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- Harmy Star Wars Despecialized Edition Iso Download Full
- Harmy Star Wars Despecialized Edition Iso Download Full
The Despecialized Edition is the years-long work of a diverse group of people who have taken elements from many different sources and created the ultimate version of the first Star Wars film. Harmy has completed work on his v2.5 Despecialized Edition and it is superb. Did I read it right that there are things in the original Star Wars that are not restored in. I actually have 2.5 downloaded and did a screen comparison while watching the burned. These are Blu-Ray ISO's that I am using.
Star Wars - The Original Trilogy [Harmy Despecialized Edition]
Star Wars - The Original Trilogy [Harmy Despecialized Edition]
AVCHD | ISO | 6hr 18mn | 1280x720 | AVC -> 6300 kbps | AC3 5.1 640 kbps | 24 GB
Science Fiction | Language: Multi | Subtitles: Multi | NitroFlare/1Fichier/Mega
AVCHD | ISO | 6hr 18mn | 1280x720 | AVC -> 6300 kbps | AC3 5.1 640 kbps | 24 GB
Science Fiction | Language: Multi | Subtitles: Multi | NitroFlare/1Fichier/Mega
Star Wars is an American epic space opera franchise centered on a film series created by George Lucas. It depicts the adventures of various characters 'a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away'. The Harmy Despecialized Edition is the years-long work of a diverse group of people led by Petr Harmy who have taken elements from many different sources and created the ultimate version of the first Star Wars film.
Star Wars - The Original Trilogy [Harmy Despecialized Edition]
Star Wars Episode IV - A New Hope [Harmy Despecialized Edition v2.7] 720p AVCHD ISO
This is a reconstruction of the 1977 theatrical version of STAR WARS. The original shots were painstakingly restored using various sources (listed below) and the film received an extensive shot by shot colour correction based on a fade free 1977 I.B. Technicolor Print.
Version v2.5 offers few more little tweaks to the picture and contains an unprecedented number of audio options, including lossless DTS-HD tracks for the original mixes (the original 70mm six-track was recreated by hairy_hen, the original stereo mix was captured from LaserDisc PCM and fixed up by hairy_hen and the original mono mix was restored by Belbucus from a VHS recording), an isolated score, four different commentary tracks, dubbing tracks in ten different languages and dialects and a British commentary for visually impaired.
Note from Towne32: Version 2.6 featured a shot-by-shot color adjustment that I performed on Harmy's 2.5 MKV source. Harmy was informed after the release of 2.5 that the Technicolor reference scans that he based his color grading on were raw scans and not corrected to the way the print actually looks projected. Furthermore, Star Wars was the final major Technicolor film produced in the West, and the quality control in the UK lab during those final days was poor, resulting in less than ideal color including the prominent green tones that Harmy then incorporated into Despecialized Remastered. The color of 2.6+ is still vibrant, but some of the strong overtones and inconsistencies of 2.5, based on those raw scans, have been reduced or removed. Additionally, several shots that were based on the low resolution 2006 GOUT DVD in 2.5 have been upgraded using Team Negative 1's 35mm 'Silver Screen Edition' after I manually cleaned, stabilized, degrained, and color corrected the shots.
Version 2.7 is of higher quality, thanks to Harmy. He sent me the lossless encode of his previous release, allowing me to encode 2.7 without any generational encoding losses. Additionally, I corrected an error where several Mos Eisley shots were actually using GOUT-based footage in 2.6, rather than the 35mm sources of Harmy's 2.5. Many additional color changes were made to correct minor inconsistencies and to remove green tones from some desert scenes, as well as the Death Star interior walls in some cases. The 'A Long Time Ago' card is now from a cleaned up version of the 35mm scan. And the Greedo subtitles have been replaced with an impressive rendering of the 35mm text made by CatBus. Additionally, Darth Lucas rotoscoped the lightsaber blade in Ben's hut from the 35mm print. The version 2.7 MKV includes several subtitle and audio dub languages not available previously, also thanks to CatBus, including a fixed Castilian track.
