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Niko, Clint, and Wren sit down to react to some of the zestiest CGi moments from the original STAR WARS trilogy: What makes a visual effect bad? What makes one great?
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Niko - the "so here's how they did it" guy Wren - the "I love this movie!" guy Clint - the guy that never saw a single iconic movie guy.
J Same!!! Lol
It’s a shame the joke isn’t even funny, I don’t know why they keep poking at it every video. The film obsessive/stuntman/actor/film editor/animator/CGI artist/filmmaker who claims doesn’t seem to ever have watched any film when questioned. It’s like a vacuum cleaner salesman who never owned a vacuum cleaner in his life. It’s like if Steven Spielberg claimed he’d never watched a 90’s film in his life. It’s. Just. Dumbo. Stahp! Please. It’s not funny.
U nailed it 😂
Apatheism I think at some point they will change this model. It really doesn’t makes sense, like u said
All of them - soy boys
Some of the asteroids in the background of the chase scene were potatoes.
Matt I heard they put a shoe in there too
Matt but did u see the spaceship
Ur profile pic looks like a 🥔
Tianjie Lu do not disrespect Matt the great
@@madmonkee1176 his profile pic is made by the best cgi game of the century
4:04 This shot is a matte-painting until 4:06, when they switch to a model trench. There's two flashes that fill the whole screen. If you look closely, you can spot how the second flash is used to hide the transition from the matte painting to the model.
Brilliant jump cut. Never noticed that before.
@@SemiMono How can you not notice that it's the most glaring effect in the whole movie. Don't get me wrong it was a master class VFX revolution brought about by geniuses but that cut always bothered me since I first saw the movie like 15 years ago
@@Pauly421 Haha! To each his own. It was obvious to me when they showed it, and I was looking for it. Maybe it's because I was a kid when I first watched it? Maybe my eyes are a little poor (they are)? Or maybe I get a little too focused? I dunno.
Yeah I notice that every time I watch it. It’s almost unsettling 😆
@@BigBoris Yeah the lighting is totally different or something, but in all fairness its over in a second and you're back in the action
imagine how you mind must have been blown if you were actually there when those movies came out and saw these vfx for the first time
That's a huge part of why they were so successful, if you compare them to other films from that time period, there was really nothing at all like the them being made.
I was there. And yes, mind = blown
I'm jealous of everyone who was able to experience this cause we're starting to hit a cap for visuals and we're consistently nailing reality, making a new experience very rare these days
That's basically why it was such a phenomenon.
I was 7 when the original Star Wars came out and I remember seeing it for the first time in vivid detail. Now when I watch Star Wars I'm able to reach back and get a taste of the awe and magic I experienced as a kid.
Fun fact: Mark Hammil's sword didn't break, it was ejected so he could "cut through" Vader's hand, whereas if the blade wasn't ejected it would just wack the top of his wrist.
oh sheeet
I was coming to say that.
Quite a few things in this video are not correct. :-/
@The Anthropologist _Forensic Then read my other comments, bro. :-0
Nooice
Honestly, it's far more fascinating to find out how non-CGI special effects were done.
Exactly !!! Nowadays with cg's everywhee, it kinda takes away the movie magic.
@@iodineclip strange how you say that in a channel that breathes CGi
iodineclip at least we still have directors like Nolan who go with practical effects as much as possible.
God bless the editors that maintain the magic between practical and vfx 🙏🏽
Special effects ARE non-cgi, pyrotechnics for example. Cgi and stuff done on a computer after shooting for example are visual effects.
The Emperor’s Death Star landing bay filled with Imperial Storm Troopers was a matte painting as big as a door. The artist who painted it , painted a “Smiley Face” on one of the Storm Troopers helmets. I saw the actual painting back in 1989. A Ghost Busters II matte painting has penguins on a rooftop building for no reason other then the amusement for the matte painter.
I just realized at the beginning of this video, Obi-Wan says his iconic “hello there” to a droid each time
*”I am a Jeddy like my father before me.”*
Geddy Lee.
"I am a Teddy like my father before me"- Wicket W. Warrick
Jeddy>Jedi
Oh hey I'm a Jeddy.
ITS WITH AN I NOT AN E, JEDE.
