Gravitas Ventures acquired domestic rights while Cinetel Films has acquired international rights.
The film won the audience choice award at the Culver City Music Festival. Watch the trailer Here
Congratulations to our client Steven Fine whose feature directorial debut Love Shot will be released today on Comcast, Directv, iTunes, Prime Video, Redbox, Barnes & Noble, Walmart and numerous other platforms and stores.
Gravitas Ventures acquired domestic rights while Cinetel Films has acquired international rights. The film won the audience choice award at the Culver City Music Festival. Watch the trailer Here
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The Michael Jackson estate has sued HBO over its new and very controversial documentary Leaving Neverland that recently premiered at the recent Sundance Film Festival. The documentary tells the story of Michael Jackson’s long-running relationships with two boys, aged 7 and 10, and their families. Now in their 30s, the men claim they were sexually abused by Jackson. The four-hour film is set to air March 3rd and 4th on HBO.
The film has been called both shocking and brutal in its revelations. It has also been criticized for being one sided by not allowing the Jackson’s estate and family an opportunity to refute the allegations. The documentary pays little attention to the fact that the alleged victims’ lawsuits against the Jackson estate were dismissed although on appeal. Moreover, Jackson was acquitted of allegations of child molestation back in 2005 with a unanimous jury verdict after a trial in Santa Maria, California. The Plaintiffs contend that HBO and the filmmaker failed to contact two other persons identified as victims of Jackson’s abuse who have publicly stated that the allegations that they were abused are false. Since Michael Jackson died in 2009, his estate cannot sue for defamation as the right to protect one’s reputation is considered a personal right that is not inherited by one’s heirs. Essentially anyone can defame the dead with impunity. This is one reason why scandalous tell all books about celebrities are often published after their subjects die. Furthermore, celebrities have a much higher burden to bear to prevail in a defamation action. They must prove that the defendant acted with actual malice, meaning that the defendant intentionally defamed another or acted with reckless disregard for the truth. Plaintiffs often find it difficult to prove that a defendant acted with actual malice. So even if Michael Jackson was alive, he might have a difficult time proving he has been defamed. While the Jackson estate acknowledges it cannot sue for defamation, it pins its case on allegations that HBO violated a non-disparagement clause that was part of a license to air Jackson’s first-ever televised concert performance back in 1992. According to the Plaintiffs, that two-hour television show was HBO’s highest-rated special ever, with approximately 3.7 million U.S. households tuning in. In the agreement for that show, HBO promised that it “shall not make any disparaging remarks concerning Performer or any of his representatives, agents, or business practices or do any act that may harm or disparage or cause to lower in esteem the reputation or public image of Performer...” This provision was attached as part of a confidentiality exhibit to the license. It is not clear whether a court would deem such a provision to preclude HBO from ever saying anything disparaging of Michael Jackson, including matters unrelated to that concert. The lawsuit alleges that HBO is so desperate to catch up with new competitors like Netflix that it is willing to ignore journalistic standards and violate its agreement with Jackson in order to air compelling content. Read the lawsuit here. Mark returns to NYC to present his one day seminar with Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts: SELF-DEFENSE FOR WRITERS AND FILMMAKERS
Writers and filmmakers need to understand their legal rights and how to defend themselves from those who may seek to exploit them or falsely claim their rights have been infringed. This seminar explains how writers and filmmakers can prevent problems from arising by properly securing underlying rights, and by encouraging other parties to live up to agreements by adding performance incentives, default penalties and arbitration clauses. In the event of a dispute, participants learn what remedies are available to enforce their rights. Related topics include protecting your stories, typical compensation and terms of contracts, merchandising deals, and negotiating tactics and strategies. The seminar includes more than 100 pages of useful contracts, checklists, forms and materials. This seminar is for filmmakers and lawyers. Lawyers earn Seven (7) Continuing Legal Education credits: 4 Areas of Professional Practice credits, 2 Skills credits, and 1 Ethics credit. When: Friday, April 26, 2019, 10 AM – 6 PM