************************
VIDEO SOURCES:
1) STAR WARS Episode IV A New Hope Official Blu-Ray 2011 (Preliminary colour correction by You_Too)
2) STAR WARS 2006 Bonus DVD (sourced from the 1993 Definitive Edition Laser Disc Master - upscales by Dark Jedi, You_Too and Harmy)
3) Star.Wars.Episode.IV.A.New.Hope.1977.720p.HDTV.x264-DON (2004 DVD Version)
4) STAR WARS 1997 Special Edition (Reivax DTV capture)
5) Custom mattes, 35mm and 70mm film cell scans etc.
6) Team Negative1 35mm 'Silver Screen Edition' LPP print scan
7) Puggo Grande (1977 16mm print transfer)
Technical Specifications:
________________________
CONTAINER: AVCHD
SIZE: 7.9 GB
VIDEO: 1280x720p H264 23.976 fps
AUDIO: (all Dolby Digital) Special thanks to hairy_hen and Belbucus
TRACK 1) 5.1 1977 70mm six track mix @ 640Kbps
TRACK 2) 2.0 1977 stereo mix @ 224Kbps
TRACK 3) 1.0 1977 mono mix @ 128Kbps
TRACK 4) 2.0 Isolated score @ 224Kbps (hairy hen)
TRACK 5) 2.0 1993 LD Audio Commentary @ 192Kbps (silence filled with 1993 LD 2.0)
TRACK 6) 2.0 2004 DVD Audio Commentary @ 192Kbps
TRACK 7) 2.0 2004 starwars.com Audio Commentary @ 192Kbps
TRACK 8) 2.0 2011 BD Archival Interviews Audio Commentary @ 192Kbps
Subtitles: (Project Threepio) Special thanks to CatBus
- English (en), Chinese (Simplified) (zh-cn), Spanish (es), French (fr), German (de)
Star Wars - The Original Trilogy [Harmy Despecialized Edition]
Star Wars Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back [Harmy Despecialized Edition v2.0] 720p AVCHD ISO
![Harmy Star Wars Despecialized Edition Iso Download Harmy Star Wars Despecialized Edition Iso Download](/uploads/1/3/3/2/133277842/175898506.jpg)
This is a reconstruction of the 1980 theatrical version of The Empire Strikes Back. The original shots were painstakingly restored using various sources (listed below) and the film received an extensive shot by shot colour correction.
The AVCHD version contains Dolby Digital encodes of the latest versions of the preservations of the original audio mixes, three different commentary tracks and an isolated score.
VIDEO SOURCES:
1) STAR WARS Episode V The Empire Strikes Back Official Blu-Ray 2011
2) STAR WARS Episode V The Empire Strikes Back 2006 Bonus DVD
(sourced from the 1993 Definitive Edition Laser Disc Master - upscale by Mattman Omega)
3) Adywan's THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK 1997 Special Edition Reconstruction 1080p MKV (HDTV source)
4) The Empire Strikes Back 1997 Special Edition ('TB' DTV capture)
5) Team Negative1 35mm print scan
6) Custom mattes, 35mm film cell scans etc.