The weird thing is... if you watch the original trilogy now, the worst effects are generally the crap cgi additions that were added 20+ years later
Not if you have the VHS still! 👌
Han shot first!
Wait what? 7:46
@@jsweizston5410 He actually futzed with the VHS version, even before the so-called "Special Edition" VHS release.
@@jsweizston5410 Yeah, even the original VHS has been messed with and had some stuff added. The original in cinema version has never been publicly released in any reasonable quality. Harmy's Despecialized version is the closest we have.
People who were kids in the 80s will remember that "The Making Of..." documentaries about Star Wars were on network television constantly. Knowing how much clever innovation and painstaking craftsmanship went into the films only made me a bigger fan.
When I was younger and saw the original trilogy, I had no idea nor questioned when they had come out. I assumed, from seeing how good they looked, they must be mid-90's at least. Once I learned the true release date of A New Hope when I was in my mid teens it blew my mind. To this day a lot of the space shots involving ships still look fantastic. The Millennium Falcon strafing toward the camera then away is amazing.
The scene where Luke’s lightsaber “breaks” is actually an intentional quick release. In the film that strike is the one that cuts Vader’s hand of so he hits a button to dislodge the blade so his swipe can follow through. The blades broke several times in prequel b roll, but that shot in particular is not what they say it is on this video.
Yeah these hosts are obnoxious morons.
@@pl3459 They're litteraly the people than run the channel
P L uhh that’s a bit much
nobody cares nerds
Mind that they are CGI Artists not Film makers from the 80s
The original trilogy was a masterpiece of cinematography for its time.
True. I always think that even without the huge legacy those three movies would still be fantastic science fiction.
I prefer the prequels.
@@Satan-lb8pu I threw up a little.
@@Reticuli I'm aware of the effect I have on people.
And for this time
I love how the Death Star exlposion is a practical explosion filmed from below, so that all the pieces actually fall into the camera. Ingenuity.
Watching how painstakingly careful AT-AT model technicians were makes me cry 😢 All for a nimble few seconds of absolute movie magic... 👍👍👍
The original trilogy is truly the definition of movie magic
I wonder if today's generation appreciates that?
308328928 I do and most people in my school as well
@David Simms yeah if you don't care about the story you can say that
@@user-hc9qv9yb9m Sadly, they do not. I am one of the few 'GenZ's' that appreciates classic and old-fashioned art. Other people are too stuck up in their Tik Toks to appreciate anything other than mindless social media.
@David Simms I agree
i’m a stop motion animator, i cannot imagine what an absolute nightmare these movies were to make. their work obviously paid off though!!!
I have always had a HUGE admiration for the patience of those who work in stop motion/animation. Counter656 is a KZheadr that I watch that does really cool videos with stop motion.
It's extraordinary to see some animator's out there that still use the older film techniques. In doing so new ideas can still come about
The Platinum Tugboat then you need to see ray harryhausen who did all the animation for the sinbad/clash of the titans/the best of 20,000 leagues/ Jason and the Argonauts/and many more .
And consider, ILM was created for this movie. Everybody thought Lucas could not pull it off... and he couldn't with what was the current SOTA. It has been argued that ILM is Lucas' greatest accomplishment, not Star Wars.
@@alexandermckay8594 honestly i dont think thats much of an arguement. starwars is just a great demo of what they could do
And then when you see how The Mandalorion did some of its scenes in the same sort of style as this with the ships it just feels like such a nice nod
1:40 I can read Obi-Wan’s thoughts: “Jeez, kid, you almost stabbed me in the face with that thing!”
The scene at 3:31 when Luke cut of Vader’s hand, he purposefully pressed an eject button on the hilt so he could “cut through”. The sword did not break. It was designed that way
Daniel Larsson It was stylistically designed to be that way, and they couldn’t undo it, but they could diminish the effects of it.
thetwopointslow what are you talking about?:) the blade flying off the hilt was not a mistake :)
Great inginuity
@@danielscorner It's a meme.
@@Harrierish That's not what a meme is.
