2nd UPDATE: ‘WATCHMEN’ WATCH: Settlement Talks Underway!
UPDATE: Fox has officially responded to Watchmen producer Lloyd Levin’s open letter about the case against Warner Bros:
“We appreciate Mr. Levin’s passion for this project, but he has neglected basic facts and legal rulings. First, Fox notified Warner Bros of our rights in this project months before production on the film began — they chose to ignore our rights on this occasion and several times after that and proceeded at their own risk; 2) only after having our rights in the film deliberately ignored by Warner Bros. did we take the action of filing litigation in order to have those rights recognized; and 3) on Judge Feess’ Christmas Eve order, he specifically ruled that WB had been timely notified and that Fox, in fact, had the rights we asserted. There is no question of who is right and who is wrong. That has been decided through the litigation that we had hoped to avoid, and we refer interested parties to the court’s ruling to confirm these statements.”
Drew McWeeny of the website Hitfix recently heard from Lloyd Levin, one of the producers of Watchmen, who wrote an “open letter” about the ongoing legal battle over the film between Warner Bros and Fox in advance of the January 20th hearing:
“Watchmen. A producer’s perspective. An open letter.
Who is right? In the Watchmen dispute between Warner Brothers and Fox that question is being discussed, analyzed, argued, tried and ruled on in a court of law. That’s one way to answer the question – It is a fallback position in our society for parties in conflict to resolve disputes. And there are teams of lawyers and a highly regarded Federal Judge trying to do just that, which obviates any contribution I could make towards answering the “who is right” question within a legal context. But after 15 plus years of involvement in the project, and a decade more than that working in the movie business, I have another perspective, a personal perspective that I believe important to have on the public record.
No one is more keenly aware of the irony of this dispute than Larry Gordon and I who have been trying to get this movie made for many years. There’s a list of people who have rejected the viability of a movie based on Alan Moore and Dave Gibbon’s classic graphic novel that reads like a who’s who of Hollywood.
We’ve been told the graphic novel is unfilmable.
After 9/11 some felt the story’s themes were too close to reality ever to be palatable to a mainstream audience.
There were those who considered the project but who wished it were somehow different: Could it be a buddy movie, or a team-up movie or could it focus on one main character; did it have to be so dark; did so many people have to die; could it be stripped of its flashback structure; could storylines be eliminated; could new storylines be invented; did it have to be so long; could the blue guy put clothes on… The list of dissatisfactions for what Watchmen is was as endless as the list of suggestions to make it something it never was.
Also endless are the list of studio rejections we accrued over the years. Larry and I developed screenplays at five different studios. We had two false starts in production on the movie. We were involved with prominent and commercial directors. Big name stars were interested. In one instance hundreds of people were employed, sets were being built – An A-list director and top artists in the industry were given their walking papers when the studio financing the movie lost faith.
After all these years of rejection, this is the same project, the same movie, over which two studios are now spending millions of dollars contesting ownership. Irony indeed, and then some.
Through the years, inverse of the lack of studio faith has been the passionate belief by many many individuals – movie professionals who were also passionate fans of the graphic novel – who, yes, wanted to work on the film, but more for reasons of just wanting to see the movie get made, to see this movie get made and made right, donated their time and talent to help push the film forward: Writers gave us free screenplay drafts; conceptual art was supplied by illustrators, tests were performed gratis by highly respected actors and helped along and put together by editors, designers, prop makers and vfx artists; we were the recipients of donated studio and work space, lighting and camera equipment. Another irony, given the commercial stakes implied by the pitched legal dispute between Fox and Warners, is that for years Watchmen has been a project that has survived on the fumes of whatever could be begged, borrowed and stolen – A charity case for all intents and purposes. None of that effort, none of that passion and emotional involvement, is considered in the framework of this legal dispute.
