My mother-in-law recently passed and we’re finally going through the items that she collected while she worked in the entertainment industry. She worked at the Paramount Pictures studio lot in Hollywood, California in the mid-1990s and then moved on to other companies in the biz. Over the years, she obtained an extensive collection of rare Hollywood items, especially from her favorite franchise “Star Trek”. Scripts, crew gifts, screen used props and much, much more. Our loss is your gain. It is a collection of production items from the feature film. “Star Trek – First Contact”. The FULL script, with ALL revision pages. 277 pages in total. Compare that to the 131 page final draft The 131 page version is what is typically up for sale at auctions. And you can see that there were many changes as the story was filmed! An incredibly rare find!! Printed on colored paper depending on the date of the specific revision to the original approved filming final draft. As a special bonus, included with this package are the following items. 37 pages of storyboard image copies showing the 1930s Nightclub Scene. (Copies that were distributed to the licensing department, not the original pen and ink drawings). 7 pages of illustrations of the Vulcan Lander. 1 drawing of the Enterprise-E superimposed over the Paramount Studio Lot. 3 images showing different cutaway versions on interiors of the Enterprise-E. A Deck by deck description of what is located on each deck of the Enterprise-E. 12 Pages of design drawings of the Enterprise-E. (Copy that was distributed to the licensing department, not the original pen and ink drawings). From the writer’s offices in the Hart building on the Paramount Pictures studio lot in Hollywood. The script is a distribution style script, meaning that it is printed on the differently colored pages, depending on the date of the revision. For this script the, the color revision order is. After this, the color order repeats, starting with White again. This script is an incredible find as it contains ALL SCRIPT revisions to the third and final draft that was approved for filming. The script started off under the title “Star Trek: Borg”. It maintained that title for the first 10 revisions. It was re-titled as “Star Trek: First Contact” as of the white script revision on May 3, 1996. An interesting look into the making of the film. See which plot points changed from revision to revision. Which characters were supposed to have certain lines of dialogue, and which character they were transferred to. Changes in the order of the scenes. Mis-spellings that were typed in! The writers are human, after all! It is in pristine condition as the pages have always been held in a hard cover binder. This item is the real deal, not a copy of a copy of a copy like a lot of other auctions that you’ll run into. Always kept in a non-smokers house! NO stains or other damage! The script is 131 pages in length. 277 physical pages in total as it contains ALL revisions! Written on March 12, 1996. Final Revision Pages on June 19, 1996. Released in theaters on November 18, 1994. All are incredibly rare finds!!
My mother-in-law recently passed and we’re finally going through the items that she collected while she worked in the entertainment industry. She worked at the Paramount Pictures studio lot in Hollywood, California in the mid-1990s and then moved on to other companies in the biz. Over the years, she obtained an extensive collection of rare Hollywood items, especially from her favorite franchise “Star Trek”. Scripts, crew gifts, screen used props and much, much more. Our loss is your gain. It is a collection of production items from the feature film. “Star Trek – First Contact”. The FULL script, with ALL revision pages. 277 pages in total. Compare that to the 131 page final draft The 131 page version is what is typically up for sale at auctions. And you can see that there were many changes as the story was filmed! An incredibly rare find!! Printed on colored paper depending on the date of the specific revision to the original approved filming final draft. As a special bonus, included with this package are the following items. 37 pages of storyboard image copies showing the 1930s Nightclub Scene. (Copies that were distributed to the licensing department, not the original pen and ink drawings). 7 pages of illustrations of the Vulcan Lander. 1 drawing of the Enterprise-E superimposed over the Paramount Studio Lot. 3 images showing different cutaway versions on interiors of the Enterprise-E. A Deck by deck description of what is located on each deck of the Enterprise-E. 12 Pages of design drawings of the Enterprise-E. (Copy that was distributed to the licensing department, not the original pen and ink drawings). From the writer’s offices in the Hart building on the Paramount Pictures studio lot in Hollywood. The script is a distribution style script, meaning that it is printed on the differently colored pages, depending on the date of the revision. For this script the, the color revision order is. After this, the color order repeats, starting with White again. This script is an incredible find as it contains ALL SCRIPT revisions to the third and final draft that was approved for filming. The script started off under the title “Star Trek: Borg”. It maintained that title for the first 10 revisions. It was re-titled as “Star Trek: First Contact” as of the white script revision on May 3, 1996. An interesting look into the making of the film. See which plot points changed from revision to revision. Which characters were supposed to have certain lines of dialogue, and which character they were transferred to. Changes in the order of the scenes. Mis-spellings that were typed in! The writers are human, after all! It is in pristine condition as the pages have always been held in a hard cover binder. This item is the real deal, not a copy of a copy of a copy like a lot of other auctions that you’ll run into. Always kept in a non-smokers house! NO stains or other damage! The script is 131 pages in length. 277 physical pages in total as it contains ALL revisions! Written on March 12, 1996. Final Revision Pages on June 19, 1996. Released in theaters on November 18, 1994. All are incredibly rare finds!!