Why is no one talking about how he pronounced "jedi"
Because it’s a running gag
I got triggered when he said Jeddy lol
At least he didn't say Jeedai... *uncoils amphistaff*
LMFAO 😂 because it generates Commenters
Did you know that's exactly how we pronounce jedi in Italy? For us instead you're pronunciation is weird
Love this. When I was a kid in the 1970's, watching Star Wars multiple times in the theaters, I dreamed not only of flying my own spaceships but also of being one of the SFX geniuses who brought that stuff to life.
I've watched this again and really have to give you guys credit for all your "infographic animations" on the optical printer techniques. I'm 48 and spent my entire junior high immersed in the analog techniques and witnessed the fear of so many as the medium transitioned to digital. It's funny now to hear now how going backwards to recreate the analog techniques could induce the same trepidation. Again, love your thorough explanations!
So fun story: I know the guy who sold the rig they used to do all the motion for the models/camera. The crane they used was a rig used on nuclear reactors. The rig could move in all degrees of freedom and was used in the reactor so that people didn't have to actually go into the reactor for inspection. He sold it to Lucas for pennies on the dollar because they needed to clear out the warehouse space and was surprised when a year or so later got a ticket for the premiere to a movie called "star wars"
WHO AND WHERE BRO
nice story
Damn that’s insanely nice
Jim Shealy That's a DOPE story. Honestly people have no idea this thing was done in a warehouse in Van Nuys. The whole world shifted on it's axis from that spot. It's like a holy site.
That is so sick
The thing I find so inspiring about old movies is just how primitive everything really was. They didn't have editing softwares tailored to their specific needs. Most of the things we can do so simply now on a computer must've taken weeks or months to do. Even basic dissolves, and despite all this, they still managed to create something great.
In my opinion it really makes these movies even more magical. In the older days you had to use creative means to get things exactly how they wanted it to be.
Great artists create great art regardless of the tools at their disposal!
I would postulate that it is not despite but BECAUSE of all this. There is a wonderful saying I think is deeply true. 'Art through adversity'. Also limitations are a huge powerhouse when it comes to creativity. Look at the things coming out of Wakaliwood. Where there is a need there is a way.
And those movies were much, much better than these heavily cgi’d ones we get now. Films back then especially Star Wars were so innovative with how they created the visual effects. Sure it took quite some time and CGI really does slow down the process, but despite that these old films knew what it took to capture an audiences attention
Explains why the movies were 3 years apart until now.
Speaking of go-motion... you guys really should cover the practical dragon in Dragonslayer (1981). That thing STILL looks amazing today... better than most CGI creations of modern day. Stunning FX.
After seeing almost all the videos by Corridor Crew, I deduce the three musketeers trait: Niko : The Professor(HOW, WHEN, WHY, WHERE) Wren : "I know how they did this" guy. Has seen every movie and every shot 10 times Clint : absorbs all the knowledge pondered by Niko silently while dropping his reactions and jokes which completes the essence of the video
Return of the JE-DEE. You did on purpose Wren. We all know.
0:31 "Hello there" "It's an older code, but it checks out"
It's easy to forget about and take for granted all of the effort it takes to make visual effects, especially back in the day before CGI. Makes me appreciate those classic movies again.
What’s crazy is that all of this sounds so complicated (and it is), but my little brother and I used to make homemade Star Wars and Star Trek movies at our house back in the mid-90s and we implemented so much of this stuff. Of course it was crude and rudimentary, but it was all the same principles. We even had full soundtracks in the background. We’d record the Star Wars soundtrack from record onto a cassette tape and then put a boom box next to the camera with the tape in. There was a very slight delay between when you turned the camera on and when it actually started recording, so we had to sync it up perfectly between scenes. But honestly we had it down to a science so well there were no cuts in the music, it was 100% perfect. It’s incredible what people can do when they simply put their minds to accomplishing things. We were like 11 and 8 years old doing stuff very similar to this with the basic equipment we had at home.
Challenge for you guys:- " Film a short video using only these old techniques."
While I think this is a cool idea, the Star Wars films had an entire team of people that were the best at what they did for each of these techniques. As well, maybe I'm off base here, but I don't think stop motion is really in Corridor's wheel house of experience.
@@ASpaceGhostFC2C Well, nothing's impossible and I think they actually might do that. They got the basic idea behind that and they might know someone who is like Pro in old school technology.
I'm sure they could get some patreon support for a project like that.
