Zodiac still

Zodiac (2007)

What editions are available?

  • Theatrical (157 min.)
  • Director’s Cut (162 min.)

Director David Fincher presented the director’s cut of his magnificent film Zodiac eight months after the theatrical release at an event hosted by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. FSLC associate director of programming Kent Jones interviewed Fincher.

“When we got the version we were happy with, we did one more screening,” said Fincher. “We hijacked people from malls and gave them the power of life and death, and made them Siskel and Ebert.” And due to those screening two scenes were let go from the theatrical version. Those two scenes were the major additions to the Director’s Cut.

Source: The Reeler

The director’s preferred edition is: Director’s Cut

Comparison of the editions with courtesy of Movie-Censorship.com

Legend (1985)

What editions are available?

  • Theatrical (90 min.)
  • Theatrical International Cut (94 min.)
  • Director’s Cut (114 min.)

When Legend was released on Blu-ray in 2011 it included the theatrical edition and the director’s cut. When viewers have chosen a edition to watch a statement from director Ridley Scott is prompted.

“The final theatrical version of Legend was transferred by Universal in 2006 directly from the film’s inter-negative. Although I was not involved in this transfer, it displays a much more detailed and refined image than the Director’s Cut. Considering the significantly different source elements and transfer processes involved, it is safe to say that each version of Legend has its own strengths and I leave it to you to decide which one you think is best.
– Ridley Scott”

“For years before its release on DVD, the Legend Director’s Cut was thought to have been lost forever. However, in 2000, it was miraculously located in the form of a pristine answer print, which was later transferred to DVD. Answer prints by their nature offer limited latitude in the transfer process, commonly resulting in less-than-optimal picture quality. Such is the case with Legend Director’s Cut. Newly re-transferred in 2011 for this Blu-ray release, the limitations of the answer print are now even more apparent in high definition. However, given its one-and-only source element, the Director’s Cut looks as good as it possibly can and I am pleased to include it on this Blu-ray release as both an archival curiosity for fans and a digital preservation of my original vision for the film.
– Ridley Scott”

Source: Legend Blu-ray

The director’s preferred edition is: Director’s Cut

Comparison of the editions with courtesy of Movie-Censorship.com

Still from Gladiator (2000)

Gladiator (2000)

What editions are available?

  • Theatrical (155 min.)
  • Extended (170 min.)

Gladiator conquered the Academy Awards in 2001 and took home 5 Oscars including Best Picture and Best Actor (Russell Crowe). The Blu-ray edition of the film includes two versions of the movie and in an intro on the extended edition director Ridley Scott states that the theatrical edition is his director’s cut.

“What you are about to see, if you press play, is the extended version of Gladiator. This is not the director’s cut. The director’s cut is the length that went out in theaters. This has a lot of scenes in it that were removed during the editing process and might be worth seeing.”

Source: Ridley Scott intro on Gladiator on Blu-ray.

The director’s preferred edition: Theatrical

Comparison of the editions with courtesy of Movie-Censorship.com

Payback (1999)

What editions are available?

  • Theatrical (90 min.)
  • Director’s Cut (101 min.)

When Paramount Pictures were presented with the neo noir revenge film Payback in 1998 it was deemed too dark for mainstream audience. Director Brian Helgeland was given the chance to retool the movie but declined, and production designer John Myhre was given a go at it. Myhre reshot 30% of the film, including a quite different and lighter ending.

Helgelands director’s cut is available in the US on Blu-ray and DVD as Straight Up: The Director’s Cut. The UK Blu-ray edition of Payback contains both editions of the film.

“I can’t speak so much to what is different about my version, than the theatrical version, because I only ever really analyzed my own version and what I’m trying to do with that version. The theatrical version to me, it’s what became once I wasn’t involved anymore on it.” – Brian Helgeland

Source: Same Story… Different Movie: Creating Payback the Director’s Cut, a featurette extra on Blu-ray

The director’s preferred edition: Director’s Cut

Comparison of the editions with courtesy of Movie-Censorship.com

Donnie Darko (2001)

  • Theatrical (113 min.)
  • Director’s Cut (133 min.)

Donnie Darko has a cult following since it’s initial release in 2001. Director Richard Kelly released a director’s cut of the film in 2004 adding more than 20 minutes of footage and an altered soundtrack.

Kelly confirmed with This or That Edition which edition he preferred:

The director’s preferred edition: Both

Comparison of the editions with courtesy of Movie-Censorship.com

Apocalypse Now (1979)

What editions are available?

  • Theatrical (153 min.)
  • Redux (202 min.)

In 2001 Francis Ford Coppola premiered an extended cut of his epic war film titled Apocalypse Now Redux at The Cannes Film Festival. Coppola along with his editor Walter Murch added 49 minutes of restored footage, that was cut out of the original film, to the Redux.

“…when we showed it to all the distributors, we realized that, for its time, it was pretty unusual,” said Coppola in an interview with Rotten Tomatoes. “It was supposed to be sort of a war movie in their minds, and what they got was strange; it was surreal, it was long.” Coppola stated that he edited the theatrical version to be more conventional. “Anyway, years later, I was sitting in a little hotel room with a little 17-inch television in London, and it came on, and I always liked the beginning of the picture, so I started watching it, and I was planning to see the whole thing. But I watched the whole thing, and my reaction was, “Gee, this is nowhere near as far out or as unusual as we thought at the time.” And you know, as often happens, art or work that everyone finds controversial, 15 years later… You know, I always like to say the abstract art of one period becomes the wallpaper a few years later. And I thought, gee, that original version had a lot of stuff that we liked but we took out. And really, people had said, “What happened to the French plantation?” So we just basically put it back. And the “Redux” version was nothing more than the original version as it had been before we shortened it for the release.”

