What an epic 400th video! Thanks for the mentions! Glad you were able to obtain a Technidisc copy for the library!
@ChronoRadio3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the assist. Now that I'm on my PC, I'm going to add a link to your extremely helpful video in the description of this one also.
@Culturedog3 жыл бұрын
@@ChronoRadio Most excellent! Thanks!
@PixarMan20013 жыл бұрын
Happy 400th episode! Been watching since the beginning.
@oliviersauret31773 жыл бұрын
Even so better than the 4K edition colours 🙏 Thanks 🙏
@anakinfan83 жыл бұрын
Happy *official* 400th episode Nathan! May the Force be with you
@1dbanner3 жыл бұрын
I got my Technidisc for Christmas last year 😊 I also now have two of the three Japanese Special Collection laserdiscs. Who needs Disney +?!
@andrewattenboroughtwothumb46973 жыл бұрын
great new video as always Nathan and happy world Star Wars day
@andrewgilbertson56723 жыл бұрын
Congratulations on 400+ videos! And a great overview here- this was a lot of fun!
@MitchellHang2 жыл бұрын
I was very lucky to get ahold of a 1994 Technidisc variant for cheap (I think the seller wasn't aware that they had a Technidisc copy).
@frhardesty3 жыл бұрын
Fascinating episode, congratulations on the 400th!
@jerlg3 жыл бұрын
Great episode!
@aravinz_hd3 жыл бұрын
Happy 400th Episode on May the 4th.
@Hadam10Rose3 жыл бұрын
May the 4th be with you, always.
@Thecatdrums33 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for saying that!!! I have been bothered by the name for it because they name it for the picture shrinking!
@ChronoRadio3 жыл бұрын
I did way too much mental math to make sure I wasn't just losing my mind on that point.
@TheIndigoBros923 жыл бұрын
Happy May the 4th Nathan, thanks for showing that demostration it definetly is narrowing down the picture as the chapters go. Do Empire and Jedi have a "fixed" laserdisc like this one or is the picture and aspect ratio consistent only in the 93 Definitive Collection and the 95 individual releases?
@ChronoRadio3 жыл бұрын
The aspect ratios are fine on those, though ROTJ's picture is a little higher in the frame than on most releases.
@jeyfromnowhere3 жыл бұрын
May the 400th be with you.
@gojikranz3 жыл бұрын
Very informative I always wondered what the shrinking aspect ratio looked like. With regards to the chapters I have seen this on other discs. I think it may not be a error sometimes the chapter will bridge sides so the chapters are splitting the movie up but the side change had to happen on the middle of a scene or whatever. Not sure if that’s what’s happening here specifically but it may not be a error specifically just weird.
@Matt_Desrochers743 жыл бұрын
Wow. This is pretty crazy. I don’t recall every hearing about this. Nice illustration with the post-its. Incidentally, I always wanted my phone number to be 326-3827. Never got it but that would have been fun. When people ask me for my number, I would always need to yell it just like Luke into the comlink. That would be fun!
@jonathanharris79823 жыл бұрын
May the 4th Be With You!
@darkempire373 жыл бұрын
Is this issue with the " aspect ratio " present on the 1992 letterbox vhs as well ? I own that vhs and I saw the video by culture dog years ago but had forgotten about it until you brought the issue to light again on the facebook group . The last time I watched that vhs after being made aware of this , I could swear the image got narrower close to the battle of Yavin . I wonder if that vhs was created from the same master .
@ChronoRadio3 жыл бұрын
I believe they are based on the same masters. I'll doublecheck at some point.
@ChronoRadio3 жыл бұрын
Checked tonight. No, those are fine.
@frhardesty3 жыл бұрын
Now there's gonna be a run on ebay!
@ChronoRadio3 жыл бұрын
Oooh, can I call myself a "social media influencer" now? My students would get a kick out of that until they figure out I'm just a Star Wars home video nerd.
@alexcarlson6633 жыл бұрын
Happy May the 4th be with you day
@DisneyVideoArchive3 жыл бұрын
What LaserDisc model do you have?
@ChronoRadio3 жыл бұрын
The player?
@DisneyVideoArchive3 жыл бұрын
@@ChronoRadio Yeah
@ChronoRadio3 жыл бұрын
@@DisneyVideoArchive I haven’t really cared to look as long as they worked, but it looks like my main one, which has a working remote, is a Panasonic LX-H670. The other one, which doesn’t have a working remote, is a Kenwood LVD-320.
@DisneyVideoArchive3 жыл бұрын
@@ChronoRadio The H670 is basic, but at least it has auto-reverse. I used to have a Pioneer CLD-980 until it broke. I'm looking for another Pioneer model, but one from the mid-90s.Hopefully something with AC-3.
@DisneyVideoArchive3 жыл бұрын
Another thing to mention is that Technidisc versions of Empire and Jedi exist.
@mmichaelc3 жыл бұрын
The date on the disc is the glass mastering date. Not the date the disc was pressed.
@ChronoRadio3 жыл бұрын
Shouldn't that be around the same time anyway? Or at least close enough to provide a general sense of pressing timing?
@mmichaelc3 жыл бұрын
Yes and no stampers were reused for reorders. We had lots of reorders for Star Wars, Empire, Jedi. Sometimes it would a month before we used the same stamper again.