@@williamzebub3252 hey I'm all for it, I'd love to see it happen, and you're probably right.
I have. Sortof. Built a motion control rig in blender that moved the camera while the model stayed still. Pain in the rear to get working right.
Wren's face when clinton has actually seen a movie is priceless
If Clinton hadn't seen the original Star Wars movies, they'd have to evict him from the premises
Yes ykzhead.info/sun/Z52wpMqEfnave3k/bejne.html
I might be a year off with all of this, but thank you guys so much for covering the filmmaking process of the OT, seeing how George and his team managed to use so many different techniques and ideas makes me fall in love with the franchise even more than before (I've been a fan basically my entire life, I'm 19 now) the star wars theory channel calls these movies a love letter essentially, a vision made real to the best of Lucasfilm's ability and skill. The stop motion, paintings, handmade backgrounds, puppets, and VFX explained in this video greatly surprised me, especially the first Death Star scene in episode VI: Return Of The Jedi. I'd have never known myself that most of what I saw on the screen was painted, and it really moves me as a fan. Thanks so much Corridor Crew for enriching my childhood even more with this amazing video.
prequels are underrated in terms of VFX, they're mostly practical and mixed with CGI, which is why they still look good over 20 years later.
This really demonstrates the value of practical effects.
Practical fx = good CGI (when used right) = super good
practical almost always looks better.. but these days it's almost always a lot more expensive too...Like Jurassic Park teaches, a mix of practical with visual is the best modern day combo. Especially using practical for closeups.
@@shadowproductions969 not really a lot of puppets look really bad and cheese
@@shadowproductions969 yeah CGI should be used only with physically impossible scenes, whereas practical should be used in close-ups. Look at Christopher Nolan's interstellar for the best example of this.
Its the birth of visual effects. Not practical.
Star Wars is probably the only movie Clint has actual seen
Leo Montano but maybe not the prequels.
8:00 Funny thing about that asteroid belt actually, if I recall it's not an actual asteroid belt. It's the scattered remains of Alderaan :D
I remember in A New Hope they always had lightsabers in bright environments so that the light that makes the retroreflective material bright doesn’t contaminate it and make it look overexposed. It wasn’t until they refined it so that the they could have lightsabers in the dark like in Empire Strikes Back when Luke and Vader fought for the first time
Niko: Have you seen it? Clint: Yes Me: Impossible
Perhaps the archives are incomplete
Clint said he saw Edge of Tomorrow during a recent video as well. I was shocked, lol.
I can’t find the original anywhere except for my dads old vhs tape
Doing the visual effects on the original trilogy was basically alchemy.
No. They used quite a few very old and traditional effects; Rotoscoping was about a 70 years old technique by then. Stop motion, also. Blue screening was almost 40 years old or more. The innovation, was using computer controlled cameras to repeat shots,
agfagaevart no one fucking cares lmao
@@Theta-411 No one like you cares, but you still read my post AND then you replied! :-0 Idiot.
@@agfagaevart i dont think star wars would be as great if those guys didnt invent the first motion tracking camera
ACB Films, that cannot be correct. Alchemy was a false 'science', as it was based on little or no actual science, which is why alchemy did not work. It becomes science when the practitioner understands how things actually work, so can plan processes and accurately predict their outcome. It was pure science that was used by the visual artists in the original Star Wars....not at all 'alchemy'.
I really really am grateful that Lucas and his crew with their dedication to make this franchise real
There was nothing like seeing this on a huge curved screen for the first time…completely mind-blowing, and the visuals were completely ground-breaking…
The original VFX artists back in the day were geniuses
The people who coded software to make CGI are geniuses too, any idea how much work is put into computer graphics? I'd contend that, including the work put into the software, CGI FX requires more workhours than old skool.
Paul Freedman obviously. Nobody disagrees with that
Actually I'd contest that, I think many do NOT realise. Many think computers automagically render everything.
