fettpride
Well-Known Hunter
You gotta put the black specs around the kills !!!!
My point of view is this ...
It really is subjective. There are certainly a few signature scratches that we can prove from stills that were not there in the production of the film. But seriously, 90 + % of them, cannot be . So we have the AoSW/C4 exhibit. It's what the majority of fans have come to expect is "canon".
It's only the hard core Fett fanatic that will know the story on this, sure. But for the sake of the most intricate costume that can be assembled for JB, the more detail the better IMO. As long as it can be pointed out on the "Hero" helmet from yesteryear, anywhere in it's history, (proven to exist on it), it just makes for more of an interesting piece, as highly detailed of a masterpiece as possible for posterity. Within reason of course. NO BLUE MARKER
Remember, there will be a lot of "Star Wars Fans" seeing this suit over the upcoming years (not just "Fett Fans"). Any hard core SW fan is all about George Lucas' vision of the galaxy after the fall of the republic and everything in it - old, dirty, beaten up, and worn. Going the extra mile with other scratches and damage we see on the helmet today on exhibit, adds more to the look and feel of the character.
Another thing to consider - when it was originally painted for the film, they never knew in a million years that it would be scrutinized up close and personal, by thousands of fans. It was meant for a few minutes in a movie for a tertiary character. So, given that perspective, some would probably be a little disappointed in seeing the 1979 ESB "Hero" up close and personal, when we've been looking at AoSW exhibit photos for 10 years or more
Again, it just makes for a much more interesting masterpiece in the end.
Besides ...
Mr. Bulloch has sustained some of his own dents, dings, and gouges over the last 25 years, why should his suit not match
( all in fun Mr. Bulloch
)
FP
My point of view is this ...
It really is subjective. There are certainly a few signature scratches that we can prove from stills that were not there in the production of the film. But seriously, 90 + % of them, cannot be . So we have the AoSW/C4 exhibit. It's what the majority of fans have come to expect is "canon".
It's only the hard core Fett fanatic that will know the story on this, sure. But for the sake of the most intricate costume that can be assembled for JB, the more detail the better IMO. As long as it can be pointed out on the "Hero" helmet from yesteryear, anywhere in it's history, (proven to exist on it), it just makes for more of an interesting piece, as highly detailed of a masterpiece as possible for posterity. Within reason of course. NO BLUE MARKER

Remember, there will be a lot of "Star Wars Fans" seeing this suit over the upcoming years (not just "Fett Fans"). Any hard core SW fan is all about George Lucas' vision of the galaxy after the fall of the republic and everything in it - old, dirty, beaten up, and worn. Going the extra mile with other scratches and damage we see on the helmet today on exhibit, adds more to the look and feel of the character.
Another thing to consider - when it was originally painted for the film, they never knew in a million years that it would be scrutinized up close and personal, by thousands of fans. It was meant for a few minutes in a movie for a tertiary character. So, given that perspective, some would probably be a little disappointed in seeing the 1979 ESB "Hero" up close and personal, when we've been looking at AoSW exhibit photos for 10 years or more

Besides ...
Mr. Bulloch has sustained some of his own dents, dings, and gouges over the last 25 years, why should his suit not match


FP