^Reading all of this, and remembering the TWOK novelization in general, just brings back my feelings of frustration over how Saavik was made more full Vulcan for TSFS and then written out of TVH and not even name-checked in future installments. A sad waste of a rich character.
As for her coming back, it's interesting (to me) how we (I) had such an expectation for Saavik's return. (And David AND Carol.)
Did we ever have any such expectation for David Garrovick? Lt. Styles? Helen Noel?
Maybe because it was a movie? Because the ending was so open ended? Because Alley made such an impression? I accepted her as a "main character" right away.
I would have been far more accepting of Curtis as Saavik if she had felt more like Saavik. And I gather this was specifically at Nimoy's direction.
That's pretty common, or used to be, since novelizers would work from scripts and would generally need to add material to fill them out to novel length, while the final films would generally cut things out for time and pacing. (These days, studios insist that novelizations be as exactly faithful to the films as possible, which seems to squander the whole point of novelizations.)
Sure. It was just that (to me) many of these little character embellishments felt much of a piece with the embellishments that we know were hers.
That wasn't me. That was actually you, citing Memory Alpha.
I see that. I could have sworn that the only reason I looked was something you said. I must be thinking of something else.
Yes. A lot of people mistakenly attribute it to Carolyn Clowes' The Pandora Principle, but she just elaborated on what McIntyre created in her novelizations.
That's silly.
She even credits Vonda in the acknowledgements. That must have seemed terribly out of left field if you didn't know in advance. Heck, that's WHY I read the book!I gather the original intent behind introducing characters like Saavik and David was to phase out the aging TOS cast in favor of a "next generation" (so to speak) of characters who would take over as the leads in later films. Instead, the later films ended up doubling down on nostalgia and phasing out the new characters to refocus on the original cast.
It could have worked. They register far more strongly that Decker and Ilia did.
I may start another thread for this, but I understand that there were changes to the book when it was compiled into the omnibus Duty, Honor, Redemption. I've done a quick re-skim though my Kindle edition compared to my paperback. The only difference that I've found is that they added the "Remember" scene in the engine room with implied reference to it being a Vulcan ritual.
I seem to remember reading about the omnibus when it was published. And what I've been able to discover with an internet search that it
- Removed or changed the scene in the shuttle about Sulu's promotion to captain. (How on Earth did they handle almost all of Sulu's scenes in The Search for Spock?!?)
- It (according to the internet) changed or downplayed Saavik's half-Romulan heritage (HOW would it do that? They'd have to take almost all of her scenes out!)
- Changed Alpha Ceti back to Ceti Alpha and changed Regulus to Regula. (Fair? I guess?)
- It also corrected McGiver to McGivers. (Same.)
I do remember that even the rumor of these changes kept me far away from that collection.
Fascinating.
Then there's the "What if Valeris had been Saavik" question, which I have mixed feelings about.
It would have been devastating. I feel like it would have worked. But then I despise Jim Phelps being the bad guy in the Mission: Impossible film. Different outcomes and motivations, I suppose.
Of course she was very obviously a retread of Saavik. The novel even makes her half-Klingon, IIRC.
) 