Movie News


Academy to screen "Star Wars"

By: Karl Schneider
Date: Friday, March 30, 2007
Source: Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

According to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the 1977 Best Picture nominee Star Wars will be screened as the first feature of the fourth installment of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' "Great To Be Nominated" series. The groundbreaking adventure epic will be shown Monday, April 23 at 7:30 p.m. at the Academy's Samuel Goldwyn Theater. Writer-director George Lucas; producer Gary Kurtz; editors Richard Chew and Paul Hirsch; visual effects team members John Dykstra, Richard Edlund and Robert Blalack; art director Leslie Dilley; and sound specialists Ben Burtt, Don MacDougall and George "Ray" West will participate in a post-screening panel discussion.

In Star Wars, a band of unlikely heroes led by Luke Skywalker joins the rebellion against the tyrannical Empire and launches an attack against its ultimate weapon, the Death Star. The film was nominated for ten Academy Awards® and took home Oscars® for Art Direction (John Barry, Norman Reynolds, Leslie Dilley; Set Decoration: Roger Christian), Costume Design (John Mollo), Film Editing (Paul Hirsch, Marcia Lucas, Richard Chew), Music – Original score (John Williams), Sound (Don MacDougall, Ray West, Bob Minkler, Derek Ball) and Visual Effects (John Stears, John Dykstra, Richard Edlund, Grant McCune, Robert Blalack). Benjamin Burtt, Jr. received a Special Achievement Award for the creation of the alien, creature and robot voices in the film. The film also received nominations for Actor in a Supporting Role (Alec Guinness), Directing (George Lucas), Best Picture (Gary Kurtz, producer) and Writing – Screenplay written directly for the screen (Lucas).


The Oscar-nominated animated short Jimmy the C will be screened prior to the feature.

Tickets for Star Wars will be available starting April 9 at a cost of $5 for the general public and $3 for Academy members and students with a valid ID. Tickets may be purchased by mail, in person at the Academy during regular business hours or, depending on availability, on the night of the screening when the doors open at 6:30 p.m. Tickets for Star Wars will not be available for purchase online.

Passes for all 17 screenings in part four of "Great To Be Nominated" will be available starting April 2 at a cost of $30 for the general public and $25 for Academy members and students with a valid ID. A $5 discount is available for those who wish to renew their passes from part one, two or three of the series.

Curtain time for all features is 7:30 p.m., and pre-show elements will begin at 7 p.m. The Academy is located at 8949 Wilshire Boulevard in Beverly Hills. For more information, call (310) 247-3600.

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Comments/Responses
1 2 > >>
Kevn • Mar 30, 2007, 07:15am •
Quick!! Everyone who can should attend and "demand" the OT on DVD in a new transfer. :)

You can be sure what is screened is not going to be the original 1977 version of the film though.

Captmathman • Mar 30, 2007, 10:15am •
I think Lucas would like to reedit the 1977 Academy Awards to better fit his vision, in which SW wins Best Picture after all.

galaga51 • Mar 30, 2007, 11:17am •
Most of the other changes I don't care much about good or bad, but...

Han Shot First!

There. It's been said. Everyone who goes should boo at that part if he doesn't.

steeldog • Mar 30, 2007, 11:20am •
Funny you should mention the original version on DVD. Everybody demanded it. It came out and nobody bought it. The "few" people that wanted it were very loud but evidently the minority.

JimSmash • Mar 30, 2007, 11:33am •
Will it be the Original or the Special Edition? Kind of inappropriate to screen the SE when the Original is the one being honored.

And most fans didn't buy the orig version dvd for 2 reasons:
1) It was only available if you bought the SE again.... fans will only buy so many copies of the crappy SE before they say "enough" .

2) The Original dvd version was taken from the laserdisc and was not anamorphic. So the dvd copy sold was the same quality as the bootleg dvds (laserdsic to dvd) everyone already has.

bjjdenver • Mar 30, 2007, 11:49am •
lol at captmathman!

drvertigo • Mar 30, 2007, 03:28pm •
Holy crap, Star Wars was nominated for an Oscar?? That must be the last time they laid any praise on a sci-fi film.

jppintar326 • Mar 30, 2007, 05:13pm •
It lost to Annie Hall at the Academy Awards and Woody Allen beat both Lucas and Spielberg (who was nominated for Close Encounters of the Third Kind but the film wasn't) for Best Director. The other nominees were Julia, The Turning Point, and the Goodbye Girl. Why Close Encounters and Saturday weren't nominated for best picture is a mystery that is unsolved to this day.

HansoSword • Mar 31, 2007, 05:42pm •
Where I absolutely agree that Star Wars should have won the Best Picture award hands down, I can't disagree with giving the Best Director award to Woody Allen.
Close Encounters was a fun film but the fact that Spielberg was even nominated for directing it shows what a weak year 1977 really was in the film industry

rudewordsmith • Mar 31, 2007, 05:48pm •
I'll never understand the bickering over the SE of Star Wars. So Lucas made changes to the flick so it could be what he, the creator of the story, wanted it to be. The SE versions aren't lesser films, just touched up.

In the end, it comes down to this: Uber fans are the only ones who really make a big stink, because they think that, having given love to the story, they own it. They think their opinions should outweigh the opinions and desires of the story teller. But if they could just sit down, watch the flicks with out their egos, they'd see they aren't bad changes...save for Han and Greedo's scene. But I chock that up to awkward special effects used in making Han lean. Just looks too...well, awkward.

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