@@paulmichaelfreedman8334 Yes if you include the original coding it MAY take more workhours. But including the original coding would be an idiotic thing to do. If the original coding gets to be taken into account when every vfx artist boots up there 10,000$ program that allows them to do so much crap without effort, then we should also start bringing up the building of the tools used to build models, the tools used to build those tools, the paint brushes being constructed for the paintings and the process of creating paint itself. The chemical processes in creating film to begin with, as well as all the work that went into making cameras. It is like saying that listening to a book on audible is more difficult than reading it just because more human ingenuity (in sum) was needed to deliver the audio book. No it is clearly easier to listen to the audio book. It requires less work on your part because more work was done beforehand. So quit acting like the modern vfx artist does more work than the classic ones. Its a nonsense argument with no legs. And yes computers do "automagically render" quite a lot. Key frames and chroma key are two things that took me a day to learn how to do with a free software. Those two things alone make it possible for me to do things with a phone camera and a few hours than it used to be possible to do in days with huge effects stages. So please get off of it. Modern convenience was built for us by our betters and assuming that you get to take credit for all their work every time you use a smoke effect to make a fart joke on youtube that looks better than most movies made in the 20th century is pure hubris.
@@kindairish2562 Just to show how big the industry is.
"Wren, I'm your biological father" 😂
Its been 4 good years of the Corridor crew reacting, i hope for many more to come. Learned so much i dont remember or have any use for at all, but i love it.
Omg! Thanks for making this video! I knew it was intense but holy crap there’s so much more put into creating those movies!! Mad respect!!
When Wren says "Jeddy" it hurts my soul 😭
was looking for this
Right? What the fuck was that, Wren??
@@rkstevenson5448 Don't want to be that guy, but I will anyway. Technically, that could be a correct pronunciation as the Jedi stem from the ancient Jedai religion, so Jedi would have a shorter "i" sound that Jedai
Jeddy beans
@@rkstevenson5448 Fu*subscribe*k
well no wonder george wanted everything cgi in the prequels, he was probably so fuckig tired of small models and practical effects edit: if his comment gets to 800 likes il change it to say some bullshit like anakin becomes general grevious
Crohn yeah like joda was a puppet at first
Lots of stuff in the prequels were real models. They built many many models and mini sets, and used a lot similar compositing techniques as the original trilogy. Apparently there were more models built for just Revenge of the Sith than the ENTIRE original trilogy. However, the CGI they did use was definitely not that great, and it shows. Here's a really good video for more info: kzhead.info/sun/ncypdteHb6mLooE/bejne.html
CG was the new thing at that time. Back when the movie came out the Prequel CG was considered pushing what was possible with CG at that time.
He probably wanted to be using the most advanced techniques of the time
Because Lucas was the guy who hand crafted and moved every single one of those OT models himself.
My friend and I made our own version of 'The Empire Strikes Back' when we were kids, using mostly hand made cardboard models, Lego men and Star Wars action figures. For the laser blasts we used an 'effects box' placed in front of the 8mm camera ( which could take one frame at a time ). Inside the cardboard box was a vertical piece of glass, and a light would shine directly down over the box. For the laser shot we would place a piece of red transparent sheet of plastic on the top with a cardboard cut out in the shape of a laser shot. The result was a red laser shot reflecting off the piece of vertical glass in front of the camera. We learned how to do it from a camera magazine in the early 80's.
The Hoth battle is something like 20 years or so ahead of its time
So incredible how it still holds up!
"Return of the Jedee" pause... /checks comment section.
Ikr
Yeah that was weird tho in my country (hungary) we pronounce "Jedi" exactly like this.
What the hell, nobody said anything!
It's a running gag I believe that they do
@@szolar1 hahaha exactly
I am a massive Star Wars fan and never knew that so many scenes in the original movies were actually matte paintings. That absolutely blew my mind.
That's back when good art *wasn't* subjective.
Halcion Koenig I mean...art is always subjective. A huge part of what makes it art is that people experience it differently. I think what isn’t subjective is that these artists were extremely talented.
A massive star wars fan you say? Well than I think you might like this: kzhead.info/sun/mN2Ydc6LsX18iok/bejne.html it's a video by the Hacksmith in which they test their real-life retractable plasma lightsaber (Over 2200 degrees celsius, 4000 fahrenheit)
Niko: The Deep Thinker Wren: The Cheeky Boi Clint:
Clint:👁️👄👁️
The shots from Hoth looked like they were from the Special Editions. If you watch the original originals you can see some transparency in the structure of the snowspeeders. The techniques they used worked great against a dark star field background, but translating it to a snowy white background made the mattes very noticeable. So they had to play the game of how transparent can we make the speeders without making them look like a ghost. In the Special Editions they fixed that and were able to make them completely opaque.