7) Adywan's THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK 1980 Theatrical Reconstruction NTSC DVD
8) Puggo Strikes Back (16mm print transfer)
Technical Specifications:
________________________
FORMAT: AVCHD DISC (ISO)
SIZE: 7.9GB (DVD9)
VIDEO: 1280x720p H264 23.976 fps
AUDIO: (all Dolby Digital) Special thanks to hairy_hen, Schorman, ABC, Puggo and Mavimao
TRACK 1) 5.1 1980 mix @ 640Kbps
TRACK 2) 2.0 1980 mix @ 224Kbps
TRACK 3) 1.0 1980 16mm mono mix @ 112Kbps
TRACK 4) 2.0 Isolated score @ 224Kbps
TRACK 5) 1.0 1993 LD Audio Commentary @ 64Kbps (silence filled with 1993 LD 2.0)
TRACK 6) 1.0 2004 DVD Audio Commentary @ 64Kbps
TRACK 7) 1.0 2011 BD Archival Interviews Audio Commentary @ 64Kbps
SUBTITLES: (Project Threepio) Special thanks to CatBus
English [eng], Chinese [chi], American Spanish [spa], Castilian Spanish [spa], Arabic [ara], Russian [rus], Brazilian Portuguese [por], Japanese [jpn], French [fre], German [ger], Turkish [tur], Korean [kor], Italian [ita], Polish [pol], Ukrainian [ukr], Dutch [dut], Hungarian [hun], Czech [cze], Greek [gre], Swedish [swe], Finnish [fin], Danish [dan], Norwegian [nor]
Star Wars - The Original Trilogy [Harmy Despecialized Edition]
Star Wars Episode VI - Return of the Jedi [Harmy Despecialized Edition v2.5] 720p AVCHD ISO
SOURCES:
1) Star Wars Episode VI Return of the Jedi Official Blu-Ray (2011)
2) LPP 35mm print scans (Team Negative 1 and Poita)
3) Schorman's HDTV Preservation - Return of the Jedi (2004 DVD version)
4) RETURN OF THE JEDI 2006 Bonus DVD (sourced from the 1993 Definitive Edition Laser Disc Master - upscaled by Dark Jedi)
5) RETURN OF THE PUG (1983 16mm print transfer)
6) Custom mattes
Technical Specifications:
________________________
FORMAT: AVCHD DVD9 (7,9GB)
VIDEO: 1280x720p H264 23.976 fps
AUDIO:
TRACK 1) 5.1 1983 mix @ 640Kbps
TRACK 2) 2.0 1983 mix @ 224Kbps
TRACK 3) 2.0 Isolated score @ 224Kbps
TRACK 4) 2.0 1993 LD Audio Commentary @ 192Kbps (silence filled with 1993 LD 2.0)
TRACK 5) 2.0 2004 DVD Audio Commentary @ 96Kbps
TRACK 6) 2.0 2011 BD Archival Interviews Audio Commentary @ 96Kbps
Star Wars - The Original Trilogy [Harmy Despecialized Edition]
42a67cc6
Star Wars - The Original Trilogy [Harmy Despecialized Edition]
Star Wars - The Original Trilogy [Harmy Despecialized Edition]
The ISO images can be burned to a DVD-DL and should work in most Blu-Ray players.
![Harmy star wars despecialized edition iso download free Harmy star wars despecialized edition iso download free](/uploads/1/3/3/2/133277842/288930323.jpg)
You can also extract the movie as an mkv with MakeMKV, or extract the ISO contents by mounting in Windows or with WinRar/PowerISO/UltraISO, then convert the m2ts to mkv with mkvmerge.
[NOTE: Return Of The Jedi will not extract/mux with MakeMKV so it has to be done with mkvmerge]
More Information
http://originaltrilogy.com/topic/Harmys-STAR-WARS-Despecialized-Edition-HD-V25-MKV-IS-OUT-NOW/id/12713
http://www.polygon.com/2014/8/18/6030725/star-wars-hd-despecialized-edition
Download A New Hope
http://nitroflare.com/folder/10315/L17NXLUFOSA
The Empire Strikes back
http://nitroflare.com/folder/10315/L19NXLVRFU0I
Return Of The Jedi
http://nitroflare.com/folder/10315/L12NXLVJPVEoyNQ
A New Hope
https://mega.nz/#F!IstwiRZC!7pWJwCT37pcBvviybSHKFg
The Empire Strikes back
https://1fichier.com/dir/idtnMyMv
Return Of The Jedi
https://1fichier.com/dir/sLg0tiId
PW: harmy
https://mega.nz/#F!IstwiRZC!7pWJwCT37pcBvviybSHKFg
The Empire Strikes back
https://1fichier.com/dir/idtnMyMv
Return Of The Jedi
https://1fichier.com/dir/sLg0tiId
PW: harmy
Download full movie Star Wars - The Original Trilogy [Harmy Despecialized Edition]
Blu-ray cover
Harmy's Despecialized Edition is a series of fan restorations of the first three films in the George Lucas-created Star Wars franchise: Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi, intended to reproduce their appearance as originally shown in cinemas. The edits were created by a team of Star Wars fans led by Petr 'Harmy' Harmáček, an English teacher from Plzeň, Czech Republic. The original Star Wars trilogy was released theatrically by 20th Century Fox for Lucasfilm between 1977 and 1983. Subsequent releases on home media, such as the 1997 'Special Edition' releases, introduced significant changes to the films, including additional scenes, altered sound-effects, and new computer-generated imagery – these changes were met with a generally poor response from critics and fans. As of 2019, the films are no longer commercially available in their original theatrical releases.
