| | |  | GIFT SETS | Home » » Star Wars Prequel Trilogy | | | | | | | Product Promotions: | | | | | Description: | | Disc 1: Star Wars Episode 1 WS Disc 1 **Commentary by George Lucas and company Disc 2: Star Wars Episode 1 WS Disc 2 **Never-before-seen Making of documentary **Never-before-seen deleted scenes documentary featuring 7 deleted scenes finished in 5.1 Dolby Digital Sound **2 animatics with multi-angles **5 Featurettes **12 original web documentaries **Music Video: "Duel of the Fates" **Production photos, print ads, theatrical trailers, TV spots, DVD-ROM - game demo Disc 3: Star Wars Episode 2 WS Disc 1 **Commentary by George Lucas and Rick McCall **Easter Egg **THX Trailer - "Cavalcade" Disc 4: Star Wars Episode 2 WS Disc 2 **2 Documentaries - "From Puppets to Pixels"and "State of the Art: Previsualization of Episode II" **8 deleted scenes with intros **Music Video, Visual Specs Breakdown **12 Web Documentaries **4 Trailers **12 TV Spots **Easter Egg **Still Galleries **DVD-ROM links Disc 5: Star Wars Episode 3 WS Disc 1 Disc 6: Star Wars Episode 3 WS Disc 2 **Full-length documentary produced by Lucasfilm **2 New Featurettes: One exploring the prophecy of Anakin Skywalker as The Chosen One, the other providing an in-depth look at the movie's eye-popping stunts **15 part collection of Lucasfilm's groundbreaking "Web-documentaries" Episode Description: Disc 1: Star Wars Episode 1 WS Disc 1 Disc 2: Star Wars Episode 1 WS Disc 2 Disc 3: Star Wars Episode 2 WS Disc 1 Disc 4: Star Wars Episode 2 WS Disc 2 Disc 5: Star Wars Episode 3 WS Disc 1 Disc 6: Star Wars Episode 3 WS Disc 2 | | | Product Details: | | | Actors:
| Ewan McGregor, Natalie Portman, Hayden Christensen, Ian McDiarmid, George Lucas | | Format:
| AC-3, Box set, Color, Dolby, DVD, THX, Widescreen, NTSC | | Language:
| English | | Number of Discs:
| 6 | | Studio:
| 20th Century Fox | | Run Time:
| 418 minutes | | DVD Release Date:
| November 04, 2008 | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 113 reviews |
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| $33.80 | New | | | $34.00 | New | | | $35.98 | New | | | $37.40 | New | | | $38.42 | New | | | $38.44 | New | | | $38.48 | New | | | $38.71 | New | | | $38.87 | New | | | $38.99 This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. | New | | | $39.70 | New | | | $39.95 | New | | | $40.22 | New | | | $40.49 | New | | | $40.63 | New | | | $40.80 | New | | | $40.99 | New | | | $40.99 | New | | | $41.05 | New | | | $41.39 | New | | | $42.48 | New | | | $43.19 | New | | | $43.88 | New | | | $44.73 | New | | | $45.49 | New | | | $47.90 | New | | | $48.20 | New | | | $49.73 | New | | | $51.04 | New | | | $52.61 | New | | | $70.77 | New | | | $87.89 | New | | | $87.89 | New | | | $87.89 | New | | | $87.89 | New | | | $87.89 | New | | | $135.99 | New | |
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| $29.37 | Used
- VeryGood | | | $30.41 | Used
- VeryGood | | | $35.00 | Used
- Good | | | $35.96 | Used
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- VeryGood | | | $38.97 | Used
- Mint | | | $39.08 | Used
- VeryGood | | | $39.09 | Used
- Mint | | | $39.95 | Used
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- Good | | | $70.77 | Used
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- Good | |
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Great product & fast shippingJul 23, 2010 I was very happy with thiis DVD purchase & the very fast shipping! Once again, Amazon has surpassed my expections! Thank you Amazon.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Good ValueJun 21, 2010 I purchased this for my Grandson and he watches them all the time, he even brings them with him when he spends the night so we can watch the movies, a must for Star War fans
0 of 5 found the following review helpful:
Let's have a global vision of the full seriesJun 15, 2010 To present the six episodes is of course a challenge. I will not present them one after another in any order (historical or chronological). I will make a few general remarks. First, why did the last three episodes come first? It was necessary for the suspense to remain intense about the only important element which is that Dark Vader is the father of both Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia Organa, both on the side of the rebellion against the Empire. These three episodes were more naturalistic and they did not need the special effects, not possible at the time, necessary for the conception and shooting of all the artificial and very strange creatures of the first three episodes. The happy ending would have been ruined by our knowing the genetic filiation between the two young heroes and the arch-enemy of freedom and democracy. Dark Vader had to be black and dark right to the end for the surprise effect of his fathering the two young heroes to be effective. Then the first three episodes arriving afterwards in time did not have the same function they can have today when we watch the six episodes in chronological order. They created a frame of reference. It is the demonstration that the Republic can only fall