Showing my age, some of my favorite movie novelizations are:
Nosferatu the Vampyre by Paul Monette, based on the Herzog film. Which is all the more impressive when you realize that it's a novel based on a remake of a silent movie based on a novel.
Yeah, that's pretty clever.
Battle for the Planet of the Apes by David Gerrold, which, trust me, is better than the actual movie. (I read the book before I saw the movie, and was disappointed that the movie wasn't as good as the book.)
Agreed! Unfortunately, some of the best, more thoughtful novel passages (based on the John & Joyce Corrington script) were shot, but ended up on the cutting room floor. However, starting with the laserdisc era all the way up to blu ray, the cut scenes are available and give some indication on how they would have helped the movie.
I would also add Michael Avallone's novelization for
Beneath the Planet of the Apes as a winner; although the film was strong, the novel added more substance to the anti-war / anti-human plots than the film, and intensified the Paul Dehn script's grim judgement on the impossibility for human or ape survival thanks to their own instincts.
The Omen by David Seltzer, who also wrote the original screenplay for the movie. It's fairly rare for the screenwriter to write the novelization as well, probably because screenwriting pays better.
You're hitting it out of the park, Greg!
The Omen was a wonderful novelization, with more character development (including a rather sickening background to Father Brennan), and explanation of the prophecy. About Seltzer--he was so involved in fleshing out Robert Munger's idea, that he made it his own.That said, when Fox wanted to release a novel in advance of the film (as part of the famous marketing of the film), there was no one better to handle it than the man who brought it all to life.