Harmáček felt that altering the films in this way constituted 'an act of cultural vandalism', and in 2010 was inspired to create his own series of fan edits that restored the theatrical releases in high definition. With no experience in professional film editing, he taught himself as he went, using programs such as Avisynth and Adobe After Effects. Taking the 1993 LaserDisc releases as a guide and a majority of source material from the 2011 Blu-ray releases, Harmáček and a team of eight other fans constructed the edits over many thousands of hours of work. In 2011, one year after the project had begun, the first version of Harmy's Despecialized Edition was published online. Updated versions have been created in the years that followed.
As a fan edit, Harmy's Despecialized Edition cannot be legally bought or sold, and is 'to be shared among legal owners of the officially available releases only'. Consequently, the films are only available via various BitTorrent trackers and through specialized rapid download programs using file sharing sites. Reaction to the project has been positive: Nathan Barry of Wired praised the films as 'an absolute joy to watch', while Gizmodo described them as 'very, very good'. Sean Hutchinson of Inverse placed Harmy's Despecialized Edition at number one on his list of the best Star Wars fan edits and called them 'the perfect pre-1997 way to experience the saga'.
- 2Production
Background[edit]
Star Wars logo
The original Star Wars trilogy was a Lucasfilm production released theatrically by 20th Century Fox between 1977 and 1983, and was subsequently released on home media during the 1980s and 1990s. The films were distributed by CBS/Fox Video on several formats, such as VHS, Betamax, and LaserDisc.[1] In 1997, to coincide with the 20th anniversary of Star Wars, Lucas re-released new cuts of the trilogy to theaters, naming them the 'Special Editions'. The Special Editions made a number of changes to the original releases, including additions such as enhanced digital effects, previously unreleased scenes, and entirely new CGI sequences.[2]
Reaction to the new cuts was mixed, with commentators criticising unnecessary additions such as a computer-generated Jabba the Hutt in the first film and a new musical number in Return of the Jedi;[3] an alteration involving the bounty hunter Greedo shooting at Han Solo drew significant ire.[4] Xfinity wont let me download torrent movies. Further changes to the series were added to the 2004 DVD and the 2011 Blu-ray releases – these changes also drew criticism. The final release of the original cuts was in 2006, when unrestored masters used for the 1993 LaserDisc were added as a bonus feature to a limited run of DVDs – fans named this release 'George's Original Unaltered Trilogy' (GOUT).[5] In 2010, Lucas stated that bringing the original cuts to Blu-ray would be a 'very, very expensive' process;[6] as of 2017, the films are still only widely available in their altered versions.[7]
As a result of these changes, a group of fans met on various Internet forums to construct higher quality cuts as fan edits by using the available home media and blending the Special Edition DVDs with the LaserDisc transfers. One such edit for The Empire Strikes Back was created by Star Wars fan Adywan.[8]
Harmy Star Wars Despecialized Edition Iso Download Full
Production[edit]
Conception[edit]
Petr Harmáček (known online by the alias 'Harmy') had watched a dubbed version of the original cut of Star Wars at the age of six, and had then seen the Special Editions of The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi on their 1997 release.[9] Although initially admiring them, he became disappointed when he learned how much the films had been changed retroactively; he argued that replacing the original effects with re-composited digital effects was 'an act of cultural vandalism'.[8] A fan of the original trilogy, he had written his undergraduate thesis on their cultural impact.[10] After seeing a trailer for Adywan's cut of The Empire Strikes Back, Harmáček was inspired to create a version of the film that 'undid' the post-1977 changes and restored the theatrical releases in high-definition.[11] He described his motivation as: 'I wanted to be able to show people who haven't seen Star Wars yet, like my little brother or my girlfriend, the original, Oscar-winning version, but I didn't want to have to show it to them in bad quality.'[8] Harmáček's edits were the first to recreate the theatrical releases in HD.[9]
Editing[edit]
'Look at this awesome film that was made in the '70s .. I want to show that to people. I wanted to show my brother. He was three when I started working and I showed it to him when he was five and he loved it.'
