|
Post by Admin on May 11, 2018 18:47:39 GMT -6
|
|
|
Post by vitugglan on May 12, 2018 2:39:27 GMT -6
A lot of teasing, not much trailer.
|
|
|
Post by Admin on May 12, 2018 10:18:00 GMT -6
Kinda how Disney is. I think they even refused to release the novelizations for their Star Wars movies until after the film's opening weekend.
|
|
|
Post by vitugglan on May 14, 2018 8:10:01 GMT -6
Well, that I can see, but I need a little more to decide if it's worth my valuable time.
|
|
|
Post by Admin on May 14, 2018 14:33:06 GMT -6
Except that most other studios don't simply because the novelization is -- more often than not -- created from an earlier version of either the screenplay and/or shooting script. Case in point, the second Bryan Singer X-Men movie novelization. I sat in the theater absolutely gobsmacked at her fate because it wasn't in the novelization that I had bought, and read, three weeks before the movie came out.
|
|
|
Post by vitugglan on May 15, 2018 5:37:15 GMT -6
I think that's common. When I think of novelizations I think of the one for Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. It was so expressive, with Indy thinking how the snake was his brother. Didn't come across in the movie quite that way though we did see that he was okay with snakes.
|
|