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Summer Megaparty: Theater Edition Luke Skywalker!

In 1997, George Lucas sent the original Star Wars trilogy back into theaters with his "Special Edition" revamps -- a topic that's still sore for many purists who preferred their "Jabba concert scene" without dancing Rodians in orange bathing suits. The Special Editions were polarizing, but in the end, anyone who hated them now has access to the original versions, too.

That was a great year to be a Star Wars fan. We knew the prequels were coming, but we didn't know an awful lot about them. Few thought that a gen-shaping series rated four stars by everyone on the planet could go sour, and the anticipation was palpable. The anticipation was palatineable. Plus, Hasbro revived the legendary Star Wars action figure collection with all the spirit of the Kenner originals, effectively kicking off a culture of "catering to the collectors" that took geeks like me off of the Internet trading posts and back into toy stores, where we fought little kids over four-inch Boba Fetts.

By the time the Special Edition Return of the Jedi hit theaters on March 14th, 1997, the excitement from the movies and from the toys intertwined in a more literal way. Hasbro issued thousands of theaters a supply of Luke Skywalker figures in exclusive "Theater Edition" packaging, to be given away free to theatergoers on opening night. The catch: Supplies were limited, and they were only going to give 'em away during one of the many showings that day. I went with an old friend of mine hoping for a little luck, and fate was on my side.


The figure itself was no different from the Jedi Luke sold in every toy store in the country at the time. The only difference was a little logo on the lower left of the packaging citing it as the "Theater Edition." Despite this, I'd been collecting toys long enough by then to realize that "Theater Edition Luke" was going to be a very hot ticket the next morning. As kids tore open the packages to get at their Luke, I very carefully slipped mine into my bag. Even had the foresight to bring along some bubblewrap.

And as an added bonus, my friend has absolutely no interest in Star Wars figures, so she gave me her Theater Edition Luke, too. We saw the movie, parted ways, and when I got home, the wheeling and dealing commenced.

While interest in this particular figure has cooled considerably since 1997, it was selling for hundreds in the weeks following its debut night. Every collector wanted it, and many of those who did their duty of going to the theater on opening night came up short. It was a total crapshoot, and since Star Wars collectors tend to be completists, it seemed that nobody could live without a Theater Edition Luke. (At the time, we all called him "Special Edition Luke," or more concisely, "SE Luke.")

I was in a twice-blessed position. Not only did I have two of these figures (meaning I could freely trade one out and still have one for my own collection), but one of the two I had was in gem mint condition. Theater Edition Luke figures most often came with dents and bruises in the packaging, because, well, it's tough to avoid that when you've got annoyed theater workers being bombarded by 70 lunatics the second they bring out a box marked "Hasbro," tossing the figures around like bread at a shelter. Since I was never much of a stickler for owning things in mint condition, I kept the figure with a few card dents and started taking offers on the mint one.

It was like walking through a barren desert with a canteen full of coconut milk. Everyone wanted my Luke, and people were practically offering their souls for it. I ultimately scored a trade wherein I sent some stranger my Theater Edition Luke, and in return, received 60 bucks and three gigantic boxes stuffed with packaged figures from at least 20 different lines -- X-Men, Batman, Star Trek, Congo...it was endless. None of the figures I got in that trade were worth more than a few bucks singularly, but anytime you can trade one free thing for over 75 other things, you've done well.

I distinctly recall the feeling of being a pig in shit as I spread the contents of those three boxes across the living room floor. The person I traded with admitted that he'd made a really bad deal, but as his apartment was overstuffed with useless figures that were hurting his ability to walk from the kitchen to the bedroom without killing a six-inch Wolverine, he was just glad to have the extra space. We both left happy, but I think I was a just a wee bit happier.

I've since stopped collecting and totally fell off the toy wagon at large, but back when I was heavy into it, I was a master trader. It was my favorite part of the hobby. I'd been at it for close to ten years before I ever had a Internet connection, but once I got AOL 2.5 and found people with similar interests online, I was unstoppable. One time I traded a guy a couple of MegaForce and Beetlejuice toys for nearly the entire run of G1 Transformers, including a boxed Optimus Prime, all because he didn't know anything about Transformers and didn't want to go through the trouble of ID'ing them. I stupidly sold them all a few years later, but the thrill always seemed to be more in the "getting there" than in the "being there."

