Paramount Apparently Going To Drop Lawsuit Against Axanar Fan Film, Produce 'Guidelines' For Fan Films
from the better-than-the-alternative dept
Since December, we've been following the ridiculous Paramount/CBS lawsuit over a big crowdfunded Star Trek fan film called Axanar. While it is true that by raising over a million dollars on Kickstarter, and getting a professional team and actors behind it that Axanar started to blur the lines between a traditional fan film and a full-on professional production, it still seemed like a ridiculous and anti-fan move to sue. To some extent, it highlighted yet another problem with today's copyright laws, which are woefully unprepared for the fact that the equipment is cheap enough and available enough for "amateur" work to be really, really good.We'd been covering the case, including the ridiculous overclaiming of copyrights by Paramount/CBS (including claiming a copyright over the Klingon language and "uniforms with gold stars.") Things had just been starting to heat up and the judge was gearing up for a trial... when famed producer/director JJ Abrams announced at a fan event for the next film that the lawsuit was going away.
The folks at Treknews have a video of JJ's statement:
“A few months back there was a fan movie, Axanar, that was getting made and there was this lawsuit that happened between the studio and these fans and Justin, I’ll tell the story because he probably wouldn’t, was sort of outraged by this as a long time fan. We started talking about it and realized this was not an appropriate way to deal with the fans.For what it's worth, the deal is not yet final. Alec Peters, the producer of the Axanar film has said that he wasn't expecting this and wasn't entirely sure what it meant -- but was "frantically texting" with his lawyers. He also says he's promised to name his first kid after Justin Lin, which, of course, now that it's on Twitter must be the same as a binding contract, right?
The fans should be celebrating this thing, like you're saying now. We all... Fans of Star Trek are part of this world. So you [Justin] went to the studio and pushed them to stop this lawsuit and now, within the next few weeks, it will be announced this is going away, and fans would be able to continue working on their project”
In my excitement, I may have told Justin Lin that I will name my first kid after him. In fact, I am pretty sure I did.....Alec
— Axanar Productions (@StarTrekAxanar) May 21, 2016
Statement from CBS & Paramount regarding JJ Abrams' announcement about the #Axanar lawsuit. pic.twitter.com/ZpMdaBAPQC
— Adam B. Vary (@adambvary) May 21, 2016
Similarly, it's a good thing that Paramount will be releasing fan film guidelines (and it would be great to see others do the same) but the details here will matter. If it's making it easier for people to make fan films, even to the point of granting licenses to allow people to do things without fear of a lawsuit, that would be really great. But what restrictions there are on all of this should be worth watching closely -- especially if the guidelines suggest that fair use is not allowed or still include overclaiming of copyright. I'm actually reminded of the story from a few months ago about the Fine Bros. trying to freely license some of their stuff, which was doomed by the horrible way it was rolled out, along with the Fine Bros.' history of aggressive complaints against anyone doing marginally similar stuff. But at that time, I noted that if, say, Lucasfilm had opened up its assets to fan film makers to create fan films with a free license, with just a promise to share back a small percentage of revenue, that would be quite cool.
So, now Star Trek will be getting some sort of official rules for fan films -- and I'm guessing that they'll restrict any and all commercial releases (which, frankly, is silly). And those details will matter quite a lot. But ending this lawsuit and letting the film continue is absolutely the right move -- so kudos to Justin Lin and JJ Abrams for telling the studio that... and to Paramount for actually listening.
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Filed Under: alec peters, axanar, copyright, fair use, fan films, guidelines, jj abrams, justin lin, star trek
Companies: cbs, paramount
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Why can't studios nurture this?
The amateur film-maker then gets to announce their film is 'sanctioned by $STUDIO' or something to that effect. So long as they don't distribute commercially, the studio gets no money off the deal. Effectively, a free, compulsory license augmented granted with fees paid to the studio for certain help.
If the film gets distributed commercially, then the studio gets a statutorily defined cut of the revenue.
Going the commercial route, then, the studio gets a free film with their name on it and money coming in for effectively doing nothing but paper pushing. Who could complain at a deal like that?
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Re: Why can't studios nurture this?
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Hollywood Accounting
I wonder if these fan films will be end up pulling a Hollywood accounting and never showing a profit and thus never sending any money back to the studio.
If they complain about that, would it end up shining an even brighter light on their one shady methods, which shows the original Star Wars as not having turned a profit.
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Re: Why can't studios nurture this?
