X-Entertainment.com X-Entertainment.com A Proud UGO Affiliate
My dying wish is for an owl/camel hybrid, which I call camowl.

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

According to Wikipedia, I share a birthday with Carrot Top. Ugh…

However, I was elated to learn that famed Architech Sir Christopher Wren died on my Birthday. That’s cool.

(I’m talking about the day, not the year, obviously).

Chestnuts roasted by Cameron T. @ 07/22/2007 10:56 AM


OOF! Rough night. Totally, Magic Toy. Were you with us?

Chestnuts roasted by Bill @ 07/22/2007 12:18 PM


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XelP8bHS-Yg

5 minutes of pure awesomness.

Chestnuts roasted by Knegative @ 07/22/2007 12:50 PM


I share my birthday with Baby Spice. Hm.

I’m sad to hear about Tammy Faye. She was a phenomenal fag hag.

Chestnuts roasted by Mystie @ 07/22/2007 1:04 PM


According to Wikipedia my birthday is the same as that of Edie Falco, Bill Watterson and Huey Lewis. People who died on my birthday include Ted Williams, Kenneth Lay and Mrs. Miller.

Lucky for me nothing much happened on that day – Venezuela declaring its independence is the most notable event.

Chestnuts roasted by mjf7583 @ 07/22/2007 2:07 PM


I could tell you about cool stuff like Reno being founded on my birthday and sharing it with Pope Pius III, Guigsy from Oasis, and Billy Joel, but forget that:

ME AND ANDREW W.K. WERE BORN ON THE SAME DAY!!!!!

I love that guy. Crazy, philosophical, totally lovable human being. w00t!!!

Chestnuts roasted by Knegative @ 07/22/2007 2:18 PM


Apparently lots of crazy stuff has happened on my birthday.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/February_9

Chestnuts roasted by Annette @ 07/22/2007 2:18 PM


Wow Annette, I was born on Feb. 7th.

I share a birthday with Emo Phillips and Charles Dickens. Ashton Kutcher was also born on the same day and year. Neat.

Chestnuts roasted by Bill @ 07/22/2007 2:24 PM


I wouldn’t brag about sharing a birthday with Ashton Kutcher, but that’s just me :P

Chestnuts roasted by Knegative @ 07/22/2007 2:29 PM


I share my birthday, June 23, with artificial intelligence pioneer Alan Turing, as well as June Carter Cash and Stu Sutcliffe, first bassist of the Beatles.

…On a sadder note, this date, in 1942, was also the date of the first selections for gassings at Auschwitz.

Chestnuts roasted by Old Jim @ 07/22/2007 2:34 PM


OOOh! I also share a birthday with rocker(?) KT Tunstall! I knew there was a reason I loved her music.

Chestnuts roasted by Old Jim @ 07/22/2007 2:37 PM


I was born on the same day as Corey Haim. Is that good or bad? I remember reading Matt’s article where he sold his teeth. It was sad and funny at the same time.

Chestnuts roasted by JLAJRC @ 07/22/2007 2:37 PM


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/December_23

Chestnuts roasted by JLAJRC @ 07/22/2007 2:38 PM


Good thing, JLAJRC, good thing. Shame on you for thinking otherwise :D

Corey Haim’s Tooth is like the greatest band name in the history of the world.

Chestnuts roasted by Knegative @ 07/22/2007 2:43 PM


JLAJRC

Doesn’t just pasting a URL for the date of your birth deprive us of your opinions of what birthday co-celebrants you consider most significant?

And, we all know, X-Entertainment blog posts are all about opinion! ;-)

Chestnuts roasted by Old Jim @ 07/22/2007 2:47 PM


My Bad – :-(

I didn’t see that you had posted twice, JLAJRC.

