As teased last August, announced for pre-order
at CES and elaborated upon a few months ago, Star Wars The Complete
Saga Blu-ray promises to be the hot disc release of 2011 when it
drops this September 16th (along with The Original Trilogy and The
Prequel Trilogy configurations, something to suit every fan). All
that remained--short of final copies for full, in-depth review of
course, hint-hint--was a hands-on demo of these long-awaited discs.
How would they look and sound? And would these mysterious new
extras really live up to the hype?
Well, at a private event in New York City last week, our friends at
Lucasfilm and Fox pulled back the curtain all too briefly for an
exciting peek at the Blu-rays as part of the 2011 Star Wars Media
Day. Two clips were played (one from a classic film, one from a
prequel) to demonstrate the quality of the brand-new 1080p/DTS-HD
Master Audio 6.1 remasters, on a Panasonic plasma and over a
Panasonic HTiB system. It was really just enough to whet our
appetites (as if we weren't drooling enough already), but I am now
very optimistic: the clips that we saw of films both of the
original trilogy flavor and the newer prequels were stunning.
Release of the older films in particular on Blu-ray will be a real
challenge for Fox, owing to the limits of cinematic technology of
the era, but Episodes II and III should have the potential to truly
amaze.
The Complete Saga will contain all six chapters, each with
beautiful, elaborate menus designed around the theme of locations
relevant to that film. There will also be "new" audio commentaries
for all, edited together from archival material amassed over the
years, these in addition to the current DVD commentaries. This
mega-set will also include three exclusive Blu-rays: Disc Seven
will focus specifically on the prequels, Disc Eight on the classic
trilogy, while Disc Nine collects both new and vintage documentary
material.
The highlights will surely be the more than 40 deleted scenes
spanning the saga (Tosche Station had better be in there!) and the
home video debut of "A Conversation with the Masters" (about 20
minutes, in HD) featuring the last on-camera interview with late
Empire Strike Back director Irvin Kershner, created for the 30th
anniversary of that film last year. But "The Archive Collection"
has us particularly intrigued, now that we've seen up close what
it's really about. Imagine if George Lucas was the subject of a
very special edition of Hoarders, since he has fastidiously held
onto just about everything from every movie. And now we can venture
into this rarified domain too, as props and more come alive via
360-degree flyarounds and painstakingly sharp zooms that look
terrific on the big high-def screen. If that's not interactive
enough, more than 100 HD mini-documentaries (two to five minutes
each) are accessible along the way, boasting fascinating new
creator interviews combined with behind-the-scenes footage.

The book-type packaging is absolutely gorgeous too (we can debate
its practicality some other time), with bold images that might be
familiar to fans of last year's coffee table book Star Wars:
Visions. I tried to take some photos of it for the enjoyment of Big
Picture Big Sound readers, but no lie, there were armed Clone
Troopers roaming Media Day looking for uppity journalists trying to
leak material early.