I feel even more nerdy writing about this stuff than writing about Dunkin' Donuts Coolatas and Ninja Turtle magazines, but I just had to reflect. If you'd like to learn more about "Theater Edition Luke," click here.

Posted by Matt on 07/21/2007. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 160 comments

Apparently in a new book one of the Solo kids uses the force to go back in time.
Hahahahaha Oh god, what’s next “Star Wars: in Space!”

Chestnuts roasted by dohopoki @ 07/21/2007 4:48 PM


eBay says you made the right choice, Matt. I’m seein’ those babies go for a buck and up.

Chestnuts roasted by Cotter @ 07/21/2007 5:02 PM


I had the regular version of that figure, and it was my favorite of the POTF2 line. As for theater giveaways, I got a set of three “micro” Micro Machines, including the Millennium Falcon, the Slave I, and the second Death Star when I went to see Episode IV. I probably still have the Death Star one somewhere, but the other two are long gone, sadly. They were no bigger than a dime, after all.

Chestnuts roasted by Frostor @ 07/21/2007 5:04 PM


The one thing that I remember from this time period is that I won the spelling bee on “empire.” It was funny because about five kids got out on the word, and when I got it, I was like “Duh, guys! What’s at the movies right now?”

Chestnuts roasted by Rainbowfeet @ 07/21/2007 5:09 PM


I was never much into the toy-collecting thing. I WAS into Transformers back during the G1 days, had the entirety of Monstructor… I sold my old collection in order to set up my home LAN, and then the collection I’d built up since then for good money. I did try the whole buy/sell thing on eBay back when it was still something everyone did, sold some M.U.S.C.L.Es…

Chestnuts roasted by DocDragon @ 07/21/2007 5:21 PM


I just picked up an original April O’Neil MOC while I was at Zern’s today and I’m a little torn between displaying her in the delightfully kitschy artwork, or ripping it open and violating her extensively.

Good haul at the market today. Got some Trading Card Treats, a couple My Pretty Mermaids, some cute little Nickelodeon novelties (stickers, eraser, pencil pack), a tiny figure of Waldo, a Disney Robin Hood beanie, the worst candy ever made, and my buddies even gave me a free Transformers poster from eBay Live. My fingers are still gritty from digging through old Happy Meal toys.

Chestnuts roasted by Mystie @ 07/21/2007 5:26 PM


Matt, doesn’t the exsistance of the prequels already make the “I am your father!” bit a “no-shit moment”? It is still significant as this is when LUKE learns the truth. In fact, because it is made clear in the prequels that Vader believes his child(ren) to be dead, it is kind of nice to have an on-screen explaination of how Vader comes to learn this. Before we had to assume he either just guessed or interrogated some rebels or something. The latter explanation making it seem especially stupid that Obi-Wan and the Lars’ still called him Skywalker!

Chestnuts roasted by Timbo @ 07/21/2007 5:30 PM


I can’t believe somebody actually brought up Monstructor!! Right near the top of my favorite combiners/gestalts. Computron is probably the only one that out ranks him, for me. Leave it to Grimlock to win the combiner award. In fact, combiners is the only area in which I feel Decepticons have ever won outright. Monstructor, Predaking, and Piranacon are just ACE.

I really hope you really meant Monstructor and didn’t mix it up with Menasor, Doc. Monstructor was quite possibly the smallest combiner and was made up of Pretenders figures.

Chestnuts roasted by Knegative @ 07/21/2007 5:33 PM


that’s really weird rainbowfeet, because I remember a lot of spelling bees from that time period too.

Chestnuts roasted by dohopoki @ 07/21/2007 5:34 PM


Wow, this articled just reminded me that I have boxes of those POTF Star Wars figures from 1997. I never opened any of them. They probably are worth next-to-nothing as I think everyone was stockpiling them. I also have a few of the vehicles as well. Hmmm, I have an X-Wing Fighter, a Snowspeeder, and maybe a TIE Fighter.