@matthewgaudet40643 ай бұрын
The disc has to be stamped Technidisc, a cover having made in the USA is no help. I have one and it's a Mitsubishi inside. And its 1993.
@miket25633 жыл бұрын
One question why don't you tell people where you find your releases it would be helpful , its too much oh look of what i got ,I'm not telling you where is .... At least if i did similar id tell people ... Are you scared of someone having a better collection than you ? .... As obi wan said in ROTS so uncivilised and most releases cause of the American market are hard to get cause most stores don't and i mean don't send international which is a kick in the teeth if you want a special item in your collection ,so please do people a favor ,help people get ..dont be tight fisted .... Thank you ... Ps you haven't done much video order for uk releases that would be nice for a complete run down of every year release pre cert , full screen and wide screen ....and the box sets
@ChronoRadio3 жыл бұрын
When an item is tough to come by *and* there's a chance that providing a source would be helpful, I do. However, most of the time, the source would either not be helpful at all or is breathtakingly obvious. The vast majority of items I show come from one of three sources: 1. Another fan selling, trading, or donating the item. In those cases, I specify who provided it and thank them, but that won't do any good to anyone else looking for the same item. If I say, "This was someone I acquired from Bob," that doesn't help anyone else. 2. A new release, usually as a preorder, which has been acquired from one of any number of readily available sources because it's a new release *or* which is an exclusive new release to one location (i.e. Best Buy, Amazon UK, Zavvi, etc.) and had to be preordered through them. In this case, it's either widely available currently (so no need to specify) or it's obvious where this new release was through (because it was only one possible source). If I say, "I preordered this Zavvi exclusive from Zavvi" or "I picked up this new release that's everywhere right now from Walmart," that doesn't do anyone any real good. 3. Just about everything else comes from eBay. Again, in that case, that's not going to help anyone else. If there's something specific for people to look for, I'll tend to mention that, but just because I find something on eBay doesn't mean the same item will be on there whenever someone else looks for the same thing. Even still, I tend to mention finding items on eBa often. That said, if you are part of the Star Wars Home Video Facebook group, we tend to share any time we run across hard-to-find items on eBay to help others acquire them. That would be a good place to look for allies in hunting down items you're having trouble finding. In cases that don't fit those three scenarios, I typically note where something came from, as in the case of the complicated way I acquired the promo DVD with the "missing" Yoda Chronicles episode or how I surprisingly acquired my first George Lucas AFI DVD set from the online Goodwill store. Yes, it's tough to find items at times, but let's take a case like the one in the episode you're commenting on. I acquired the Technidisc version (alongside a spare Mitsubishi version) through eBay. It was the only one on eBay at the time, hence a high price tag. Telling someone "I found it on eBay," which I think I actually do in this or the previous monthly update video, doesn't help actually find the item. Instead, I provide details on the item so that those hunting for it can know what they have found when they come across it and avoid purchasing the "wrong" version when looking for this one. That, I find, is a far more helpful approach for other collectors than just constantly saying, "Hey, look on eBay," which is about the most obvious suggestion for acquiring previous releases that anyone could possibly give. It's something that literally goes without saying most of the time. As far as the UK, I've stated several times in recent videos on UK releases that UK releases are not an area of expertise for me or in which I'm even particularly well versed. My focus is the U.S. market, and I cover UK items when I happen to acquire them and have an opportunity to look into how they fit into UK and international context. It isn't a focus for my collecting or the channel, just interesting curiosities to add as I happen to get them. Many of the more recent ones shown have been only because I happened to acquire a bunch of older VHS releases from the UK when a fellow collector donated his collection into mine last year. They were not things I actively hunted down myself. As far as full rundowns of anything on the show, that's unlikely, whether we're talking UK or otherwise. I attempted that a few times with the oft-updated video on this channel that was a sort of visual timeline of primarily U.S. releases, but those are tough to update, take a ridiculous amount of time to record, are often out of date quickly. As a father of a two-year-old who is with me alone 90% of the time, there's no way I'll be recording anything like that again, at least for a matter of years. For U.S. releases, though, that's not what the show is for anyway. That's what "A Saga on Home Video" is for, if someone is looking for a more comprehensive, chronological rundown of releases from a given region over 4+ decades. That's why the second edition that will launch later this year is nearing 900 pages and 1400 images in its current draft. That's designed to be more thorough than any single video could ever be. Lastly, I take some offense at the notion that not stating the obvious that most older acquisitions come from eBay is somehow "tight fisted" or an indication that I'd be "scared of someone having a better collection" than me. When asking for information or seeking to alter an approach to how episodes are handled so that information you want added can be added, it helps to not come off like a dick immediately. In this case, it wouldn't have changed the answer, but it wouldn't have me sitting here asking myself why I'm bothering to reply in detail to someone who decided to go for insults right out the gate. For what it's worth, the Star Wars home video collecting community, at least in my experience, has been one of the few niches within Star Wars fandom that is almost entirely non-toxic. Members of the community are constantly sharing information, helping each other acquire items, and generally positive toward each other. There isn't much of a sense of competition in that community, such that typically if someone finds something unusual, the response isn't for members to compete over who can acquire it but instead to assist each other in acquiring such items with a sense of "Dude, I had no idea that existed! The hunt is on!" excitement, not rivalry.