From my point of view, the flashpoint of this dispute, came in late spring of 2005. Both Fox and Warner Brothers were offered the chance to make Watchmen. They were submitted the same package, at the same time. It included a cover letter describing the project and its history, budget information, a screenplay, the graphic novel, and it made mention that a top director was involved.
And it’s at this point, where the response from both parties could not have been more radically different.
The response we got from Fox was a flat “pass.” That’s it. An internal Fox email documents that executives there felt the script was one of the most unintelligible pieces of shit they had read in years. Conversely, Warner Brothers called us after having read the script and said they were interested in the movie – yes, they were unsure of the screenplay, and had many questions, but wanted to set a meeting to discuss the project, which they promptly did. Did anyone at Fox ask to meet on the movie? No. Did anyone at Fox express any interest in the movie? No. Express even the slightest interest in the movie? Or the graphic novel? No.
From there, the executives at Warner Brothers, who weren’t yet completely comfortable with the movie, made a deal to acquire the movie rights and we all started to creatively explore the possibility of making Watchmen. We discussed creative approaches and started offering the movie to directors, our former director having moved on by then. After a few director submissions, Zack Snyder came onboard, well before the release of his movie 300. In fact, well before its completion. This was a gut, creative call by Larry, me and the studio… Zack didn’t have a huge commercial track record, yet we all felt he was the right guy for the movie.
Warner Brothers continued to support, both financially and creatively, the development of the movie. And eventually, after over a year of work, they agreed to make the film, based on a script that, for what it’s worth, was by and large very similar to the one Fox initially read and deemed an unintelligible piece of shit.
Now here’s the part that has to be fully appreciated, if for nothing more than providing insight into producing movies in Hollywood: The Watchmen script was way above the norm in length, near 150 pages, meaning the film could clock in at close to 3 hours, the movie would not only be R rated but a hard R – for graphic violence and explicit sex – would feature no stars, and had a budget north of $100M. We also asked Warner Brothers to support an additional 1 to 1.5 hours of content incurring additional cost that would tie in with the movie but only be featured in DVD iterations of the film. Warners supported the whole package and I cannot begin to emphasize how ballsy and unprecedented a move this was on the part of a major Hollywood studio. Unheard of. And would another studio in Hollywood, let alone a studio that didn’t show one shred of interest in the movie, not one, have taken such a risk? Would they ever have made such a commitment, a commitment to a film that defied all conventional wisdom?
Only the executives at Fox can answer that question. But if they were to be honest, their answer would have to be “No.”
Shouldn’t Warner Brothers be entitled to the spoils – if any — of the risk they took in supporting and making Watchmen? Should Fox have any claim on something they could have had but chose to neither support nor show any interest in?
Look at it another way… One reason the movie was made was because Warner Brothers spent the time, effort and money to engage with and develop the project. If Watchmen was at Fox the decision to make the movie would never have been made because there was no interest in moving forward with the project.
Does a film studio have the right to stand in the way of an artistic endeavor and determine that it shouldn’t exist? If the project had been sequestered at Fox, if Fox had any say in the matter, Watchmen simply wouldn’t exist today, and there would be no film for Fox to lay claim on. It seems beyond cynical for the studio to claim ownership at this point.
By his own admission, Judge Feess is faced with an extremely complex legal case, with a contradictory contractual history, making it difficult to ascertain what is legally right. Are there circumstances here that are more meaningful, which shed light on what is ultimately just, to be taken into account when assessing who is right? In this case, what is morally right, beyond the minutiae of decades-old contractual semantics, seems clear cut.
For the sake of the artists involved, for the hundreds of people, executives and filmmakers, actors and crew, who invested their time, their money, and dedicated a good portion of their lives in order to bring this extraordinary project to life, the question of what is right is clear and unambiguous – Fox should stand down with its claim.
My father, who was a lawyer and a stickler for the minutiae of the law, was always quick to teach me that the determination of what is right and wrong was not the sole purview of the courts. I bet someone at Fox had a parent like mine who instilled the same sense of fairness and justice in them.