The next time I head to my parent’s house I should go find them. I think they are in storage somewhere in their (finished) basement. If I had to guess I’d say there are probably 40-50 figures. I had totally forgotten about them.

When it comes to collecting stuff like this I definitely go through hot and cold spells. Every once in a great while I’ll become motivated and collect them like a fiend for a few months, then take a few years off. I think the SW figures in ’97 were the last time I really was addicted. Since then I think I have only bought three or four Transformers, two of which were just this week.

Usually I am pretty happy with myself when I resist the temptation and pass on collecting them. The only toys I regret not buying were the Road Warrior action figures that were released a few years ago.

Oh, and I also regret not buying the Statler and Waldorf Muppet figures as well. I had grand plans of building them a little balcony and placing them on one of the shelves on my desk at work. I could then have pretended they were mocking me and joking about my poor work performance all day long.

I totally should have done that.

Chestnuts roasted by Magic Toy @ 07/21/2007 6:26 PM


Speaking of spelling bees… I nearly won my school’s annual bee when I was in 4th or 5th grade. It was pretty cool. The entire school took spelling tests and those with the highest scores were allowed to compete on stage. I was one of the final three contestants and I got knocked out on the word FINALLY.

F-I-N… err… N — OH F**K!

As soon as I said the letter I knew I’d screwed it up. I’m still bitter about that.

Oh well, I still got a small congratulations cake out of it (from the parents).

Chestnuts roasted by Magic Toy @ 07/21/2007 6:33 PM


I always enjoy seeing old figures in the package. Mostly because I like seeing old packaging.

Ferris Bueller’s Day Off is on VH1 tonight. I don’t have cable. But it’s been awhile since I have seen it and I think I am going to go rent it. I went bonkers at Target today and too broke to go out. So, if this is the beginning of the SNT, Happy Saturday!

Chestnuts roasted by kb @ 07/21/2007 6:42 PM


I hope they stick the OT in theaters one more time, as I missed the ’97 re-release. Minus Hayden Christensen. I don’t care about the Sarlacc having Audrey from “Little Shop of Horrors”‘s mouth, but Ani’s grinning nerdy face is reeeeally out of place in the final scenes.

Chestnuts roasted by Mars @ 07/21/2007 7:48 PM


I briefly worked on the EP1 toy line back then. I was employed by a division of Hasbro, and the annointed ones actually went to his Ranch for product development meetings. He made a mint squeezing them for high percentage of royalties. I was told it was the first time the royalties reached over 3% (He asked for and got 10%). Working from memory here, but I believe when Godzilla came calling for high royalties and got it, we knew it was the beginning of the end.

Chestnuts roasted by mk @ 07/21/2007 7:58 PM


My first time seeing Star Wars was the Special Edition so certain things (Jabba in ANH, the Hoth monster) seem natural to me, but I hate the more egregious changes as much as any old schooler.
So anybody else finish Deathly Hallows yet? I’m pretty sad to think it’s all over, but it’s a happy sad. I can’t wait for whatever JKR does next.
Happy SNT everybody!

Chestnuts roasted by squee4242 @ 07/21/2007 8:10 PM


hey Mars, I’m not sure if it’s true or accurate but I think I heard that they were releasing all 6 movies back into digital theaters one by one starting some not too distant year and in large format like IMAX.

Chestnuts roasted by dohopoki @ 07/21/2007 8:23 PM


dohopoki- Yeah, we had like one a week that year in preparation for the big one. It got so old so fast.

Magic Toy/Toe- Congratulations on your almost-win. I made it to the area bee in 8th grade, and lost on “benign.” Which wasn’t bad considering I didn’t read the book in preparation and had not heard it before. Third place was pretty okay. The problem (I tell this story a lot) was that some fifth-grader won and her parents were mouthing the letters for her. Plus, the people running the bee got to one on the list and we could all hear them say “let’s not give her that one.” I don’t know why none of us ever contested it. (Maybe because none uf us wanted to go to another bee.)Bitter? Me? No way! :)

Chestnuts roasted by Rainbowfeet @ 07/21/2007 8:31 PM


The way Yoda aged through the movies was wrong, he aged WAY too much over a short time if you consider how much he changed over, say 25 years.