Where: Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, 4 Times Square, New York, NY 10036 Includes lunch. Register by March 29 for early bird discount. For more info and to Register Mark has once again achieved a brief moment of fame on the big screen in Hollywood. Disney recently released Ralph Breaks the Internet, a sequel to its “Wreck-it Ralph movie,” and once again, Litwak’s Video Arcade is included in the movie. One of the film’s writers was inspired to give the arcade this name after attending one of Mark’s lectures at Cal-Arts many years ago. In the film, Mr. (Stan) Litwak is the friendly owner and operator of Litwak’s video arcade. Released during Thanksgiving the animated film has already grossed 285 million at the box office. More about the character:
http://disney.wikia.com/wiki/Stan_Litwak Hollywood is a strange place with its own customs and practices. One custom that often confuses newcomers is when a studio executive or producer tells them that he or she would love to read their script but can only do so if it comes in from an attorney or an agent. The caller then seeks to obtain such representation because they think the intended recipient is genuinely interested in reading their script. Unfortunately, that is usually not the case. The executive is just looking for a way to get off the call without offending the caller. They know most novices do not have representation, so this is a diplomatic way of saying, “No thanks.” The truth is that most studio executives do not want to spend time reading material that comes over the transom from people who may not have experience or expertise in the craft of storytelling. Studio executives believe that 99% of the time such material from novice writers is not worthy of consideration. Since there are plenty of scripts to consider from the major talent agencies, there is little need to consider work from beginners trying to break into the industry. Executives are also concerned about being sued for story theft. They are afraid that if they read a script and pass on it, and later develop something similar, they will open themselves to being sued. There have certainly been many such suits filed and more than a few of them have been found to be without merit. Consequently, most studio executives and producers will not accept unsolicited submissions, especially from persons they do not know and those without a track record. Consequently, it is very difficult for newcomers to the entertainment industry to have their scripts read by industry insiders if they do not have representation. In the rare instance that an executive is willing to accept a script from a novice writer, the writer is often asked to sign a submission release or waiver making it more difficult for the writer to sue for theft of their material. There is no law that requires that the material be submitted by an agent or attorney. You can be sure that if George Clooney calls Universal, they will be delighted to receive material directly from him. In fact, they will send over a messenger to pick up the script. The fact is, a filmmaker with a successful track record can get a commitment just by pitching an idea for a film because the studio wants to work with that person. Even if an unknown writer can submit a script to a studio, the chances of a bare script being given serious consideration is not likely. That is because nowadays studios and networks often prefer packaged projects. They want a star and director attached. When agencies submit scripts, they often are packaged with other elements which make the project more desirable in the eyes of a studio. So then how does an unknown writer break into the industry? There is no easy answer. But often you break in because of a relationship with someone who already has a foot in the industry, such as your friend from film school or a producer who has access. Or if you produce something yourself that is so exceptional that it receives attention at a film festival or with critics. Going the independent route has become more viable because the cost of production has gone down. In the days when making a film meant purchasing film stock and developing it, you needed some serious cash to get into the game. Nowadays, talented filmmakers can make films with low cost digital cameras, edit them on a computer, and then upload it to YouTube. For an enterprising person willing to hustle, a film can be made for very little. Stormy Daniels aka Stephanie Clifford has had her defamation case against President Trump tossed out of court on the grounds that Trump’s statements were “rhetorical hyperbole.” In defamation law, the phrase “rhetorical hyperbole” encompasses a variety of communications, including epithets, insults, and name-calling, all of which may be protected expression. So what exactly is “rhetorical hyperbole” and how does this doctrine insulate one from making statements that might otherwise be considered defamatory?