Wren: Return Of the Jeddy Me:😞
I was waiting for someone to say that!
That was a joke
@@YourMJK Was it?
ARRO Astronomical Research & Rocketry Organization Yes, he did that a few times now in different videos.
@@YourMJK Oh, my bad
Fun fact: The explosion rings on the Death Star & Alderaan added in the special edition were added the wrong way around. The Alderaan one was supposed to be vertical as the blast from the Death Star came on from the side, while the Death Star one was supposed to be horizontal, across the axis like in Return of the Jedi. They flopped it unbeknownst to the FX artist who designed it.
@El-ahrairah Funner fact, most of us don't care that you think that.
Oh wow. I didn't know that. It's always bothered me
El-ahrairah I can second that. The little CGI add ins always throw me off and it’s terrible
some of the shots they show like at 7:00 are CGI that was added in the special edition, not the original models. and most people don't know that because George Lucas has never made the original versions widely available. the highest quality version available of the original versions are made by fans.
Wren's excitement at figuring out how they did the effects is the most precious thing, just sayin'.
I was re-watching old rewinds after KZhead Rewind 2019 and I saw you guys plus Freddie in Rewind 2013 and 2014. Good times.
When I realized that they were the cardboard Minecraft guys, my mind literally exploded
@@vargaroli9421 yeah, me too!
Ok. I am gonna watch it. Be right back Edit : 2013 - 3:04 Edit Again : 2014 - 4:00 Those are the time guys . Damn
they're in 2012 also I'm pretty sure
And 2012
The space battle in Return of the Jedi looks absolutely phenomenal.
back in the day when it was first released, to us, it looked epic.
@@rogueelement1176 still does. To this day The Battle Of Endor is probably one of the best space battles ever created, if not, the GOAT of space battles.
@@00Mindi00 I don't want to be that guy glorifying all the CGI, but the battle over Coruscant is a strong contender.
Ironically, they actually used computers to control the cameras. Otherwise these layered shots would not have been possible.
you mean return of the jedY
This somehow made me appreciate the trilogy more than I already did
Thanks. I had no real appreciation for how much hard work and ingenuity went into his movie until now. wow.
9:40 “return of the jedee” No That’s not how you say it What the hell Why
Blitz_MG that’s Italian, it’s literally what I hear in my theatre
Yeah that was fucking lame.
It was an inside joke from other Corridor Crew vlogs.
@@chuckhaller3842 It's an inside jokes, especially in Wren's vlogs on the channel.
Latino here, some of us say jedee. Since the "I" is spelled like "E" in spanish. Now some hardcore latinos pronounce it like hedee. Since "J" is pronounced like "h" in spanish.
In the RotJ footage of Luke's blade flying out of the hilt-- That was on purpose. Hamill had a little button that would pop the blade out so he could do that final swing (the one that chops Vader's hand off).
Then why did mark Hamilton seem surprised when it happened
I chopped my father's hand off with a stick once. We didn't have no fancy buttons or nothing. They came out a few years later. We just had to suck it up and commit.
@@jamesmcvittie4635 He's not, in that particular take he looks over to where the Emperor would be standing, laughing maniacally. Same with the ESB shot that follows-- Anytime the blade's meant to make contact with a person, they release it so they're not smacking a stuntman with a stick at full speed.
I absolutely love how the effects all come together, good and bad it makes me appreciate the movies even more
Absolutely spectacular. I appreciate those films so much more after this video.
Ah, Return of the Jeddie, my favourite episode in the series.
LOL!
If that's ur fav MOVIE then u are a plastic fan of star wars...DOUCHE...and it's JEDI not JEDDIE
ASTRON O ASTRAN you’re actually a fucking potato
@@avinier325 search on google "define sarcasm"
Koryo Or3o He’s joking about the joke.
