With the original Star Wars not released on VHS, Betamax, LaserDisc or CED until October 1982, and The Empire Strikes Back four years away from its home video release when it arrived in May 1980, the only way many fans could enjoy the saga at home was via Ken-Films Inc, who released a variety of different versions (with or without sounds, colour or black and white) of the first two original trilogy films (the Fort Lee, New Jersey based company, which first began operating in 1968, released a total of 436 films and folded in 1982 before Return of the Jedi arrived, the explosion of the video boom putting paid to Super8 releases). Here we see the opening 3 minutes of their edit of Empire, which represents 14 minutes of regular screen time, and which ran for a total of 33 very heavily and judiciously edited minutes.
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