The Original Theatrical Cut of STAR WARS is Finally Returning to Theaters!
A moment that felt impossible for decades is officially happening! Lucasfilm and Disney are bringing the original theatrical cut of Star Wars back to the big screen for its fiftieth anniversary, letting fans experience Star Wars the way audiences first saw it in 1977.
The re-release lands on February 17, 2027, and it’s confirmed by Lucasfilm that this is indeed the untouched theatrical version. For longtime fans, this is huge! I haven’t seen this version of the film since I was a kid!
Earlier this year, Lucasfilm revealed that Star Wars: A New Hope, would return to theaters for the milestone celebration. That announcement immediately sparked the big question. Which version would we get? Would the Special Edition, the version that has been the go to for the last three decades, be the one projected on the screen again? The Special Edition with Greedo firing first, CGI Jabba the Hutt, and those added rings around the Death Star?
Now the studio has answered that once and for all. This upcoming release will be “a newly restored version of the classic Star Wars (1977) theatrical release” shown for a limited run. Other outlets report it is expected to hit IMAX as well, though Lucasfilm has not confirmed that part yet.
This marks a major shift from how the studio has handled the original trilogy for years. When George Lucas remastered and reworked the films for the 1997 Special Editions, those became the exclusive versions available on every platform.
The theatrical cuts vanished from circulation which meant no official Blu-rays, no streaming, no theatrical revivals. Fans who wanted Han shooting first or a Jabba free Mos Eisley had to hunt down rare prints or early physical releases.
Last year, however, Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy attended a screening of one of those original prints, a moment that signaled something was changing, and now we can see exactly what that meant.
The re-release was originally slated for April 30, 2027 which would have placed it just ahead of the new film Star Wars: Starfighter. Moving it to February gives the classic film more breathing room and positions it early in the year when moviegoing competition is lighter.
If you have ever wanted to see Star Wars the way audiences did in 1977, this is going to be a hot ticket.
More details will arrive next year as the anniversary approaches. Until then, it is officially time to celebrate. The original Star Wars is coming back to theaters and fans finally get the chance to experience it again in its authentic form.
Source: StarWars.com