— Petr 'Harmy' Harmáček explaining his motivation for creating the Despecialized Edition[10]
Harmáček began creating his new cuts in 2010.[6] At the time, he was working as an English teacher in Plzeň, Czech Republic, and had no professional experience with film editing.[9] Instead, he taught himself as the project progressed, beginning with Photoshop skills that he had developed in college.[2][10] To remove the post-1977 changes, Harmáček was required to go through the film frame-by-frame, correcting colors and rotoscoping.[1][12] Undoing some shots took only an hour, while others took hundreds. Lightsabers were color-corrected, shots of the Millennium Falcon cockpit were cropped, Boba Fett's voice was changed, and CGI characters and backgrounds were removed.[2] Most of the source material used for Harmy's Despecialized Edition was taken from the 2011 Blu-ray release, while other sequences were upscaled from the 2006 GOUT DVDs.[13] To create the cuts, source material was taken from the 2011 Blu-ray releases, HDTV broadcasts of the 2004 DVDs, GOUT, digital broadcasts of the 1997 Special Edition, the 1993 LaserDiscs, digital transfers of a Spanish 35 mm Kodak LPP and 70 mm film cels, a 16 mm print, and still images of the original matte paintings. Harmáček edited these sources together using programs such as Avisynth and Adobe After Effects.[8]
To help, Harmáček was assisted by a group of similarly-minded fans from the website OriginalTrilogy.com,[5] whom he knew by their online aliases Dark Jedi, YouToo, Puggo, Team Negative 1, Belbucus, Hairy_Hen, CatBus and Laserschwert.[2] In total, the project took thousands of hours of work between them.[8] In 2011, one year after the project had begun, the first version of Harmy's Despecialized Edition was published online;[14] new and updated versions have been created regularly in the five years that followed.[4] As of February 2017, the most recent 'despecialized' versions of Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi are v2.7, v2.0 and v2.5 respectively.[10] As a result of the project, Harmáček was able to quit his teaching job and in 2015 was hired by UltraFlix to prepare and restore a library of 4K-encoded films for sale and rent. He has since joined UPP, a Prague-based VFX house, as a 2D digital compositor and worked on such projects as Blade Runner 2049, Wonder Woman, and AMC's The Terror.[2][6]
Legality[edit]
The legality of downloading Harmy's Despecialized Edition is contentious.[1] As a fan edit, the cut cannot be legally bought or sold, and treads a line between fair use and copyright infringement.[15] OriginalTrilogy.com states that the edits are 'made for culturally historical and educational purposes' and that they are 'to be shared among legal owners of the officially available releases only'.[6] Consequently, the films are only available via various BitTorrent trackers and through specialized rapid download programs using file sharing sites.[3][16] Harmáček himself remarked: 'I'm convinced that 99% of people who download this already bought Star Wars 10 times over on DVD.'[10] As of November 2015, he has received no legal issues from Lucasfilm over the Despecialized Edition.[8] https://hcnew776.weebly.com/blog/medal-of-honor-airborne-download.