To recap the circumstances surrounding this case, Clifford is a porn star who had an affair with Donald Trump. In May of 2011, she agreed to cooperate with In Touch Magazine in connection with an article about her relationship with Mr. Trump. She agreed to speak to the magazine after her ex-husband approached the magazine without her approval. Several weeks later she says she was approached by a man who threatened herself and her daughter. The man said, “Leave Trump alone. Forget the story.” Ms. Clifford later worked with a sketch artist to render a sketch of what the man who made the threat looked like. Ms. Clifford released the sketch on April 17, 2018. The next day, Mr. Trump, from his Twitter account, posted a purportedly false statement regarding Ms. Clifford, and her account of the threatening incident. Mr. Trump's tweet stated: "A sketch years later about a nonexistent man. A total con job, playing the Fake News Media for Fools (but they know it)!" Clifford filed a defamation lawsuit against Trump. She argues that the tweet attacks the truth of her account of the threatening incident and suggests that she is falsely accusing an individual of committing a crime against her. In other words, Trump is saying she “is a liar, someone who should not be trusted, that her claims about the threatening encounter are false, and that she was falsely accusing the individual depicted in the sketch of committing a crime, where no crime had been committed." Ms. Clifford alleges that Mr. Trump acted with actual malice in issuing the tweet because he knew the falsity of his statement because the person who threatened her acted at the direction of Mr. Trump or Mr. Trump's attorney, Michael Cohen. If the lawsuit was allowed to proceed, Trump could be compelled to testify under oath which might create a dilemma for him, just like it did for Bill Clinton when he was sued by Paula Jones. Whether a president has immunity from a civil suit for actions before taking office and unrelated to his office, was decided by the Supreme Court in Clinton v. Jones.[1] In a unanimous opinion by Justice John Paul Stevens, the Court ruled that separation of powers does not mandate that federal courts delay all private civil lawsuits against the President until the end of his term of office. Therefore, if Clifford’s suit against Trump is able to proceed, he might face a dilemma. If he lies under oath, he commits perjury. If he tells the truth, well that might be embarrassing. A defamatory statement is one that is both false and that tends to “harm the reputation of another as to lower him in the estimation of the community or to deter third persons from associating or dealing with him.” Usually statements that are “merely unflattering, annoying, irksome, or embarrassing, or that hurt only the plaintiff’ s feelings” do not support a defamation claim. Humor or parody is generally protected by the First Amendment and is considered a form of protected opinion. There is no libel when the material is clearly understood as parody, satire, humor, or fantasy and is not capable of a defamatory meaning.[2] Similarly, statements that reflect a point of view, or opinion, rather than specific allegations of fact are not considered defamatory. “Vigorous epithets,” “rhetorical hyperbole,” “loose, figurative language,” or “lusty and imaginative expressions” are also not considered defamatory. In one case,[3] cartoonist, Paul Conrad of the Los Angeles Times was sued by Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty for a cartoon lampooning his desire to be appointed to President Nixon’s cabinet. The caricature depicted him as he is about to be placed into a strait jacket and taken by medical orderlies. The caption read, “I’ve got to go now … I’ve been appointed Secretary of Defense and the Secret Service men are here!” Although the court held that a cartoon could be libelous if it presented as fact defamatory material which is false, it found the cartoon to be “no more than rhetorical hyperbole, a vigorous expression of opinion by those who considered Mayor Yorty’s aspiration for high national office preposterous.” As such it was a form of protected editorial comment which was not reasonably susceptible to a defamatory meaning. One court[4] held that the “lunacy of the statements themselves” was a factor in finding the statements not defamatory as a matter of law. Rhetorical hyperbole is part of the larger opinion-fact distinction in defamation law. To be defamatory, a statement must be one of fact. Consequently, neither statements of opinion, which do not imply assertions of fact, nor statements that are not to be taken literally, such as rhetorical hyperbole, are considered defamatory. In dismissing Stormy Daniels suit, the court held: Mr. Trump's tweet served as a public rejoinder to allegations made by Plaintiff. If this Court were to prevent Mr. Trump from engaging in this type of "rhetorical hyperbole" against a political adversary, it would significantly hamper the office of the President. Any strongly-worded response by a president to another politician or public figure could constitute an action for defamation. This would deprive this country of the "discourse" common to the political process. In short, should Plaintiff publicly voice her opinions about Mr. Trump, Mr. Trump is entitled to publicly voice non-actionable opinions about Plaintiff. Clifford’s attorney has filed an appeal seeking to overturn the dismissal. You can read the judge’s opinion here. [1] Clinton v. Jones, 520 U.S. 681 (1997). [2] Salek v. Passaic Collegiate School, 255 N.J. Super. 