The one set in Seattle in the 1800s![]()
So say we all!The Final Reflection. Its Klingons are far more interesting than anything we got post TOS.
I'll never understand why people want to assume the Preservers existed millions or billions of years ago, when the one confirmed instance of their activity could not possibly have been earlier than the 16th or 17th century, since Native American populations weren't endangered until then. They're a modern entity, not an ancient one. Presumably any ancient group that did comparable things would be unrelated to the later one.
I'm still surprised that I'm the only person I'm aware of who ever considered that the Vians from "The Empath" might be the Preservers, given that they have essentially the same goals, to rescue endangered populations by relocating them to other planets.
A title held by multiple species, likely, adhering to some older code or sacrament - that MAY go back as far as the Progenitors (or some dimly remembered accounts of them) just maybe.
A couple of thoughts here…There's a lot of good Star Trek books out there that could potentially be adapted into great on screen stories. In a way I'm actually surprised none of the showrunners ever did that. I realize there's some legalities involved probably. And would the novel writer be entitled to some royalties from that even though it's a licensed novel? I honestly don't know.
TV writer-producers in particular shy away from adapting tie-ins directly to the screen as new series because, if they did, they would not be able to claim the coveted "created by" screen credit (which brings with it certain fiscal and reputational boons); they would be limited to the less exclusive (and less remunerative) "developed for television by" credit.
It depends upon the creators' contracts. Also, Marvel tends to be better about that sort of thing than DC, which often failed to acknowledge original creators when making derivative works, or Star Trek, which never has. Also, my answer was principally in response to the poster's question about Star Trek tie-ins, not tie-ins generally.Not necessarily, I think. I've seen a number of recent adaptations, e.g. the Netflix Marvel shows, that credited their developers as creators. So apparently there's a way to finagle creator credit for an adaptation.
Most comic creators I've spoken with have said that DC has traditionally been better than Marvel when it comes to financial compensation on creator's stuff being used in movies and TV. Len Wein famously said that he got paid more for Lucius Fox being used in Christopher Nolan's Batman movies than he did for ALL the Marvel movies made with Wolverine. But DC isn't as good about that sort of thing since Paul Levitz left the company.It depends upon the creators' contracts. Also, Marvel tends to be better about that sort of thing than DC, which often failed to acknowledge original creators when making derivative works, or Star Trek, which never has.
Good choice.Vendetta
Len Wein famously said that he got paid more for Lucius Fox being used in Christopher Nolan's Batman movies than he did for ALL the Marvel movies made with Wolverine.
If the Star Trek film or TV producers want to adapt a story from the licensed Star Trek fiction, they certainly can. There would be no need for them to obtain permissions or options or anything else — the tie-ins are Star Trek's property, theirs to use as they wish, forever. The film/TV creators are at liberty to borrow whatever they want from the books or comics without any permission from, or credit or compensation to, the original writers or publishers.
It would be mostly at the discretion of the producers. Contractually, I wouldn't be entitled to any screen credit or compensation. However, if a work for film or TV was adapted directly from literary material I created, I might be able to petition the Writers Guild to demand a screen credit.That does bring up another question. Would the novel writer get any on screen credit? For instance if they decided to adapt, say, Collateral Damage for the screen (just picking the first novel that came to mind), would you get a credit on screen saying "based on the novel Collateral Damage by David Mack"? Even if you wouldn't get any additional compensation.
No, that has nothing to do with it. It's about who created the character. None of the development that Chris Claremont and others did with Wolverine could have happened if Len Wein and Herb Trimpe hadn't created him first. Chris Claremont, for all he did with the character, did not create Wolverine. It doesn't matter that Len Wein's original version of Wolverine was very different from the character that became mega popular years later. Wolverine wouldn't exist without Len Wein. It doesn't get more "foundational" than that.Whether it's legally correct or not, I suspect the latter is at least in part because much of the modern character of Wolverine builds on material established by Chris Claremont on the long-running X-Men title rather than Wein's Incredible Hulk or Giant Size X-Men #1, whereas his contributions to Lucius may have been more foundational to the ongoing character.
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