Director reverses changes he made for 20th
anniversary DVD:
Steven Spielberg to release original edit of ET
Perhaps the original version of a classic movie is the best cut after
all? Steven Spielberg has acknowledged the error of his ways after
reversing a series of additions and alterations which he controversially
inserted into ET: The Extra-Terrestrial.
Digital advances have allowed directors to tinker extensively with
films which appeared to be perfectly satisfactory to their fans. George
Lucas has been another offender, using CGI technology to make
substantial changes to his Star Wars films.
In the 20th anniversary DVD release of ET, Spielberg's much-loved
1982 story of a boy who befriends a lost alien, he introduced a number
of poorly received changes.
Key scene
During one key scene in which Elliott and his friends take off into
the sky on bikes, Spielberg replaced the guns carried by the government
agents chasing them, with walkie-talkies. Some argued that Spielberg had
sanitised his film. Dialogue was altered too - Elliot's mother says he
looked like a "terrorist" in his Halloween costume but this was
downgraded to "hippie" in the version, released shortly after 9/11.
Spielberg also used CGI technology, unavailable at the time, to
enhance shots of the alien running and hiding in a cornfield. The
insertions were not universally well-received by fans who preferred the
charm of the original.
Spielberg has now agreed that the changes will be reversed for the
Blu-ray version, released in October, to mark its 30th anniversary.
Spielberg has fulfilled a promise he made last year, when he said:
"There's going to be no more digital enhancements or digital additions
to anything based on any film I direct... When people ask me which E.T.
they should look at, I always tell them to look at the original 1982
E.T."
No such pledge has been received from Lucas, who has made almost 100
changes to the original Star Wars film alone, on a variety of cinema and
DVD re-releases. As well as correcting errors, Lucas has altered the
look and sound of his light-sabres and added dialogue.
Although it is the director's vision which has driven these updated
versions, many fans suspect it is a marketing ploy to encourage them to
buy new box sets of films they already own. The E.T. Blu-ray comes with
the insertions made in the 2002 DVD, now advertised as "deleted scenes".
- The Independent
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