Which is a shame, because I would have enjoyed reading the additional detail it would have likely added to Krall's backstory.There won't be one.
Which is a shame, because I would have enjoyed reading the additional detail it would have likely added to Krall's backstory.There won't be one.
It may not have. A lot of novelization authors are under instructions by the studios not to embellish on details not provided in the scripts these days. I don't know why, it's pretty much the only draw novelizations could have in the modern era, but there you have it.Which is a shame, because I would have enjoyed reading the additional detail it would have likely added to Krall's backstory.
True, but even three or four paragraphs would have been a substantial "elaboration."It may not have. A lot of novelization authors are under instructions by the studios not to embellish on details not provided in the scripts these days. I don't know why, it's pretty much the only draw novelizations could have in the modern era, but there you have it.
It may not have. A lot of novelization authors are under instructions by the studios not to embellish on details not provided in the scripts these days. I don't know why, it's pretty much the only draw novelizations could have in the modern era, but there you have it.
Really? I actually hadn't heard that, that's kind of a shame.
I'd love a novelization of Beyond by Christopher, especially since any references to the 22nd Century would be right up his alley. I think he'd do as good a job as Vonda did on the ST2,3,&4 novelizations from the 1980's. YMMV..
I don't think there is much to display. As far as I know the only Beyond merchandise is the Funco Pops!.It would have been nice to see some kind of display for Beyond merch at my local bookstore.
Well, the comics completely ignored that bit by having it happen in a somewhat different manner in the Ongoing series, so make of that what you will.About embellishing novelisations, how pissed were Paramount - CBS, Bad Robot or whoever - with Alan Dean Foster over text involving a certain Admiral Archer receiving his prized beagle back then? Because that definitely didn't occur onscreen the last time I saw the 2009 film. Although I'd clearly welcome the notion they considered such a cameo, only to lose it between screenplay drafts.
About embellishing novelisations, how pissed were Paramount - CBS, Bad Robot or whoever - with Alan Dean Foster over text involving a certain Admiral Archer receiving his prized beagle back then? Because that definitely didn't occur onscreen the last time I saw the 2009 film. Although I'd clearly welcome the notion they considered such a cameo, only to lose it between screenplay drafts.
About embellishing novelisations, how pissed were Paramount - CBS, Bad Robot or whoever - with Alan Dean Foster over text involving a certain Admiral Archer receiving his prized beagle back then? Because that definitely didn't occur onscreen the last time I saw the 2009 film. Although I'd clearly welcome the notion they considered such a cameo, only to lose it between screenplay drafts.
It's not a hard and fast rule,.
If the studio didn't like it, it wouldn't have been there, and if Foster was pissing people off, they wouldn't have rehired him for into Darkness.About embellishing novelisations, how pissed were Paramount - CBS, Bad Robot or whoever - with Alan Dean Foster over text involving a certain Admiral Archer receiving his prized beagle back then? Because that definitely didn't occur onscreen the last time I saw the 2009 film. Although I'd clearly welcome the notion they considered such a cameo, only to lose it between screenplay drafts.
Dillard still found space to add the stuff about Carol Marcus to Star Trek VI-- didn't she even reference some of McIntyre's ST II characters in the process?It's not a hard and fast rule, and ADF was hand-selected by Orci & Kurtzman, IIRC, based on their appreciation of his work on SF movie novelizations over the decades. I bet they conferred with him on a few "extras". The content of a two-hour movie script does not a novel-length manuscript make.
Vonda McIntyre added lots of scenes to her ST II and ST III novelizations, but things tightened up halfway through her novelization of ST IV, and the "extra scenes" and original-to-author new characters simply stop appearing in the rest of that book. JM Dillard embellished less, but scenes that work perfectly well onscreen sometimes need more context in book form.
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