• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Admiral ? There Be Whales Here!

TrekToday

Rear Admiral
Rear Admiral
A new bobble head courtesy of Bif Bang Pow! will feature a scene from Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home. The Star Trek IV: Whales with Spock Bobble Head will make its debut at this summer’s San Diego Comic-Con on July 8th. The Star Trek IV: Whales with Spock Bobble Head “features a miniature-sized Spock […]

More...
 
At the spring 1989 Denver Star Trek convention, Harve Bennett came onstage just after the Batman presentation by Tim Burton himself, and just before William Shatner, making his first appearance at said con. Harve Bennett had with him a collage of scenes from the first four films, and a work print of the scene from TFF where Kirk Spock and McCoy board the Enterprise after being called back from vacation. Shatner's appearance not only made Batman the highest selling opening weekend in Denver history, but put about 4500 people in the room together to see the scene the thread title comes from.

There is no other single experience quite like 4500 people all crying out that line in unison. No singular mindset present, just common purpose. Some present cried from the power of it. It was incredible.
 
Are we giving Shatner's appearance at a con credit for Batman's box office numbers? As I recall, that movie did crazy box office everywhere.
 
Are we giving Shatner's appearance at a con credit for Batman's box office numbers? As I recall, that movie did crazy box office everywhere.
You misunderstand me. Normally a presentation like Tim Burton's one for Batman would have put about 2000-2500 people in the room, with about a third leaving immediately afterward because the next presenter was "only" Harve Bennett. But because Shatner followed Bennett, no one left, while an extra 1000 or so were there early and saw the Batman presentation. The volume of people in the room mushroomed until is was SRO, something that convention had rarely experienced up to that point.

Because so many were present for the Batman presentation, the word of mouth about it in Denver was phenomenal, with several local reviewers having to do research on the character far beyond the typical "Bang Pow, it's the TV Show on the Movie Screen" crap that superhero movies had gotten up to that point. One local reviewer in fact was raked over the coals for misidentifying the character of Vicki Vale as having been created for the film, when she had been part of the Batman cast since 1942.

None of this would have happened if Shatner hadn't been a presenter at that convention, with Batman coming out that summer. So yes, in a sense, in Denver, Shatner boosted the box office for Batman.
 
Are we giving Shatner's appearance at a con credit for Batman's box office numbers? As I recall, that movie did crazy box office everywhere.
You misunderstand me. Normally a presentation like Tim Burton's one for Batman would have put about 2000-2500 people in the room, with about a third leaving immediately afterward because the next presenter was "only" Harve Bennett. But because Shatner followed Bennett, no one left, while an extra 1000 or so were there early and saw the Batman presentation. The volume of people in the room mushroomed until is was SRO, something that convention had rarely experienced up to that point.

Because so many were present for the Batman presentation, the word of mouth about it in Denver was phenomenal, with several local reviewers having to do research on the character far beyond the typical "Bang Pow, it's the TV Show on the Movie Screen" crap that superhero movies had gotten up to that point. One local reviewer in fact was raked over the coals for misidentifying the character of Vicki Vale as having been created for the film, when she had been part of the Batman cast since 1942.

None of this would have happened if Shatner hadn't been a presenter at that convention, with Batman coming out that summer. So yes, in a sense, in Denver, Shatner boosted the box office for Batman.

That may be your impression, but I'd still have to question how much of an impact a room full of convention-goers had on a major population center's box office for a film that proved to be a phenomenon everywhere else as well.

If it is true, then it's just sad that Shatner managed to drum up so much more interest in the competition than in his own film that summer....
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top