Official For many years, the only confirmed copy of
Return of the Ewok was a video copy in Warwick Davis' own home entertainment center. This copy has been said by Davis to have been frequently shown to only close family, friends, and colleagues. Despite viewings of the film by those close to him, he had never shown the film publicly, and many fans had never even heard of it until 1996, when Davis mentioned it in an interview for the
Star Wars Insider magazine. Davis publicly screened the film at the first
Star Wars Celebration in 1999, and it was also screened at Celebration II in 2002 and Celebration III in 2005. The original
16 mm print was said to be lost; according to Davis, his VHS copy is the only one in existence. However, a copy of the print, or even the original print, may actually reside in the Lucasfilm archives. Evidence of this was shown on the 2004
DVD release of the
Star Wars Original Trilogy. A clip from the film of Wicket being chased by Boba Fett on the Death Star was included as part of the
Easter egg of
bloopers from the
trilogy. It appeared in a
widescreen format in good quality, suggesting that it had been preserved. In April 2005, approximately four minutes of the film was made available on the official
Star Wars website for members of Hyperspace, the official fan club, to download and view after the film was shown at Celebration III. Davis said at the convention that he loaned his VHS tape to Lucasfilm, who made a digital copy of it, and since it was the best known copy, that it was the source for the Hyperspace clip. The copy online at StarWars.com shows a minimal amount of cleanup, and the soundtrack has been altered in several places. Where the original film used
Supertramp's "
Take The Long Way Home", the online version substitutes incidental music to avoid copyright clearance issues. Dialogue has also been changed—in one example, Wicket's cry of "Crikey, it's Lord Vader!" near the end of the film has been excised. Unlike its counterpart mockumentary,
R2-D2: Beneath the Dome,
Return of the Ewok has not yet been officially released on DVD or any other format. Davis has reportedly stated that a future release is "possible." In 2020, high quality footage from
Return of the Ewok appears in
Warwick & Son, a 6 minute documentary about Warwick Davis returning to play Wicket W. Warrick in 2019's
Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker. The documentary is featured as bonus content on home video releases of the film and on
Disney +.
Bootlegs In 2004, a recording of the entire film was put on eBay by someone who attended a screening, but the auction was pulled because the copy was reportedly given to the seller under strict agreement that it was not to be copied or sold. At least two people are alleged to have filmed it at Celebration II, but their copies have yet to surface. Although the film was also screened in the Pop Culture room at 2005's Celebration III, no illicit recordings have yet surfaced. The highest-quality bootleg known of the entire film is a fan preservation project created in May 2005, a collaboration between fans Garrett Gilchrist and SKot Kirkwood. Their DVD version uses footage taken from the clip on StarWars.com combined with someone's camcorder recording of the film from one of its public showings, as well as clips culled from other sources, such as a brief excerpt that was shown on
VH1. Gilchrist digitally cleaned up portions of the video and audio, then combined and edited the footage from different sources together to reconstruct the film. At 25 minutes, this version is slightly longer than the original, with Gilchrist adding his own opening and ending credits. The first UK screening of the film was at The Elstree Studios Star Wars Day, Borehamwood, England on November 13, 1994. The second showing was at Empire Day 3 in Watford, England in 1996. A later showing was at the
National Space Centre in Leicester for the Star Wars day convention on November 12, 2005. It was presented by Warwick Davis and also included a question-and-answer session afterward. == Awards ==