15 More Things You Didn’t Know About Star Trek III: The Search For Spock (1984)

Even more you need to know about the making of the sequel to Star Trek's most popular film.

Search For Spock
Paramount

A sequel to The Wrath of Khan was a given. Only days after Khan opened, The Los Angeles Times was reporting that Executive Producer Harve Bennett had already given a go-ahead to begin developing a sequel.

But the elephant in the room was how it would handle the death of Spock and the aftermath of Project Genesis. An early story treatment was radically different in its handling of these elements, even as other things like the Excelsior and the unstable and doomed Genesis planet were set from the get-go.

The story went through a number of overhauls for both narrative reasons and to address leaks to fandom. Like Khan it was also a budget production, which meant re-using materials wherever possible, and saving as many pennies as possible for where the money was really needed...

So here are 15 more things you didn’t know about Star Trek III: The Search For Spock.

15. It Was One Of Two Khan Follow-Ups In Development

Search For Spock
Paramount

Many fans know that when Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan opened to boffo box office and a record opening weekend, Paramount pounced on the idea of making sequels and spinoffs. Just days after the film’s opening The Los Angeles Times reported:

Not one to rest on its laurels, Paramount is already preparing ‘Star Trek III: In Search of Spock’.

(In Search Of… having been a Leonard-Nimoy narrated syndicated show). Indeed, Harve Bennett was quickly tasked with developing a sequel story.

But the article went on:

According to Paramount President Michael Eisner, there even may be a future movie about the fate of Khan, the villain of ‘Star Trek II’ played with Cordoban relish by Ricardo Montalban.

Indeed, even as Harve Bennett was busily writing his first draft sequel, another screenwriter—future Ferris Bueller writer and director John Hughes—was banging out a screenplay for another Star Trek movie, a prequel titled The Rise of Khan.

The story was a space-age take on The Count of Monte Cristo, with Khan substituting for Gérard de Villefort, with his adversary, a non-superman named John Piece, subbing for Edmond Dantès.

Hughes delivered his 136 page screenplay in January of 1983, but the Development Department at Paramount were unimpressed, and produced scathing coverage. It appears the screenplay was tossed in the circular file shortly thereafter.

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Maurice is one of the founders of FACT TREK (www.facttrek.com), a project dedicated to untangling 50+ years of mythology about the original Star Trek and its place in TV history. He's also a screenwriter, writer, and videogame industry vet with scars to show for it. In that latter capacity he game designer/writer on the Sega Genesis/SNES "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine — Crossroads of Time" game, as well as Dreamcast "Ecco the Dolphin, Defender of the Future" where Tom Baker performed words he wrote.