"i wouldnt say its very hidden" boy i have watched this more often than i can count and i never noticed that cut. the ATATs became very apparent though when i grew out of my childlike amazement
Honestly, the AT-ATs never bothered me. That jumpcut definitely did, and the AT-STs still kill me, but I'm good with the AT-ATs.
For me it was weird when i was younger, and then when i learned hwo they did it, AT-AT, AT-ST lightsaber and all, it became irrelevant to see the flaw. My child amazement was replaced by technical amazement :D
@@shorebreakers96 Fair enough! Honestly, it's the same for me in a lot of ways. I love how good modern CGI looks, but there is something attractive about those retro special effects.
Baktillus the cut’s not bad, I always noticed it but it helps if you imagine it’s caused by the sudden instantaneous snap as the saver ignites. I’ve always preferred the way this lightsaber snaps instantly to life than the way modern movies show them sliding out like a cock or something.
@@shorebreakers96 Same for me. Instead of having the childhood 'magic' ruined I just became more and more appreciative of the amazing technical achievements of the whole trilogy. The sequence in ROTJ where Wedge and the Falcon fly into the Death Star innards chased by TIEs is one of my favourite VFX sequences in all of film.
Thanks for breaking down the Asteroid Field chase. My jaw dropped the first time I saw (or recognized) this sequence.
3:13: You're using the DVD version. Vader's and Obi Wan's sabers were a lot less of a saturated blue and red. Obi Wan's was almost teal originally.
When you’re so early you have enough time to hear the tale of Darth Plagueis the Wise
When you realize how much work is put into these old movies, they become so much more impressive!
thats why these movies have ages so very well unlike CGI.
ikr, like we today are amazed by these films, think about what audiences back then thought of the films
@@iainwmacintosh makes me wish I got to see it pre computer days
anegwa then again, today we can view the films whenever wherever and watch the bts alongside
@@iainwmacintosh - I was in the audience back then, 8 years old for Star Wars and 11 for Empire, and they blew us away. They were literally the only movies at the time that looked like that, true one-of-a-kind experiences. I'll never forget how magical it all was.
This was one of my favorite vfx artist reaction series
This just goes to show how much a labor of love these films were
The effects hold up so well even to this day, especially the ones from Empire and ROJ. These guys were just straight-up genius wizards.
consider that all they need is just a little bit of CG (color correction and motion blurring, and a bit of adjustment to the rotoscoping effects) to make them perfect. compare that to the effects in most other movies of it's era, which tend to fall flat quite consistently these days.
ROTJ actually fails in two scenes, hangar looks totally fake before attack on second death star, and destruction of Executor was not good. And that is with all the additions made in special edition.
Because most were practical FX
@@AG.Floats its hard to call 80s greenscreen practical effect. I am talking about this scene. i.stack.imgur.com/L8OcJ.jpg and crashing could be doen with more explosions, instead of one huge ball of flame. 7:02 here kzhead.info/sun/mZdxkZqokH6VnX0/bejne.html You can even see outlines of many spaceships.
4:40, basically how old school 3D movies worked. It's why you had 3D glasses with red and blue lens.
I just cant understand how they made this so good. The effects are bad compared to nowadays, but not far behind and they were made so long ago. These effects are honestly so amazing
They look way more realistic than any marval movie
What are you talking about they still look good
*Wren and Niko finally take the fact that Clint has only seen 3 movies in his life into account.*
Those 3 movies being the og Star Wars movies. Nothing more, nothing less.
I was legit surprised when he said he’d seen it.
Nah, he also said he saw Edge of Tomorrow in a past recent video as well, lol. I was a bit surprised there too :D
Everyone's reaction: No way!
But DID he ... did he REALLY see them? The looks on his face say he really has not, or it has been a LONG time ago.
You guys missed the Death Star trench transition. When Luke dives into the trench of the Death Star, it changes from a matte painting to an actual model.
ET Shotenkey I’m pretty sure it cuts when that a laser flash blinds the screen.