What, what.... allow producers and actors to get an ongoing income from a film, that is not the Hollywood way.
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You really can't say fairer than that; the money could be put into a fund for future productions, so everyone would win.
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JJ Abrams is talking out of his ass because he has no influence on what Paramount wants to do. JJ Abrams does not own the rights to "Star Trek". he's only a movie producer. Even if Paramount does currently drop the copyright lawuit, they will wait until after the film is completed and then move to block its release and demand that all copies of the film be turned over to Paramount.
Creating a fan film is one thing but making money on it (generating income from it) is not covered by fair use.
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Re: Hollywood Accounting
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He wasn't saying that he was doing it. He was saying that he and Lin urged Paramount to figure something out... and that Parmaount had then worked out a settlement.
Paramount has since confirmed it.
Even if Paramount does currently drop the copyright lawuit, they will wait until after the film is completed and then move to block its release and demand that all copies of the film be turned over to Paramount.
Again, Paramount has confirmed that they are completing a settlement agreement. That's IN THIS POST which apparently you didn't read.
Creating a fan film is one thing but making money on it (generating income from it) is not covered by fair use.
That's not necessarily true, but thanks for playing.
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Re: Why can't studios nurture this?
Since when do studios care about canon? Or consistency within the story?
One of the problems with even the canon ST universe is the number of inconsistencies it has grown to have. But it doesn't make them (much) less entertaining.
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Axanar was trying to capture the ideas of what Star Trek is about.
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well... that happened
but all in all... I think it's good that there is "some" solution striking between fandoms and official releases. But as has been said, we need to hear the details first.
On a tangent... I would contend that anything not explicitly created by Gene Roddenberry (as in he having his hands on it directly) is inherently fan made.
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Re: well... that happened
This assumes that Paramount are fans of Star Trek, which I find very unlikely.
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""Axanar" is the story of Garth of Izar & the Battle of Axanar, a pivotal event in the history of the Federation."
Not exactly Star Trek.
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Caribbean Accounting
And it was common practice for privateer ships to cook the books to redistribute more loot back to the crew.
Yar-har and Fiddle-dee-dee!
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Re: well... that happened
In which case a lot of people would agree that all the best Star Trek is fan-made Star Trek :)
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But Paramount was trying to argue that Axanar was trying to do more than just "capture the ideas": they claimed that Axanar was trying to position itself as official, canon Star Trek.
That's why there was the whole argument over terms like "red shirt", "warp drive", "transporter", Klingon, etc. Sure, Paramount can't own these individual concepts, but when all of them are put together, they form what fans recognize as Star Trek.
The Axanar people could have taken the "50 Shades of Grey" approach and changed all the names so it would be Star Trek in spirit, but without using any of the specific names.
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At one end of the scale, you could say: the "expression" is the exact, fixed, fully completed work. Everything else is an idea. Anything less than simply copying a Star Trek script word for word is not infringing, because it's just using the idea not the expression itself.
At the other end of the scale, you could say: the "expression" is everything beyond the vaguest of feelings that underpins the property. You can set something in space with spaceships, but anything more specific than that begins to infringe on the specific "expression" of that idea that is copyrighted Star Trek.
The reality is, I suppose, somewhere in between - but there's no consistent line to be drawn and no easy set of criteria to consider. Personally I'd argue that we should err towards the former in all cases. Others would argue the opposite (and be wrong, IMO).
Like consider these different things:
- I make a show that is completely unique from Star Trek, with 100% original stories. It's not even focused on space travel or galactic politics or any of that - but it stars Captain James Kirk from the United Federation of Planets. But he's totally different, and it's actually an earthbound love story that doesn't feel like Star Trek at all.
- I make a show that is exactly a Star Trek story in every way, and in spirit it is 100% Star Trek, but it's all unique characters and planets and names of my own. Change the details and it would fit right into the original series, maybe it's even a direct ripoff of a famous episode, but absolutely none of the specifics are the same.
Which one is "more" infringing? Which one violates the idea, and which one the expression?
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Fan Star Trek
Indeed, Roddenberry imagined a future in which we had long since gotten over our Puritan sexual hang-ups (A common theme in 50s and 60s sci-fi), but the 60s writers weren't comfortable with that (Nor were the 80s - 90s writers of TNG) and TOS and TNG ended up only emphasizing how insecure we are.
Star Trek gained a lot -- as with most creative works -- standing on the shoulders of giants.
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Basically the american dream, everyone can get rich but if everyone is rich then all are middle class aka. won't happen.
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