Just curious if anyone else is reading Meyer's autobiography: The View From the Bridge. I picked it up yesterday and and breezing right through it, having hit the halfway mark. It's a quick easy read and I find Meyer to pretty honest about his own strengths and weaknesses, as well as coming across as level-headed about things that others would rant about.
I just finished the section on TWOK and am about to read the chapter about The Day After. One thing that surprised me is that he relates how close TWOK came to not happening at all. Apparently the studio had locked in a release date, and at the point where Meyer offered to write the script, they were 12 days away from a drop-dead date with ILM, who would not guarantee they could meet the release date if they didn't have the script by that deadline 12 days hence. If no script had been whacked out in that crazy deadline, the project would have been canceled, and who knows what Paramount would have tried the next time around.
My only real complaint about the book thus far is that the editor/proofer appears to have been asleep. There are a number of consistently misspelled names and some outright actual errors that five minutes with Google would have fixed (seventy-six TOS episodes?).
I just finished the section on TWOK and am about to read the chapter about The Day After. One thing that surprised me is that he relates how close TWOK came to not happening at all. Apparently the studio had locked in a release date, and at the point where Meyer offered to write the script, they were 12 days away from a drop-dead date with ILM, who would not guarantee they could meet the release date if they didn't have the script by that deadline 12 days hence. If no script had been whacked out in that crazy deadline, the project would have been canceled, and who knows what Paramount would have tried the next time around.
My only real complaint about the book thus far is that the editor/proofer appears to have been asleep. There are a number of consistently misspelled names and some outright actual errors that five minutes with Google would have fixed (seventy-six TOS episodes?).