355 (N. J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 1992). [3] Yorty v. Chandler, 91 Cal. Rptr. 709, 715 (Cal. Ct. App. 1970). [4] Frank v. National Broadcasting Co., Inc., 506 N.Y.S.2d 869, 875 (N.Y. App. Div. 1986). Shopping refers to the practice of producers pitching a story that they do not own or have not optioned. Let’s say you are a writer. You go in to see a producer and pitch your project. The producer says “Interesting. Let me think about it for a few days and get back to you.” After you depart, the producer calls his buddy, an executive at ABC, and pitches your story without your knowledge. If there is interest, the producer takes an option on your project. If there is no interest, he passes. He never tells you that behind your back he pitched your material and it was rejected.
You go on your merry way and pitch your story to a more ethical person. Let’s call him producer Bob. He takes an option on your story before pitching it. When he goes in to ABC they inform him that they already heard your story and passed on it. Producer Bob is unhappy that you did not disclose this fact to him. Shopping without permission of the writer is unethical. Producers who do not risk any money on an option tend to hastily package and pitch a project. The tendency is to throw the project up against the wall to see if it will stick. A more careful approach developing the project and attaching elements would likely produce better results. Shopping can tarnish a project. Once ABC has heard and passed on your story, it is unlikely that they will reconsider, even if your story is better the second time. While bestselling authors and acclaimed screenwriter are not likely to enter into shopping agreements, there are many novice writers who are open to have an experienced producer pitch their script even without being paid an option fee. Many writers don’t have connections to production companies, networks, studios or platforms. A novice writer may feel fortunate to have her material presented by a legitimate producer with a track record and access to those who have the power to get a script produced. Moreover, producers may be reluctant to spend money optioning material from an unknown and unproven writer. Sometimes the material is so original and unique that it is clearly a longshot to get it set up. Furthermore, the number of producers who have first look or exclusive deals at studios have declined. Under those deals, the studio typically would provide development money that could be used as option money. Producers who do not have such an arrangement with a studio have to pay option fees out of their own pocket. Consequently, shopping agreements have become increasingly common in the industry. Producers like to have the opportunity to present the material without making a significant financial commitment up front. Writers hope that having an experienced producer shop and package the script with other attractive elements will increase its chances of getting produced. There is nothing improper about such an agreement provided the arrangement is disclosed and everyone understands the nature of the deal. A shopping agreement typically provides that the producer can bring the material to potential studios and networks, and, if there is interest, the writer and producer will each negotiate their own deal. This arrangement has some benefits for each party but also some potential pitfalls. If, for example, either party is unreasonable in their demands when negotiating their deal with a network, the other party cannot proceed without them. The producer has wasted his time and effort. With an option agreement, the producer has much more control over the project. The producer typically has the right to exercise the option, at which time the purchase agreement, which has been negotiated already, kicks in. The terms for the sale of the script have already been agreed upon so the writer has very little leverage and cannot prevent the project from moving forward as long as the producer abides by the terms of the option purchase agreement. Shopping agreements are sometimes referred to as producer attachment agreements. The producer is helping prepare the project to be presented and may also attached other elements such as a star that will make the project more appealing. The producer typically has a track record, and a network takes comfort in knowing that they are dealing with someone who has the proven ability to produce a project. Shopping agreements tend to have shorter terms than option purchase agreements. The term is often less than one year; although, if the project is set up it may automatically be extended. The producer is protected by having a written agreement that prevents the writer from pursuing the project with a studio or network introduced by the producer. The writer is often precluded, even after the term, from pursuing the project with a third party that the producer has brought the project to. Producers sometimes pay a fee to the writer to compensate him from taking the project out of the market. Congratulations to Devin Hume and Bruce Robinson. Their new crime mystery feature film Making A Killing will premiere this Friday in Beverly Hills. It based on a true story involving a murder trial that recently concluded in Otero County, Colorado.
