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Star Wars, Episode III - Revenge of the Sith (Widescreen Edition)
Star Wars, Episode III - Revenge of the Sith (Widescreen Edition)
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List Price: $29.98
Buy New: $12.54
You Save: $17.44 (58%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $7.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars(based on 1485 reviews)
Sales Rank: 85
Category: DVD

Actors: Hayden Christensen, Ewan Mcgregor, Natalie Portman
Publisher: 20th Century Fox
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Brand: Twentieth Century Fox Home Video
Label: 20th Century Fox
Format: Ac-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), English (Dubbed), French (Dubbed), Spanish (Dubbed)
Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Media: DVD
Running Time: 140 minutes
Number Of Items: 2
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.2 x 5.4 x 0.6

UPC: 024543203094
EAN: 0024543203094
ASIN: B00005JLXH

Release Date: November 1, 2005
Theatrical Release Date: May 19, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Ending the most popular film epic in history, Star Wars: Episode III, Revenge of the Sith is an exciting, uneven, but ultimately satisfying journey. Picking up the action from Episode II, Attack of the Clones as well as the animated Clone Wars series, Jedi Master Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor) and his apprentice, Anakin Skywalker (Hayden Christensen), pursue General Grievous into space after the droid kidnapped Supreme Chancellor Palpatine (Ian McDiarmid).

The Star Wars Family Tree (click for larger image)
It's just the latest maneuver in the ongoing Clone Wars between the Republic and the Separatist forces led by former Jedi turned Sith Lord Count Dooku (Christopher Lee). On another front, Master Yoda (voiced by Frank Oz) leads the Republic's clone troops against a droid attack on the Wookiee homeworld of Kashyyyk. All this is in the first half of Episode III, which feels a lot like Episodes I and II. That means spectacular scenery, dazzling dogfights in space, a new fearsome villain (the CGI-created Grievous can't match up to either Darth Maul or the original Darth Vader, though), lightsaber duels, groan-worthy romantic dialogue, goofy humor (but at least it's left to the droids instead of Jar-Jar Binks), and hordes of faceless clone troopers fighting hordes of faceless battle droids.

But then it all changes.


Star Wars Time Line (click for larger image)

After setting up characters and situations for the first two and a half movies, Episode III finally comes to life. The Sith Lord in hiding unleashes his long-simmering plot to take over the Republic, and an integral part of that plan is to turn Anakin away from the Jedi and toward the Dark Side of the Force. Unless you've been living under a rock the last 10 years, you know that Anakin will transform into the dreaded Darth Vader and face an ultimate showdown with his mentor, but that doesn't matter. In fact, a great part of the fun is knowing where things will wind up but finding out how they'll get there. The end of this prequel trilogy also should inspire fans to want to see the original movies again, but this time not out of frustration at the new ones. Rather, because Episode III is a beginning as well as an end, it will trigger fond memories as it ties up threads to the originals in tidy little ways. But best of all, it seems like for the first time we actually care about what happens and who it happens to.

Episode III is easily the best of the new trilogy--OK, so that's not saying much, but it might even jockey for third place among the six Star Wars films. It's also the first one to be rated PG-13 for the intense battles and darker plot. It was probably impossible to live up to the decades' worth of pent-up hype George Lucas faced for the Star Wars prequel trilogy (and he tried to lower it with the first two movies), but Episode III makes us once again glad to be "a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away." --David Horiuchi

DVD features
Say what you will about the new Star Wars films--and plenty has been said already--but the DVDs continue to set the standard for technical excellence. From the opening of the first scene, the Dolby 5.1 EX sound is thrilling, and the picture, transferred directly from the digital source, is fantastic. A commentary track is again provided by a combination of people, including George Lucas, producer Rick McCallum, animation director Rob Coleman, and ILM visual effects supervisors John Knoll and Roger Guyett. Lucas admits that the film is political and that he was influenced by Vietnam, but makes no mention of the Bush administration, as is widely speculated.

The main documentary on the second disc is probably the most granular DVD feature ever. "Within a Minute: The Making of Episode III" takes 67 minutes to deconstruct one minute of the film, an excerpt of the duel on Mustafar. The idea is to cover all the aspects that go into creating that minute, from writing to set construction to accounting. Fortunately, many of the concepts such as costumes apply to the movie as a whole, but having producer Rick McCallum tell us the importance of food seems a bit overkill. Two other featurettes are "It's All for Real: The Stunts of Episode III," an 11-minute discussion focusing mainly on the lightsaber duels, and "The Chosen One," a 14-minute examination of Darth Vader's evolution over the six films.

The six deleted scenes were no great loss from the film but are all worth watching. Natalie Portman in particular gets some much-needed screen time as one of the co-plotters of an anti-Palpatine movement, and an early action scene ties in to the Clone Wars animated series. There's also a 15-part series of 5 to 7 minute Web documentaries on topics such as the creation of General Grievous and Ewan McGregor, and an Xbox sampler of Battlefront II (if you're lucky, you can play as Obi-Wan Kenobi cutting through an army of droids) among other supplements. --David Horiuchi

The Complete Star Wars Saga


Episodes 4-6 Trilogy (widescreen)

Episode I: The Phantom Menace

Episde II: Attack of the Clones

Star Wars: Clone Wars Vol. 1

Star Wars: Clone Wars Vol. 2

The Star Wars Store

Stills from Episode III: Revenge of the Sith (click for larger images)


Anakin turning to the dark side

When Wookiees attack

Yoda, Jedi master

Mr. and Mrs. Vader

Saber training with Ewan McGregor and Hayden Christensen

The cast




Customer Reviews:   Read 1480 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars To the naysayers here...   July 25, 2006
...picture me with my hand firmly in the crook of my arm, fist raised and middle finger extended. Look, compared to Episodes I and II (the latter I didn't bother with), this film is f**king GREAT!! So enough of your tearing down Episode III; at least the circle has been completed. No, the acting isn't too good, but it wasn't much better in the original trilogy (Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back, and Return of the Jedi)--they're ACTION flicks, fer Chrissakes, what do you expect? Likewise the dialogue...so my advice to the naysayers: Get a clue, already!