Lloyd Levin”
- VIDEO: Why Is Fox’s Sister Company Hosting New ‘Watchmen’ Sneak Peek?
- WB Vows To Fight Fox Over ‘Watchmen’
- WATCHMEN RULING: Where Was Larry?
- SHOCKER! Federal Judge To Side With Fox In Warner Bros ‘Watchmen’ Film Lawsuit
- ‘Watchmen’ Contracts & Court Documents
- SAVE US! Warner’s ‘Watchmen’ In Legal Peril After Judge Won’t Dismiss Fox Suit
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.
No one is more keenly aware of the irony of this dispute than Larry Gordon and I who have been trying to get this movie made for many years. There’s a list of people who have rejected the viability of a movie based on Alan Moore and Dave Gibbon’s classic graphic novel that reads like a who’s who of Hollywood.
Through the years, inverse of the lack of studio faith has been the passionate belief by many many individuals – movie professionals who were also passionate fans of the graphic novel – who, yes, wanted to work on the film, but more for reasons of just wanting to see the movie get made, to see this movie get made and made right, donated their time and talent to help push the film forward: Writers gave us free screenplay drafts; conceptual art was supplied by illustrators, tests were performed gratis by highly respected actors and helped along and put together by editors, designers, prop makers and vfx artists; we were the recipients of donated studio and work space, lighting and camera equipment. Another irony, given the commercial stakes implied by the pitched legal dispute between Fox and Warners, is that for years Watchmen has been a project that has survived on the fumes of whatever could be begged, borrowed and stolen – A charity case for all intents and purposes. None of that effort, none of that passion and emotional involvement, is considered in the framework of this legal dispute.

“free screenplay drafts?” For shame, Lloyd, you scourge of the labor class.
This whole thing is a scam.
Fox and WB knew that “Watchman” had a loyal cult following but the comic has never been mainstream and it’s certainly not known by the tween crowd.
WB knew it had rights and Fox did too. You reported this but somehow those aggroant WB bastards went on and greenlit a multi-million dollar pic anyway?
Not on your life.
These are the guys who have been squeezing quarters out of Bugs Bunny’s ass for seventy-five years!
Fox and WB have planned this whole thing to get free pub. Fox needs a hit and WB needs to seed the year because they shafted “Potter” into the spring (wonder that WB trailer will play with “Watchmen”)
This is what we call a “friendly lawsuit.” It’s legit but the parties have agreed to disagree. And no it’s not illegal. There are issues to resolve on sharing the film, of course, but they could easily be resolved out of court.
Man, this is right up there with “War Of The Worlds,” and Rock Hudson’s marriage.
They got me for a while but the “coming together has already happened, just in time for a marketing push for a March release.
How convenient.
This is really a great idea and I have to take my hat off to both companies. A high stakes legal showdown over a movie with obscure literary material. Brilliant.
But we know better, don’t we?
No way WB’s lawyers are that dumb.
No way Fox’s lawyers are that smart.
Score one for the suits.
Well said Lloyd. Like many other fans across the country eagerly awaiting this film,I plan on boycotting Fox films if Watchmen is delayed because of a necessary appeal by WB.
Somewhere, my law school contracts professor is giving you an A, Lloyd.
In all matters of contract, and especially when the call might be so close or complicated, a policy consideration is not at all out of place. In fact it should be the last and most important consideration to be taken into account.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: when all is said and done, Fox should not be allowed to set such a dangerous business precedent.
I agree, Spork. Writers GAVE THEM free drafts?? Oh, hahahahahaha!
I can’t remember the last time I WASN’T “asked” for a free “polish” (read: major re-draft) by a studio/producer. Agents are complicit. “Oh, it’s good for you to do this,” or “The relationship is solid; don’t rock the boat,” blah, blah blah. You’re DISGUSTING, Llloyd.