The film tells the story of Arthur Herring who serves as the mayor, priest and mortician in a small town. A pillar of the community, he and his brother are accused of theft of a coin collection and the murder of a fellow mortician who is a convicted felon recently released from prison. The brothers struggle to keep their ambitions in check while a detective, Orlando Hudson, dives head deep into trying to find out what happened and why. After meeting resistance in his investigation, Orlando presses on and soon uncovers a case with buried treasure, gold mining in dead bodies and a tangled love affair that is sure to rock the small town. The film stars Michael Jai White, Mike Starr, Sally Kirkland, Aida Turturro and Christopher Lloyd. Writer/Director Devin Hume is known for his award winning short films and work as a cinematographer. This is his debut feature film. The film will premiere in Los Angeles at the Laemmle Music Hall at 9036 Wilshire Blvd in Beverly Hills on Friday August at 9:55 PM. Tickets can be purchased at: tickets A lawsuit has been filed claiming that “The Shape of Water” which won best-picture at this year’s Oscars, infringes the copyright of a play by a famous playwright. The estate of Paul Zindel, a Pulitzer prize-winning American playwright alleges that Guillermo del Toro’s film “brazenly copies the story, elements, characters and themes” of Zindel’s play “Let Me Hear You Whisper” (1969).
As the Economist explains: Both stories are set in a government-controlled laboratory during the cold war. Both feature a cleaner who develops a relationship with a captive sea creature, dancing in front of its tank with a mop to a love song and devising a plan to smuggle it to safety in a laundry cart after she learns of plans to kill and dissect it. However, there are many differences in the stories, and ideas are not copyrightable. While a detailed plot and characters can be protected under copyright law, the fact that two works share certain similarities does not mean one infringes the copyright of the other. It's complicated. As Mark explains, "Unlike patent law, the first person to publish a creative concept does not own it. “If two people come up with the same story independently, without borrowing from the other one, they both get the copyright in their work,” Read he full article here . This comprehensive seminar —for new attorneys, attorneys transitioning to entertainment law, and filmmakers— explores how independent films are financed and distributed.
Topics include financing via pre-sales, debt and equity investors, negotiating tactics, typical contract terms, cross-collateralization, creative accounting, and ethical concerns. Particular attention will be paid to how producers and filmmakers can protect themselves by: investigating distributors; watering down warranties; adding contract provisions covering performance, termination, and alternative dispute resolution; getting errors and omissions (E&O) insurance; and using lab access letters and schedules of minimums. Other topics will include: criteria for selecting a distributor; new media distribution; which contract terms are negotiable; compliance with state and federal laws regarding investors; retaining an attorney, producer reps and publicists; and confirming awards and enforcing judgments. Extensive handouts will be distributed via email in advance of the program, including a distribution contract, articles, and a self-defense checklist. Finally, the lunch hour will provide a great opportunity for networking. Mark Litwak is a veteran entertainment attorney with offices in Beverly Hills, California. His practice includes work in the areas of copyright, trademark, contract, multimedia law, intellectual property, and book publishing. Litwak is an adjunct professor at USC Law School, and functions as a Producer’s Rep, assisting filmmakers in the financing, marketing and distribution of their films. Litwak is the author of many books including: Reel Power, Dealmaking in the Film and Television Industry (winner of the 1995 Krazna-Kranz Moving Image Book Award), Contracts for the Film and Television Industry, Litwak’s Multimedia Producer’s Handbook, and his latest book, Risky Business, Financing and Distributing Independent Film. *CLE with VLA: Seven (7) New York CLE credits awarded for attorneys: 4 Areas of Professional Practice credits, 2 Skills credits, and 1 Ethics credit. This program qualifies as “transitional” for newly admitted attorneys. When: Friday, April 27, 2018, 9:30 AM – 5 PM – CLE* Space is limited! Where: Manhattan LINK Congratulations to our clients producer Bruce Robinson and Director Devin Hume whose film Making a Killing will be shown at the Santa Fe Film Festival on February 10th at 8.00 pm at The Screen theater, and at the Garden State film which runs from March 22nd to the 25th. The film is being distributed by Shoreline Entertainment.