That said, I reiterate my comment that Episode III is the best of the newer trilogy. Episode I was simply wasted potential, although it did us the favour of setting up the story's beginning. Jar-Jar Binks I could have done without. Episode II was the one I missed, and haven't regretted that for a moment--as I am to understand it, that was truly the nadir of this trilogy. But the real meat is here; now, at last, we understand how Obi-Wan Kenobi and Anakin Skywalker's friendship was torn asunder. Samuel L. Jackson, playing Mace Windu (Anakin's other mentor), gets to give the performance he's said he often dreamed of--being in a Star Wars movie--and we see Anakin destroy him without hesitation when the Emperor/Lord Palatine seems on the edge of defeat (that ties together with Anakin/Darth Vader's change of heart in Return of the Jedi when the Emperor is trying to kill Luke and seems about to win; Luke's attempts to convince his father that good still lives in his heart in that film are at last successful). We see how the Jedi were either destroyed or driven into hiding, how Anakin made his final transformation into Darth Vader ("He's more machine than human by now"), and where the infants Luke and Leia were sent to be raised secretly, out of the eye of their young father's sorrowful wrath...how his beloved's death in childbirth was the final straw that buried good under a mountain of evil in Vader's heart. (Another note to the naysayers: Those of you who think Padme's [Natalie Portman] death in childbirth is just a cheap tactic to scare young girls coming to watch this film SERIOUSLY need to get a clue...this kind of thing happens in real life a good deal more than you think, and a nice dose of reality might be just what those young girls need, so please spare me and everyone else your moral grandstanding! It was never needed here.)

The circle is complete. And George Lucas has gone beyond the superannuated future shock of THX-1138 (his first feature film, from 1970; a great film, to be sure, but rather obviously dated now) to a galaxy far, far away...



5 out of 5 stars Dark Lord RISE!   July 25, 2006
I think this is the best of all of the movies. The action scenes are great and the making of Darth Vader is a good story. I had to say something because I disagree with the last reviews.


1 out of 5 stars Awful   July 24, 2006
  0 out of 2 found this review helpful

No continuity with the original three masterpieces, that about sums it up! George Lucas seemed to make up this movie as he went along opting for CGI graphics instead of a compelling story line. Never in my moviewatching history have I seen potential wasted the way it was with the entire Prequel triology.
The galaxy, once vast and diverse, has been reduced to the size of a sandbox in a Catholic school. Don't believe me? Luke has now picked up four additional family members since Vader's shocking revelation in ESB. Count 'em out? Leia, 3PO, Padme, Palpatine (his grandfather). Disgusting isn't it?



1 out of 5 stars Expectations were high. And fans were let down.   July 24, 2006
  0 out of 2 found this review helpful

There are a lot of negative things to be said about any given movie that has been released throughout history. But what makes a good movie, is if the good things about it, greatly outweigh the bad things about it. A bad movie is just the opposite; and I have seen some very poor movies. If I had a top five list of poor and pathetic movies, 'Revenge of the Sith' would undoubtedly and unfortunately be on that list. There are very few, if any real redeeming qualities about this movie. It isn't a classic... and can never be a classic. It has failed the fans of Star Wars (older fans of the O.T.), and the more intelligent fans. People who really liked and enjoyed this movie, are either in denial, or just plain simpletons.

The story is lacking. The third edition to the saga needed to perhaps be the most powerful. This was the movie that was supposed to be better than any of the others; we were supposed to be moved to tears by the transformation that Anakin took from being himself, to becoming Darth Vader. I wasn't moved.

Characters, were like cardboard cut-outs. There was nothing deep in their personality that made them believable; the whole while watching this movie, I KNEW without a doubt that these were actors saying lines that they had read from a script written by a cop-out director. They had little to work with; the only true emotional part was by Ewan McGregor, when Anakin was about to catch on fire by the lake of lava. Those lines he delivered were the only lines worth remembering and caring about. Rather than that, the dialogue in this movie will be forgotten as the decades slip by.

Are there any good things about this movie at all? Sure. But very few. If you read some of the other HONEST reviews here, you will see that the flaws outweigh any redeeming qualities... and after watching this movie, you will find that George Lucas failed. He failed at pleasing the audience, and failed the entire Star Wars franchise.

But are there good things about the actual DVD itself? The picture quality is 100% top-notch, and there are many bonus features, that even if you hated the movie, you will probably like watching. The features are comprehensive and very interesting.






5 out of 5 stars Entertaining!   July 23, 2006
From someone like myself who isn't into these types of spacy and action movies I liked Star Wars Episode III very much, it was the best of the whole collection in my opinion. I even enjoyed the action scenes.
Watching the making and other special features DVD was quite interesting as well.


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