Questions About Doing A Parody Of A Movie
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Questions About Doing A Parody Of A Movie
Do I have to pay royalities or anything if I poke fun at a movie? And if the title sounds similar to the original movie are there any kind of special steps I have to take?
say your doing a spoof on Daredevil call it DarnDeevil or something...or like spider-man make it Man-With-Web'd-Feet or something hehe
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Uh - oh, getting a reputation huh...
Parody is a GENERALLY permitted use of copyrighted material. However, just saying it's a parody, it's protected go away to the legal eagle's from the studio, may not be enough, and in fact probably won't be enough. Here is a reference article http://www.publaw.com/parody.html . Understand that in order to protect their copyright, copyright holders are required to prove that they have previously protected their rights ( ie to sue people) so there is a good chance, if you come up on their radar that they will come after you, even if they think they are going to lose, it is simply to prove they have attempted to protect their copyright so if someone does a real rip-off of the material down the road.
So my totally un legal opinion is even tho technically your parody should be a protected work ( assuming it passes the tests listed in the article) you may have to go to court to prove it. In the case of the example 2LiveCrew had to go to the supreme court. And you are probably talking about some real serious hard cash to get the licenses you would need if you licensed the work. As always, anytime you tread the tenuous areas of copyright infringement, seek the advice of a good Intelectual Property attorney, and generally not on the Internet LOL.
Again my opinion and interpretation, there is no legal advice implied, just my thoughts on the question at hand.
Parody is a GENERALLY permitted use of copyrighted material. However, just saying it's a parody, it's protected go away to the legal eagle's from the studio, may not be enough, and in fact probably won't be enough. Here is a reference article http://www.publaw.com/parody.html . Understand that in order to protect their copyright, copyright holders are required to prove that they have previously protected their rights ( ie to sue people) so there is a good chance, if you come up on their radar that they will come after you, even if they think they are going to lose, it is simply to prove they have attempted to protect their copyright so if someone does a real rip-off of the material down the road.
So my totally un legal opinion is even tho technically your parody should be a protected work ( assuming it passes the tests listed in the article) you may have to go to court to prove it. In the case of the example 2LiveCrew had to go to the supreme court. And you are probably talking about some real serious hard cash to get the licenses you would need if you licensed the work. As always, anytime you tread the tenuous areas of copyright infringement, seek the advice of a good Intelectual Property attorney, and generally not on the Internet LOL.
Again my opinion and interpretation, there is no legal advice implied, just my thoughts on the question at hand.
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And a very well done parody at that!! I could see absolutely nothing in that movie that would even allow them to raise a copyright question! And at the same time, it was obviously a parody of the Indiana Jones series...Grant wrote:Just don't use exact character names. music, props etc and you should be right. My film Dangerous Dan Jones is a parody of Indiana Jones and if you listen to the music it sounds similar but if you break it down into tracks it is very different.
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yeah I type mine in the crappy Scriptbuddy, then I copy and paste it to word and make my corrections that way the formatting is semi right and I dont have to format the whole thing.
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meaning don't call a parody of "The Lord of the Rings" "The Lord of the Rings". Call it "The Lord of the Circular Jewelry Wornn on the Hand for the Purpose of Aesthetics"
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