Making A Killing based on a true story revealed during a murder trial that recently concluded in Otero County, Colorado. The film tells the story of Arthur Herring who serves as the mayor, priest and mortician in a small town. A pillar of the community, he and his brother are accused of theft of a coin collection and the murder of a fellow mortician who is a convicted felon recently released from prison. The brothers struggle to keep their ambitions in check while a detective, Orlando Hudson, dives head deep into trying to find out what happened and why. After meeting resistance in his investigation, Orlando presses on and soon uncovers a case with buried treasure, gold mining in dead bodies and a tangled love affair that is sure to rock the small town. The film stars Michael Jai White, Mike Starr, Sally Kirkland, Aida Turturro and Christopher Lloyd. Writer/Director Devin Hume is known for his award winning short films and work as a cinematographer. This is his debut feature film. Many bloggers and social media users may be surprised to learn that truth in advertising laws apply to them just as they do to television broadcasters and magazine publishers. Endorsements must be honest and not misleading. The endorser must disclose if they have a financial interest in the product they are promoting or if they are being paid to promote it.
Recently, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) for the first time went after social media influencers who did not disclose their interest in a website that they promoted to their subscribers. Trevor Martin and Thomas Cassell are popular social media influencers in the online gaming community. They posted videos on their YouTube channels (with 3.3 million and 10 million subscribers respectively) showing them participating in an online gambling service without disclosing that each had a 42.5% ownership interest in the online gambling company, thereby violating FTC disclosure laws. The FTC’s complaint can be read here. The case was settled with a Consent Agreement that requires the parties to:
The FTC is troubled with endorsements that are made on behalf of a sponsoring advertiser. For example, an endorsement by a blogger would be covered by the FTC Act if he or she was paid to mention a product. Even if not paid, if one receives free products or other benefits with the expectation that the blogger will promote a product in a blog, the blogger is potentially violating the law. Such practices may constitute unfair or deceptive acts affecting commerce in violation of Section 5(a) of the Federal Trade Commission Act. The FTC publishes endorsement guides to provide guidance as to the rules and laws that apply. A single disclosure on a home page may not be adequate to insulate yourself from liability if visitors would not see the disclosure when reading a review or watching a video on your site. Mark Litwak This comprehensive seminar —for new attorneys, attorneys transitioning to entertainment law, and filmmakers— explores how independent films are financed and distributed.
