Weird brain fart. Bear with me.
Pocket Books have the rights to depict the various Star Trek actors and spaceships and sets on the covers of their novels. Will that always be the case?
I know this is a completely different set of circumstances, but I was in a book store earlier and came across a Harry Potter book. My immediate thought upon looking at the cartoon cover was, "That's not Harry Potter!" Now I know Harry Potter was a book series long before it was a film franchise, and so rights to film-related stuff is seperate from the books , but nonetheless it got me wondering if Trek's "visual" rights are seperate from those to use the characters' names, locales, ship names etc that make up Trek's copyrighted universe - and if one day (presumably as a cost-cutting measure), we'll see a Kirk on the cover of an officially-licenced Trek novel who resembles neither William Shatner nor Chris Pine? Or maybe a USS Enterprise which doesn't quite match any TV/film incarnation of the ship?
Pocket Books have the rights to depict the various Star Trek actors and spaceships and sets on the covers of their novels. Will that always be the case?
I know this is a completely different set of circumstances, but I was in a book store earlier and came across a Harry Potter book. My immediate thought upon looking at the cartoon cover was, "That's not Harry Potter!" Now I know Harry Potter was a book series long before it was a film franchise, and so rights to film-related stuff is seperate from the books , but nonetheless it got me wondering if Trek's "visual" rights are seperate from those to use the characters' names, locales, ship names etc that make up Trek's copyrighted universe - and if one day (presumably as a cost-cutting measure), we'll see a Kirk on the cover of an officially-licenced Trek novel who resembles neither William Shatner nor Chris Pine? Or maybe a USS Enterprise which doesn't quite match any TV/film incarnation of the ship?
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