Star Wars Edit
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Almost every 'Star Wars' fan has dreamed of a world where Jar Jar Binks never appeared in the prequels. Let's suspend disbelief for a moment and immerse ourselves in an alternate reality made possible by Vimeo user Double Digit, who recut the prequels into one, more sensible sub-3-hour film. Unfortunately, there's still a little Jar Jar, but most of that silliness has been removed.
'Star Wars: Turn to the Dark Side' cuts out a lot of extraneous story lines. The focus, instead, is on Anakin Skywalker and his relationship with Padmé Amidala. If nothing else, this cut will save you from fast-forwarding your way past your least-favorite parts of the prequels.
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The whole affair kicks off with the classic logo and crawl and then quickly jumps into a sweet Darth Maul lightsaber duel. Double Digit has wisely left in a good dose of the fun action set pieces. The editor says the refashioned film required over 100 video and audio edits to 'heighten the main character's tragic fall from grace.'
This isn't the first time someone has taken a stab at rebuilding the prequels. Actor Topher Grace made a legendary unreleased recut of the films that clocks in at a very slim 85 minutes. He named it 'Star Wars: The Editor Strikes Back.' That version is what inspired Double Digit to make this latest recut.
'Turn to the Dark Side' can act as a crash-course to get you ready ahead of the release of the new 'Star Wars' film in 2015. That's assuming the recut video doesn't get taken down.
Topher Grace Star Wars Edit Download
(Via Kotaku)