Topics include financing via pre-sales, debt and equity investors, negotiating tactics, typical contract terms, cross-collateralization, creative accounting, and ethical concerns. Particular attention will be paid to how producers and filmmakers can protect themselves by: investigating distributors; watering down warranties; adding contract provisions covering performance, termination, and alternative dispute resolution; getting errors and omissions (E&O) insurance; and using lab access letters and schedules of minimums. Other topics will include: criteria for selecting a distributor; new media distribution; which contract terms are negotiable; compliance with state and federal laws regarding investors; retaining an attorney, producer reps and publicists; and confirming awards and enforcing judgments. Extensive handouts will be distributed via email in advance of the program, including a distribution contract, articles, and a self-defense checklist. Finally, the lunch hour will provide a great opportunity for networking. Mark Litwak is a veteran entertainment attorney with offices in Beverly Hills, California. His practice includes work in the areas of copyright, trademark, contract, multimedia law, intellectual property, and book publishing. Litwak is an adjunct professor at USC Law School, and functions as a Producer’s Rep, assisting filmmakers in the financing, marketing and distribution of their films. Litwak is the author of many books including: Reel Power, Dealmaking in the Film and Television Industry (winner of the 1995 Krazna-Kranz Moving Image Book Award), Contracts for the Film and Television Industry, Litwak’s Multimedia Producer’s Handbook, and his latest book, Risky Business, Financing and Distributing Independent Film. *CLE with VLA: Seven (7) New York CLE credits awarded for attorneys: 4 Areas of Professional Practice credits, 2 Skills credits, and 1 Ethics credit. This program qualifies as “transitional” for newly admitted attorneys. When: Friday, April 27, 2018, 9:30 AM – 5 PM – CLE* Space is limited! Where: Manhattan The Grinch and Fair Use
By Mark Litwak On September 15, 2017, Judge Alvin K. Hellerstein of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York[1] issued an important fair use ruling about a play based on a children’s book. Playwright Matthew Lombardo wrote Who's Holiday! which makes fun of the characters, plot, and setting of the classic book, How the Grinch Stole Christmas! ("Grinch") by the late Theodor Seuss Geisel who went by the pen name Dr. Seuss. The author created many of the most popular children's books of all time, selling more than 600 million copies. The original Grinch book is about a green creature that lives in a cave on Mount Crumpit in the town of Who-Ville, home of the merry and cheerful Whos, who love Christmas. The Grinch, who hates Christmas, decides to ruin the holiday by disguising himself as Santa Claus and stealing all of the communities’ Christmas trees and presents. While pursuing his evil deeds, he meets Cindy-Lou Who, a cute two-year old. When she asks the Grinch why he is taking her family's tree, the Grinch lies by telling her that he needs to repair a light but will return it soon. Cindy-Lou goes back to bed. The next day, as the Grinch listens for the sound of despair from crying residents, he is surprised instead when he hears merry singing. The Grinch, upon learning that the residents could remain joyous even without presents or Christmas trees, realizes that Christmas means more than presents. The play is a one woman 75-minute comedy presenting a destitute 45-year-old adult version of Cindy-Lou Who. It takes place at a 1970s-era trailer. Cindy-Lou speaks to the audience in rhyming couplets that are clearly intended to evoke the work of Dr. Seuss while waiting for guests to arrive for her Christmas party. She informs the audience, using bawdy rhymes, of the story of her life, beginning with her first encounter with the Grinch followed by sex, a marriage opposed by her parents, the birth of a child, and eventually divorce. As she relates her story, Cindy-Lou swills hard alcohol, consumes prescription pills, and smokes a substance she calls “Who Hash," which she describes as just "like a prescription" which keeps her in check to avoid a "conniption." She engages in this self-medication following her realization that none of the guests she invited to her party is going to arrive, as they keep calling throughout the Play to cancel. The key issue raised by the case was whether the Play is a fair use that comments on Grinch by imitating and ridiculing its characteristic style for comic effect, or unfairly exploits the characters, style and themes of Grinch to capitalize on the original. Under the fair use doctrine, authors can draw upon existing works to produce new works of authorship without violating the copyright of the original author. Such uses include fair comment and