because it is totally engulfed in corruption, red tape bureaucracy, the incapability to take a fast decision and to act promptly, the constant waste of time because of political maneuvering. On the other side, that of evil, swift and surprise attacks and violence are the rule. The Republic has been infiltrated to the top and the Force itself embodied in the Jedi order has been drowned in bureaucratic impotence. Then the dark side of the Force can easily convince and capture those who are suffering from that impotence and are frustrated by the refusal to act straight away. It is also necessary to think that those first three episodes that came last needed a technology that was not available before and that is the technical justification of the inverted order, though then the director plays on it and with it. Some of the scenes of these three chronologically anterior films are absolutely breathtaking and only because they use the full array of computerized effects. The race in the first film is amazing, the underwater world is fascinating and the clones and their war against the strange giraffe human species is phenomenal and were not possible without the late 1990s and early 2000s technology. And the battles would never have been that impressive without these special effects. Then we can wonder about the meaning of the whole series back in chronological order. A Republic dies in red tape bureaucracy and corrupted calculation and is taken over from the inside by the main leader who is an infiltrated putsch maker and his military coup is based on the full destruction of the only protection the Republic had, the Jedi order though this one had been made impotent by the red-tape dictatorship of the democratic Republic. The Empire that takes over is based on effectiveness, swiftness and the absence of any waste of time due to useless discussions. To the point of any decision taken by one man. Then you can speak of efficiency. But that Empire that is going to impose an absolute one-person dictatorship is not able to control the grass roots movements and the local dynamisms of all the planets and peoples of this galaxy. That's what the rebellion against this Empire needs to be effective in its turn. Underground rebellion and resistance. Yet they cannot succeed if they do not re-conquer the Force because the Empire is founded on the dark side of that Force and is embodied in the father of the main heroes and leaders of the rebellion. The Force has to be re-learned by Luke Skywalker in order to be able to face his father and defeat the emperor who is manipulating Luke's father. This Force is the only real defense and conquering power of any resistance against any dictatorship. Without a Force of that magnitude no resistance can succeed. But then the meaning changed completely from that of the last three episodes that came first and could appear as a simple metaphor of the rebellion against a dictatorship, hence a metaphor of the defeat and disintegration of the Soviet Union for one. Later on when the first three episodes that came last were available, the meaning was no longer the same because history had changed in the mean time. The meaning then is that any democracy when it forgets it has to be fast and courageous in its decisions that should refuse red tape and bureaucracy will automatically fall in the hands of potential potentates or dictators. That is a common myth and political theme in the USA: the Roman Empire died after two centuries. Unluckily the Roman Empire was not the Republic of Rome and here Lucas is playing with our references. Are the USA a target of that decay of democracy? Yes indeed. That's the message today of this set of six beautiful films with great actors, even the perambulating carpet.
Dr Jacques COULARDEAU, University Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne, University Paris 8 Saint Denis, University Paris 12 Créteil, CEGID
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Star Wars TrilogyJun 05, 2010 I've always liked Star Wars; it may seem too juvenile for some hard core Sci Fi fans, but to me it's nice to have the classic battle between good and evil that most people can understand, relax, and enjoy. The extra scenes enhance the movie. It might have been good to have them in a metal boxed collectible format, but hey, I bought the movies for the movies, not the packaging.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Awesome SetJun 05, 2010 First of all I would just like to say that I love the original trilogy and the prequel trilogy. It all kicks major ass! The plot, the characters, the amazing special effects, it all reminds me of when I first saw A New Hope. The only weird thing was that the bonus feature disc for Episode III has the cover art: The Story of Star Wars, and not episode III. Nothing wrong with that, it still has all the features, it just seems very weir and confusing. Especially when that featurette isn't even featured on the disc! It was a promo at the beginning of the VHS version of Attack of the Clones. (I'm a geek).
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