Still the greatest movie series ever made!

Chestnuts roasted by Mike D @ 07/21/2007 8:40 PM


The only prequel I thought was awesome was Episode III. I like it way more than A New Hope.

Chestnuts roasted by Jeff Mack @ 07/21/2007 9:14 PM


Oh, and about the Special Editions:

I hate hate hate CGI Jabba in A New Hope. Not only does it look stupid but I liked the idea of some sinister gangster tracking Han down from the shadows…

Chestnuts roasted by Jeff Mack @ 07/21/2007 9:17 PM


Ep. V and VI are great thanks to Lando and Ackbar, but otherwise II and III are where it’s at, for me. Phantom Menace does indeed suck, but having Anakin ask Padme if she’s an angel is just too fucking awesome, and him leaving his mom makes me blubber something awful. So, I can’t hate it hate it.

Chestnuts roasted by Knegative @ 07/21/2007 9:21 PM


“Empire” is my favorite, but I pretty much enjoy parts of all of them; yes, even “Phantom Menace.”

Funny you should post this. One of the things I did quite a bit of on my vacation was shopping. We stopped in several stores and malls, including one fair-sized Toys ‘R Us in Albany. While my best friend eyed the new Transformers and TMNT figures, I pored through the Star Wars stuff. Some of the figures that came packaged with comics were really tempting, but in the end I reminded myself I had limited space to carry everything home.

And yes, I remember when the Special Editions came out. I was in my last year of high school. I saw all three of them in the theater, “New Hope” twice. I saw “Empire” with a pair of my best friends. We talked and chatted and ate popcorn, maybe a little too loudly, as someone actually told us to hush.

I didn’t see “Return of the Jedi” until well after its March release, by which time “Theater Edition Lukes” were long gone. I never even heard of that promotion until I read Matt’s blog. I saw it with my family; I bet my brother would have gotten the figure, anyway.

Chestnuts roasted by starwenn @ 07/21/2007 10:05 PM


Are the high royalties why the figures are so expensive? I mean,they may not be the MOST expensive figures in the store,but if it’s 7 bucks for a tiny 3.75 inch G.I. Joe-esque Luke,that looks nothing at all like Luke,or a total badass looking 6 inch tall Mattel figure of Batman or Bane for 3 bucks more,then the Star Wars guys are a ripoff. Hell,for the price of a Star Wars figure,you could get one of the smaller Transformers,that actually transforms from vehicle to robot!

Chestnuts roasted by Kid Nicky @ 07/21/2007 10:14 PM


Kid Nicky I’m pretty sure that you just answered your own question. The reason that Star Wars toys are so expensive is because of the royalties. Hasbro has to pay Lucasfilm such a large amount so they can have the rights to make the toys, so that’s money out the window for them. The only way for them to make a sizeable profit is to increase the price. And as long as fruits like me keep buying ‘em, Hasbro will keep it that way.

Chestnuts roasted by Darth Poop @ 07/21/2007 10:29 PM


Royalty payments had a great deal to do with the design of this line. In addition, you contractual agreement on returns and damaged goods that figure in to it (who bears the cost) and net vs. gross roytalty payments. I remember how deflated the R&D team was having to stripout the products of the features because Hasbro wasn’t going to make the kind of money off EPI that they enjoyed from the previous franchise. You can imagine.

Toy lore: Not sure if this is true or not, but someone from Kenner told me that when the first toys came out, the production run wasn’t able to keep up with Christmas demand, so Kenner shipped empty packages to the stores with a certificate to mail in to retrieve your action figure. With the height of Barbie collectible mania in the middle 90s, the 1995 Christmas Barbie ended up doing something similar.

Chestnuts roasted by Anonymous @ 07/21/2007 10:32 PM


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