Dear Mr Levin,
Don’t steal other people’s stuff. It tends to tick them off. And especially don’t steal stuff from people who have two floors full of lawyers.
I’d love to do remake of RAGING BULL. I have Paulie Shore all lined up to play Jake LaMotta. But that jackass Marty Scorcese won’t sign a remake/sequel agreement, the dick!! Guess we’ll have to wait until it goes public domain.
Sincerely,
Mrs Levin
Ella – I don’t think Fox would be taking this to court if they didn’t have a pretty solid case that they own the underlying property. The dangerous business precedent is allowing WB to steal someone else’s IP rights without compensation or permission.
Short version of Levin letter: “Okay, yeah, sure, we don’t have an actual legal leg to stand on, maybe… but: c’mon, Your Honor. I mean, come on.”
Buffoonish. Pathetic. There’s an ages old dictum we legal professionals like to quote: “If you have the facts on your side, pound the facts. If you have the law on your side, pound the law. If you have neither on your side, pound the table.” This lengthy snivel of Levin’s is simply the verbal equivalent of WB pounding the table.
Come the 20th (if not earlier), Judge Feess will decide this case on the basis of one question, ultimately, above and beyond any/all others: “DID WARNER BROTHERS KNOWINGLY GO AHEAD AND MAKE THIS FILM, OF THEIR OWN FREE WILL, WITHOUT CLEARING ALL THE NECESSARY LEGAL HURDLES WITH FOX FIRST?” And not all the sniveled fanboy mewlings over “how totally Watchmen rawks, OMG!!ELEVEN!!!” or what-have-you will effectively gainsay this essential, implacable and inarguable legal point.
And I find it endlessly amusing to see so many breathy, indignant comics fanboys frantically twisting their stunted principles every which way possible, in piggish defense of one company [WB] being allowed to steal from another [Fox]… just so they can watch grown men and women gad and ponce about in spandex for two hours at their local cinemas.
How very Superman of them. How very Captain America.
Pfft.
I love what Lloyd said. BUT . . .
Let’s get one thing straight: LAWYERS and especially JUDGES (who came from the ranks of attorneys) don’t care a shit about justice. This is the nature of the system. It’s Harvard Law 101: it’s about the Law – as poorly written as it mostly is – it’s NOT about Justice. As a major studio litigator said once (and this quote should be enshrined at all the studios), “What, JUSTICE? Are you some kind of schmuck?”
It’s the legal technicality that judges adore… And they love this little legal technicality beyond all reason. Ask any attorney working today.
Justice simply doesn’t concern a judge working at the high level of Lloyd’s case. That’s naive; that’s NOT what the case is really about. Judges are only looking for technicalities.
Sorry Lloyd. This is the time when you have to get down and pray. And while you’re doing that, prepare to let Fox up your the ass.
I’d like to make a few of the films that Lloyd Levin is currently sitting on the rights for but ..there’s just one problem… I don’t have the rights, so I can’t. That’s what this is really about, securing rights and making sure you have the proper authority to use someone’s intellectual property.
Making absurd statements like “beyond the minutiae of decades-old contractual semantics, seems clear cut” and “Fox should stand down with its claim.” is LUDICROUS. Our entire system of ownership is based on such ‘minutiae’ and ‘semantics’. Obviously neither was followed, and such Warner finds themselves in a pickle.
“It seems beyond cynical for the studio to claim ownership at this point.” Cynical probably, but legally and ethically, absolutely. Let someone walk into this guy’s house and start making off with boxes of his stuff he hasn’t used in years. We’ll see how fast his tune changes.
God, this letter was desperate and embarrassing. These people are hurting their case, and encouraging intellectual theft. Anyone who’s ever applied for a copyright or trademark and retains legal ownership knows what is going on, and you simply don’t fucking move on a project you don’t have the rights to move forward with. END OF STORY, and stop bitching because you fucked up.