Source: Rotten Tomatoes

The director’s preferred edition: Redux

Comparison of the editions with courtesy of Movie-Censorship.com

E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982)

What editions are available?

  • Theatrical (115 min.)
  • 20th Anniversary Edition (120 min.)

The sci-fi classic E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial was re-released in theaters on its 20th Anniversary in 2002 with extra footage with blessing from Steven Spielberg. Not only was the new edition longer it also had altered special effects. Fans were outraged by Spielberg’s decision and later he said he regretted those changes.

“When people ask me which E.T. they should look at, I always tell them to look at the original 1982 E.T.” said Spielberg in an interview with Ain’t It Cool News. “If you notice, when we did put out E.T. we put out two E.T.s. We put out the digitally enhanced version with the additional scenes and for no extra money, in the same package, we put out the original ‘82 version. I always tell people to go back to the ’82 version.”

Source: AintItCoolNews.com

The director’s preferred edition: Theatrical

Comparison of the editions with courtesy of Movie-Censorship.com

Dances with Wolves (1990)

What editions are available?

  • Theatrical (181 min.)
  • Extended (234 min.)

Kevin Costner directed,  produced and starred in the Oscar winning film Dances with Wolves in 1990. The movie won 7 Oscars including Best Picture, Director and Best Screenplay Based on Material From Another Medium. Two editions of the movie are available on Blu-ray: Theatrical in the UK and Extended in the US, the latter is a cut by the producer Jim Wilson.

”I didn’t work on the long version of Dances With Wolves,” said Costner according to Entertainment Weekly. ”I release the versions I want. They are long, so I don’t need for ’em to be any longer.”

Source: Entertainment Weekly

The director’s preferred edition: Theatrical

Comparison of the editions with courtesy of Movie-Censorship.com

Alien (1979)

What editions are available?

  • Theatrical (117 min.)
  • Director’s Cut (116 min.)

British director Ridley Scott, like Stanley Kubrick with 2001, changed the way we looked to space with the nail biting thriller Alien. In 2003 20th Century Fox released the Alien Quadrilogy set on DVD and Scott was approached to digitally restore and remaster Alien.

“In 1979, when Alien was originally released, I felt that the theatrical cut of the film was the best I could possibly make it. I was very pleased with its pace and structure, and although there were several scenes left on the cutting room floor, I didn’t miss any of them. For all intents and purposes, I felt that the original cut of Alien was perfect. I still feel that way. The traditional definition of the term “Director’s Cut” suggests the restoration of a director’s original vision, free of any creative limitations. It suggests that the filmmaker has finally overcome the interference of heavy-handed studio executives, and that the film has been restored to its original, untampered form. Such is not the case with Alien: The Director’s Cut. It’s a completely different beast. When Twentieth Century Fox approached me to digitally restore the original 1979 cut of the film, they also suggested fully restoring many of the film’s deleted scenes to be reincorporated into a proposed expanded DVD version of the film. Following an exhaustive year-long restoration process, Fox then decided to re-release ALIEN theatrically. It was their hope that I would see fit to include several of the deleted scenes we had restored in order to give moviegoers additional incentive to see the film in theaters. Upon viewing the proposed expanded version of the film, I felt that cut was simply too long and the pacing completely thrown off. After all, I cut those extra scenes out for a reason back in 1979. However, in the interest of giving the fans a new experience with Alien, I figured there had to be an appropriate middle ground. I chose to go in and recut that proposed long version into a more streamlined and polished alternate version of the film. For marketing purposes, this version is being called “The Director’s Cut”. To film purists everywhere, rest easy. The original 1979 theatrical version isn’t going anywhere. It remains my version of choice and is presented fully restored and remastered under my personal supervision alongside the new Director’s Cut in this DVD set.”
Source: DVD booklet from Alien Quadrilogy

The director’s preferred edition is: Theatrical

Comparison of the editions with courtesy of Movie-Censorship.com

World War Z (2013)

What editions are available?

  • Theatrical (115 min.)
  • Unrated (122 min.)

Brad Pitt starred in and produced the ill fated zombie/disaster movie World War Z in 2013. The Golden Globe nominee Marc Forster directed World War Z and is said to have clashed with the A-list star on the production which resulted in the movie going through many stages of disasters. The affair was well documented by Vanity Fair in a enlighten article and it’s no secret that one third of the movie was scrapped, rewritten and then reshot. On Blu-ray viewers can choose between two versions.

”I’m very proud of the rated version and what we pulled off,” said Forster when asked by ShockTillYouDrop about the two versions. “The unrated version is my preference because it’s not just about blood and gore being added. The overall intensity is more than the rated version. You can dial it up more. That’s what I found was that the film didn’t need to be so much more gorey. The level of intensity is bigger.”

Source: ShockTillYouDrop.com

The director’s preferred edition is: Unrated

Comparison of the editions with courtesy of Movie-Censorship.com