Harmy Star Wars Despecialized Edition Iso Download Full
Reception[edit]
Reaction to Harmy's Despecialized Edition has been universally positive. Writing for Inverse, Sean Hutchinson placed it at number one on his list of the best Star Wars fan edits, and described it as 'the perfect pre-1997 way to experience the saga'.[4] Whitson Gordon of Lifehacker called the edits 'the best version of Star Wars you can watch', and named them 'the version of Star Wars we've all been clamoring for the last 20 years'.[3] Similarly, Nathan Barry of Wired praised the films as 'an absolute joy to watch',[12] while Gizmodo described them as 'very, very good'.[14] In an article listing Ars Technica's favorite Star Wars items, Sam Machkovech selected Harmy's Despecialized Edition, calling it 'a treat'.[16]
References[edit]
- ^ abcGoldberg, Matt (December 14, 2015). 'Yes, an HD Version of the Unaltered 'Star Wars' Original Trilogy Lurks Online'. Collider. Archived from the original on December 21, 2015. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
- ^ abcdeMiller, Daniel (December 2015). 'Restoring Star Wars'. Sydney: Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Archived from the original on December 14, 2015. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
- ^ abcGordon, Whitston (December 14, 2015). 'Watch the Original Star Wars Trilogy As It Was Before George Lucas Screwed It Up'. Lifehacker. Archived from the original on December 14, 2015. Retrieved January 27, 2015.
- ^ abcHutchinson, Sean (January 22, 2016). 'These Are the 5 Best 'Star Wars' Fan Edits'. San Francisco: Inverse. Archived from the original on January 27, 2016. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
- ^ abSmith, Chris (December 15, 2015). 'How to watch the original Star Wars trilogy from before George Lucas altered it'. Boy Genius Report. Archived from the original on December 16, 2015. Retrieved January 27, 2015.
- ^ abcdBrew, Simon (May 20, 2015). 'Star Wars: Fan creates 'despecialized' original trilogy'. London: Den of Geek. Archived from the original on May 23, 2015. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
- ^Hutchinson, Lee (May 10, 2014). 'Could Disney finally give us the remastered, unedited Star Wars we want?'. Ars Technica. Archived from the original on May 11, 2014. Retrieved April 19, 2016.
- ^ abcdefHosie, Ewen (November 17, 2015). ''Star Wars: Despecialized Edition' Restores the Original, Unedited Trilogy'. Vice. New York City. ISSN1077-6788. OCLC30856250. Archived from the original on November 18, 2015. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
- ^ abcJun, Dominik (November 8, 2014). 'The Czech guerilla restorationist battling to 'save Star Wars''. Prague: Radio Prague. Archived from the original on November 13, 2014. Retrieved April 25, 2016.
- ^ abcdeEveleth, Rose (August 27, 2014). 'The Star Wars George Lucas Doesn't Want You To See'. The Atlantic. Washington, D.C.: Atlantic. ISSN1072-7825. OCLC783915762. Archived from the original on August 28, 2014. Retrieved March 20, 2016.
- ^Johncock, Benjamin (December 21, 2015). 'On Star Wars, The Craft of Writing and What Novelists Can Learn From 'The Force Awakens''. The Huffington Post. Archived from the original on January 27, 2016. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
- ^ abBarry, Nathan (February 12, 2013). 'Star Wars – The Fandom Editors'. Wired. Archived from the original on October 31, 2015. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
- ^Barry, Nathan (May 2, 2013). 'Star Wars – The Fandom Editors – A Real New Hope'. GeekDad. Archived from the original on May 5, 2013. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
- ^ ab'Two Entirely Different Ways to Watch the Original Star Wars'. Australia: Gizmodo. December 18, 2015. Archived from the original on December 21, 2015. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
- ^Broughall, Nick (December 18, 2015). 'Awakening the Force in my son was easier with the Harmy Despecialized Editions'. TechRadar. Archived from the original on January 27, 2016. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
- ^ abMachkovech, Sam (November 26, 2015). 'Star Wars beyond the films: Ars' staff picks its fave games, toys, more'. Ars Technica. Archived from the original on November 29, 2015. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
External links[edit]
- Harmy's channel on YouTube
- Star Wars Trilogy Despecialized Edition on Facebook
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Harmy%27s_Despecialized_Edition&oldid=893076775'