@@n8wulfcommander207 it's a hidden cut, correct. also, they did mention it in a previous episode
I'm crying tears of joy and amazement because everything they did was revolutionary for it's time and it's absolutely incredible and insane to see the behind the scenes for each of the original trilogy films. Imagine using these techniques now. This is what star wars was all about. Using whatever limited technology they had to create an advanced masterpiece that one could only dream of now. It's just...I cant even. I'm crying right now because I love it. 😂😭
I’m currently doing a rewatch of my favorite episodes (which turns out to just watching every video I’ve already seen) and it’s crazy to know I’ve been watching for so many years. Rewatching three years later in 2023 is wild it seems like just yesterday I was discovering this channel and instantly drawn to the subscribe button. Thank you guys for the truly inspiring, informative just all around extraordinary content you produce.
11:11 i thought they were going to talk about vader's helmet going through the ship
O wowowowoowowowowow Yas
These "experts" even missed that one. :-0
WTF
@@agfagaevart they explained how hard it is don't insult them by adding " to experts
How about AT-AT "falling over". I mean you can see the stick here 15:16
10:18 "They're not gonna spend all that money to make that set. That set would be insane." Stanley Kubrick be like : "LOL, hold my beer"
Well done! Thanks for that. The Dykstra-Cam was named for John Dykstra, the special effect expert for all of this. :)
0:15 and that's how Clint destroyed the 1st Death Star and saved Yavin... and got all the merit taken away by Luke and his friends
I was 15 when the first (IV) Star Wars film was released. It was PURE MAGIC. When I later learned about the techniques used, it became even more impressive. Realizing the amount of time and effort it took, I began staying at the end of every movie from then on, out of respect for ALL the talent "behind the scenes".
Me too
A movie I would love for you guys to take a look at is “Dinosaur” made in 2000. Thanks
gabe Stoll that movie was ahead of its time
Oh yes! I actually remember my version of the film having some bonus material that showed how thay did some of the visual effects. :D
Please do this one. Fantastic animation.
That was a MONSTER of a movie, at its time.
I absolutely loved that movie, i might rewatch it again
My art class is college had us paint matte paintings as a final project, i have mad respect for the artists in these. As well contrary to popular belief matte painting is still used quite a lot, but its done digitally and often slightly animated
I don't know why but when he says, "...in Return of the Jedee..." and they just act like it didn't happen, that got me.
In a previous one they say haideo kojima
There should be a running gag that whenever someone wears green their shirt gets green screened throughout the whole video
Nobody noticed that the hobbit episode will be released on January 2019?
I too saw that.
we are gonna actually go back in time ;)
Yes lok
Oops
it is stated that 2020 will not come. something called 2019 2 will come instead
Man, watching this made me really geek out about my favorite childhood movie in a whole new way. Thanks guys!
These reaction videos help me to know how to do certain things old school style. Love these
7:45 lol i think they wrote the wrong date (January 4th, 2019)
Oh come on, it's CURRENT YEAR. The VFX guys have time machines don't you know?
Lol
“Part 2: January 4th 2019” Me: 🤔
Looking for this comment hahaha
TIME TRAVEL
damn... we already missed it....
🤣🤣🤣😭 thought that was some inside joke or something
Its a joke.. you write 2019 for next few months during 2020 because you can never adjust to the year change.
I was 8 when the original Star Wars came out in 1977 (11 when Empire came out), and it was pure magic. It's impossible to overstate how groundbreaking the effects were - in 1977, Star Wars was literally the only movie that looked like that, and in 1980, Empire was literally the only movie that looked like it did. Scenes like the asteroid field or the battle of Hoth were jaw-dropping, and I'll never ever forget watching the opening shot of Star Wars in a darkened theater as an 8-year-old, with the impossibly gigantic Star Destroyer revealing itself over the shoulder. Talk about grabbing the viewer's attention from the outset! I think these movies still look marvelous today, and I refuse to watch the so-called "Special Editions" - the originals only for me, thank you very much Mr. Lucas. They look amazing and always will, and I want to appreciate the original work of the original artists - what they did was incredible. Today's Star Wars "content" frankly has nothing on these classics.
It was amazing watching this and seeing how may favorite movies were made! Thank you!
Whenever Wren says Jed-e, it gives me a mixed feeling
Noob PTFO It makes me want to turn to the dark side!
I thought I remember hearing that one of the actors in the original trilogy pronounced it that way. I wanna say it was David Prowse (Vader). He apparently was always trying to make the other actors crack up while filming.
He pronounced it in spanish
It's actually pronounced like this here in Hungary.