Picture of author.

Allan Asherman (1947–2023)

Author of The Star Trek Compendium

10+ Works 873 Members 6 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the names: Alan Asherman, Allen Asherman

Works by Allan Asherman

Associated Works

Things to Come: A Film Story (1975) — Introduction — 17 copies
DC Masterworks Series of Great Comic Book Artists #1 — Author "Frank Frazetta: The Art World's Shining Knight" — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Asherman, Allan T.
Birthdate
1947-04-21
Date of death
2023-09-22
Gender
male
Education
State University of New York, New Paltz
Long Island University (BA | Journalism)
Occupations
librarian
Organizations
DC Comics
Place of death
Plainview, New York, USA
Associated Place (for map)
New York, USA

Members

Reviews

7 reviews
In The Making of "Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan", long-time Star Trek fan Allan Asherman chronicles every aspect of the titular film's production. Asherman begins with the buzz surrounding a sequel to Star Trek: The Motion Picture, continues with early drafts and the development of the story, features interviews from producers Harve Bennett and Robert S. Sallin, director Nicholas Meyer, and more, as well as a look at the making of the special effects and the score. The overall effect is an show more excellent examination of the evolution of the film, how various people worked together to craft the narrative and which plot elements were added or jettisoned and why. Only Leonard Nimoy and DeForest Kelley have interviews included in this book, but Asherman includes biographies of the other cast. The longest chapter is that on the special effects, explaining both the origin of Industrial Light and Magic as well as the process for creating models that the filmmakers could "destroy" and reset, the effects of the Mutara Nebula, and more, all complete with photographs of the effects wizards at work. As I write this, Star Trek is celebrating its 50th year and The Wrath of Khan its 34th; Asherman's book helps to shed light on all the work that went into this film to make sure it not only contributed to the legacy of the original series, but stood the test of time itself. show less
An excellent and succinct account of the making of what is arguably the best entry in the Star Trek film franchise. Asherman's book recounts the genesis of the story, the various drafts of the script, the and the special effects as created by ILM. Through interviews with producers Harve Bennett and Robert Sallin, director Nicholas Meyer, and cast members Leonard Nimoy and DeForest Kelley, we gain insight into the creative decisions that went into crafting the plot, the music, the wardrobe, show more and--most especially--the death of Spock. show less
This comic book version of the film 1941 is absolutely perfect. The crazy drawing style and the collaged illustrations exactly capture the demented, madcap spirit of the movie. Although it isn't an exact representation (Betty's friend is drawn as a cute girl instead of the fat, aggressive character she is in the movie, and her obsession with Treat Williams' character is left out), it gets most of it right. If you love MAD magazine, you'll like this.
My go-to book for all things concerning TOS. Asherman literally has everything covered, including the story of how Star Trek came to be, very detailed info on each episode including guest stars, goofs and continuity errors, past TV appearances of each of the stars, and a no-holds barred critique of why the show declined in its 3rd season and why it was axed. Quite a fantastic effort. Top stuff.

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Stephen Bissette Illustrator
Rick Veitch Illustrator
Steven Spielberg Introduction
Bob Gale Original Screenplay
Robert Zemeckis Original Screenplay
John Milius Original Screenplay
John Totleben Illustrator
Thomas Yeates Illustrator
Irwin Hasen Illustrator

Statistics

Works
10
Also by
3
Members
873
Popularity
#29,325
Rating
3.8
Reviews
6
ISBNs
17
Languages
3
Favorited
1

Charts & Graphs