criticism, parody, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Thus, a movie or literary critic does not need permission to include a small quote from a work being reviewed. It is sometimes said of writers that if you borrow extensively from another’s work, you are a thief; but, if you borrow small amounts from many, you are a scholar. Of course, the scholar adds value by synthesizing information from prior works and creating something new. In determining whether the use of a copyrighted work is a fair use, courts weigh four factors: 1) the purpose and character of the work; 2) the nature of the copyrighted work; 3) the amount and substantiality of the portion borrowed in relation to copyrighted work as a whole; and 4) the potential adverse effect on the market for, and value of, the copyrighted work. One type of fair use is a parody, which is a work that imitates the characteristic style of an author or a work for comic effect or ridicule. The work copied must be, at least in part, an object of the parody. The central question in many instances is “whether and to what extent the new work is 'transformative.’'' In other words, as the Supreme Court has explained, "whether the new work merely supersedes the objects of the original creation, or instead adds something new, with a further purpose or different character, altering the first with new expression, meaning, or message."[2] After a detailed analysis, Judge Hellerstein found that the Play “recontextualizes Grinch's easily-recognizable plot and rhyming style by placing Cindy-Lou Who — a symbol of childhood innocence and naiveté — in outlandish, profanity-laden, adult-themed scenarios involving topics such as poverty, teen-age pregnancy, drug and alcohol abuse, prison culture, and murder. In so doing, the Play subverts the expectations of the Seussian genre, and lampoons the Grinch by making Cindy-Lou's naiveté, Who-Ville's endlessly-smiling, problem-free citizens, and Dr. Seuss' rhyming innocence, all appear ridiculous.” This case is another in a recent series of cases[3] that further defines what is a fair use and expands protection for authors who parody pre-existing works. However, this past June, a motion to dismiss a case concerning the works of Dr. Seuss was decided by the United States District for Court for the Southern District of California with a different outcome.[4] Rather than dismiss the case, the court let the matter proceed forward. In Dr. Seuss Enters., L.P. v. ComicMix LLC, Defendants created a Kickstarter campaign in order to fund printing and distribution of an allegedly infringing work, Oh, the Places You’ll Boldly Go! ("Boldly"), which combines aspects of various Dr. Seuss’ works with "certain characters, imagery, and other elements from Star Trek, the science fiction entertainment franchise created by Gene Roddenberry. Here, the court refused to dismiss the copyright infringement claim on the grounds that there was insufficient evidence of whether this work would affect the market for Dr. Seuss’ work. The court found that Boldly failed to qualify as a parody even though it was transformative, explaining, “it combines into a completely unique work the two disparate worlds of Dr. Seuss and Star Trek. Go! tells the tale of a young boy setting out on adventure and discovering and confronting many strange beings and circumstances along his path.” While the defendants were not successful in getting the court to dismiss the complaint with a preliminary ruling, the outcome of the case remains to be decided. These two cases demonstrate the difficulty of determining whether a fair use defense is viable. One useful resource in determining fair use is the copyright office’s compilation of cases in its Fair Use Index found at: https://www.copyright.gov/fair-use/fair-index.html. [1] Lombardo v. Dr. Seuss Enters., L.P., No. 16 Civ. 9974 (AKH), 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 150213, (S.D. N.Y. Sept. 15, 2017), available at https://advance.lexis.com/api/document/collection/cases/id/5PGM-YH61-F04F-03KC-00000-00?cite=2017%20U.S.%20Dist.%20LEXIS%20150213&context=1000516. [2] Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc., 510 U.S. 569, 582 (1994). [3] See Faulkner Literary Rights, LLC v. Sony Pictures Classics Inc., 953 F. Supp. 3d 701, 712, where the court held that Woody Allen’s inclusion of a short quote (“The past is not dead! Actually, it’s not even past”) from William Faulkner’s Requiem for a Nun in the film Midnight in Paris was a fair use. In Seltzer v. Green Day, Inc., 725 F.3d 1170, 1179 ((9th Cir. 2013), the Ninth Circuit held that the popular band Green Day’s unauthorized use of street artists’ work as a video backdrop for its stage show did not violate the artists’ rights. [4] Dr. Seuss Enters., L.P. v. ComicMix LLC, No. 16cv2779-JLS (BGS), 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 89205, at *31 (S.D. Cal. June 9, 2017). |
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