{"product_id":"close-encounters-of-the-third-kind-vhs","title":"Close Encounters Of The Third Kind VHS","description":"\u003cp\u003eClose Encounters Of The Third Kind on VHS is the home-video format for a movie that was built for the theater. Spielberg’s 1977 sci-fi feature is one of the touchstone American films of its decade, and the Columbia TriStar studio retail VHS is how it lived in living rooms for the twenty years before DVD took over. The cassette is the real piece. The sleeve art is the real piece. The clamshell case with the Columbia TriStar Home Video labeling is the real piece.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eThe film itself does not need a sales pitch. The Devils Tower mountain reveal, the five-note communication motif, the practical effects on the mothership reveal, the Truffaut casting choice. It is one of the most discussed sci-fi films of its era and the conversation has never really cooled off. What VHS adds is the era-correct viewing context: a softer image, a warmer color cast, audio that breathes a little, and the sense that you are watching the version of the film that was actually in circulation when the cultural footprint got laid down.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003ch3\u003eThe format\u003c\/h3\u003e\u003cp\u003eThis is a studio retail VHS from Columbia TriStar Home Video. We can verify the title, the vendor, and the format from the cassette and case in hand. We do not claim a specific year of pressing, a specific release variant, or a specific store-of-origin unless that information is printed on the tape itself.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eVHS is not a substitute for digital. It is its own viewing experience. The grain is part of the image. The magnetic audio fluctuation is part of the soundtrack. The tracking is part of the ritual. People who collect VHS in 2026 are not doing it because they cannot stream the movie. They are doing it because the tape is the artifact and the artifact has its own life.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003ch3\u003eCondition\u003c\/h3\u003e\u003cp\u003eLook at every photo we shot. We do not stage and we do not retouch. Sleeve wear, shell color, label condition, and any spine creasing are visible in the listing photos. If the tape is shrink-wrapped we say so. If it is not, we describe it as an open studio retail copy. We do not represent unsealed tapes as new-old-stock. The condition you see is the condition that ships.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eFor playback after long storage, a cleaning-tape pass on the VCR head before first run is the standard move. The cassette itself is stable; the player heads pick up oxide from sitting tapes and a single pass clears it.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003ch3\u003eWho this is for\u003c\/h3\u003e\u003cp\u003eSpielberg completists building a director-shelf in physical media. Sci-fi fans who want the seventies-era version of the movie rather than the remastered streaming cut. VHS collectors building a Columbia TriStar run. Anyone who saw this in a theater on first release and wants the take-home tape that lived in the living room afterward. Set dressers and prop stylists who need an era-correct prop for a period piece. We sell to all of them.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003ch3\u003eThe Spielberg physical-media shelf\u003c\/h3\u003e\u003cp\u003eClose Encounters sits inside a defined Spielberg shelf-building project that collectors approach as a multi-decade run: Jaws, Close Encounters, Raiders, ET, Empire of the Sun, Jurassic Park, on through the later catalog. The Columbia TriStar Home Video studio retail VHS is the era-correct format for the late-seventies and eighties part of that run. Building the shelf in physical media gives a director-shelf its own visual identity that streaming cannot replicate, and the cassette format is part of how that identity reads.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eThe film also occupies a specific spot in seventies sci-fi history. The genre’s late-seventies window produced a handful of touchstone American films that defined what mainstream sci-fi could be, and Close Encounters is one of the cornerstones. The VHS connects the viewer to the era the film was actually consumed in, which matters more on this title than on most.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003ch3\u003eThe shop\u003c\/h3\u003e\u003cp\u003eWe are on Fremont Street in downtown Las Vegas, ground floor at Container Park. The VHS wall rotates weekly. We carry one-of-one inventory across vintage apparel, retro video games, VHS, jerseys, toys, and collectibles. Nothing on the site is reproduced. If you want to dig in person, the shop runs deeper than the website shows.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Columbia TriStar Home Video","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45145997508717,"sku":null,"price":5.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0592\/0564\/8493\/files\/95BF87D8-C68D-449A-B761-43F4BC66613B.jpg?v=1777403719","url":"https:\/\/keepitclassiclv.com\/products\/close-encounters-of-the-third-kind-vhs","provider":"Keep It Classic","version":"1.0","type":"link"}