Chestnuts roasted by Old Jim @ 07/22/2007 2:50 PM


I share a b-day with Judy Garland, which I’ve always thought was neat. It’s not that I’m a huge fan of her work (I’ve really only ever seen Wizard of Oz, which she’s great in), but her personal history is interesting.
Hey Magic Toy, what did you think of Children of Men? Did you ever watch it?
If anybody wants to discuss Harry Potter, click my name. I really want to know what you guys thought, but of course we can’t really get too detailed here because we don’t want to ruin it for anybody (please don’t click if you’re trying to avoid spoilers!).

Chestnuts roasted by squee4242 @ 07/22/2007 3:35 PM


Oh so that was what you guys were talking about a few days ago. I knew something got deleted, but I didn’t know what. Thanks for that Squee, I’m going to hold all that over the Colonel’s head now :D

Chestnuts roasted by Knegative @ 07/22/2007 3:54 PM


I share my birthday with Jenny McCarthy and Matt Chapman. As some of the long-timers here know, it’s also shared with Samhain, Day of the Dead, and All-Saints Day.

I haven’t even read Half-Blood Prince yet, so I have some catching up to do. The whole HP saga is pretty good, not as traumatic as, say, The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, but just as good for the long haul, if you dedicate yourself to the entire ride. I had hoped it might hinge on the unexpected use of Muggle artifacts, and/or their Mundane technolgy, a la Bakshi’s Wizards or Robert Asprin’s Little Myth Marker, but I know whatever the end, I’ll enjoy nonetheless.

Chestnuts roasted by kingklash believes Kennedy shot first @ 07/22/2007 4:08 PM


Kneg I said Monstructor, and I meant Monstructor. Menasor was off the shelves by the time I was into Transformers. Heck, my first Transformer was Powermaster Optimus Prime.

Chestnuts roasted by DocDragon @ 07/22/2007 4:10 PM


Bill Oh well FINALLY someone appreciates and acknowledges me!! I love you too you are cool yourself. I really enjoy your articles when you went to the special olympics, when you went to the metallica concert, and the calvin and hobbies article too. They are well written and they capture the moment. Also I know when I find something from my childhood online I know how great that feels so I try to do the same for others when I can. A webpage, a video, something. I don’t do it that often but when I think it’s fairly easy I do so.

Chestnuts roasted by Goob @ 07/22/2007 4:33 PM


Bill

Yeah, I was around. I just kept finding so many interesting things to do. Why is it that everything is more fun after midnight?

OK… now to check out my birthday.

I share it with: Jeff Foxworthy, CeCe Peniston and Rosie Perez. Well that sucks.

Oh, I also share it with Chicago Cubs first baseman Derrek Lee. Finally, at least one person I respect.

My birthday is also “Defense Day” in Pakistan. Nice.

Chestnuts roasted by Magic Toy @ 07/22/2007 4:43 PM


Nice, Doc, nice. Powermaster Optimus had the honor of being my favorite version of Prime until I got the movie version.

Chestnuts roasted by Knegative @ 07/22/2007 4:47 PM


I finished ‘Deathly Hallows’ this morning. I really enjoyed it, it was worth the wait. I was in total media black-out mode since Thursday, so I had had a lot of X-E Blog reading to do this afternoon.

And my birthday is pretty boring. Antonio Banderas is really the only person of note.

Chestnuts roasted by Big McLargehuge @ 07/22/2007 5:06 PM


Taking my HP break (1/2 done; not as quick as most are), so figured I’d chime in. But haven’t we done this before?

‘Famous’ typed born same day as me (Jan. 18):
Danny Kaye, Cary Grant, and Kevin Costner – all actors at some point ;)
Jesse Martin – another actor of RENT and Law & Order fame
Dave Attell
Johnathan Davis from Korn
Frank Quietely, a well-known comicbook artist
Curtis Cregan- ya know, Curtis from Hi-5
Ray Dolby – the guy who invented Dolby noise reduction

Chestnuts roasted by Shuanfu @ 07/22/2007 5:24 PM


Add A New Comment!