The most Fox can get out of this is a financial settlement unless they agree to assume some of the fnnancial risk, at least half the production, ad, promotion, print and distribution cost of the film, as a releasing and production partner with WB. Fox’ position however, appears to be “Hey, we want to block the film’s release, for no reason but to do it, no other reason given, or necessary”…and that position, is an absurd one. This is a film that Fox didn’t want to make, and placed into turn around, meaning, they were saying to any other studio or production company, that they, Fox, were no longer interested in the property and were releasing it from their production schedule for anyone else, or another entity, to buy and produce, and obviously, release…and, as Fox invited, another entity did eventually buy the rights to make the film, and that is the WB. According to the producer, he has a paper trail to back that contention up 100 percent. Fox felt the script unworthy to be shot and wanted nothing to do with the project. That being the case, the only reason now that they are asserting their rights to the distribution is as a backdoor way to protect their X-Men franchise from competition, as they now see Watchmen as a valid threat…a view that I have been forwarding.
Fox does not wish to partner with WB, which appears to hold the rights to make the film, and Fox is not asking for a buy-out of their rights to distribution in court? With that being the sitting facts, the judge needs to order a financial judgement, giving Fox damages that would hinge on the success of the film and how much Fox would make if it were the contracted distributor of said film, in terms of being a hired entity by the WB, for said task…or perhaps, even a distribution or releasing partner. Whatever that eventual figure is, the judge should order, in advance, that Fox should only receive half of that amount to offset the fact that they did not pay into the film production, and will not pay into its distribution, ad campaign, promotions, film print costs, etc. Also, the judge should again, take into account that Fox does not own the rights to make this film, at at no time since before they placed the property into turn around, had any intention to distribute the film at all…as they had no intention to make it, thereafter. Should the judge take that into account, that should diminish any damages against the WB…and thus further lower any legal cash award to Fox. In other words, Fox should only get the type of money that, a independently contracted distributor would get if WB brought a film of this size to them for a contracted distribution deal.
In the end, this film will be released, and Fox will walk away with a cash award…but WB will see The Watchmen in theaters. As for Fox, they are simply playing childish brand protection games, that being…The X-Men vs. The Watchmen. Clearly, they now feel that the WB may have a super hero team franchise which may now undermine the X-Men…and they are using the courts legally, to achieve an illegal goal!!!
I hate to say it, but it is a great letter. What Fox did, ie, letting someone else make the movie, see that it was going to turn a profit and THEN call their trump card, was horribly unethical and immoral, especially considering that they had the chance (allegedly) for the same project, same script, and passed. WB has always had a reputation for being a reasonably indulgent studio (see: Assassination of Jesse James) in terms of what directors and writers can do and how much risk they’re willing to accept to see a project through.
All that said, the legality of it does not change. What Levin neglects to mention is that they DID NOT sell all of the rights to WB, because they never got all the rights from Fox. And for those of you accusing WB of stealing, come on. Really? It seems to me that Larry Gordon misrepresented the exact rights he had from Fox resulting from his quitclaim agreement.
In my opinion, what Gordon did was stupid, and now WB is in hot water for it. I like the idea of Fox getting some money as a co-distributor, less the financial risk they didn’t assume. But I don’t know if, retaining the rights, they have to factor in risk at all.
Rather than WB undermining creative copyrights, Fox is undermining a studio taking risks and seeing profit from it. Whether it’s legal or not, WB does deserve a big fat profit from the Watchmen, and hopefully they can buy off Fox for as little as possible. Unfortunately, this is one instance where justice isn’t a consideration and legality is the only issue at hand.
Could someone with a JD please explain or clarify for me…
I was under the impression that you had to actively protect your copyright, as in, if you know someone is going to violate it, you do something to stop it and not wait years before stepping in.
Am I completely off about this?
For everyone above who says WB is stealing this Fox property, my question is: if someone comes into your house and ‘steals’ something from your garbage, as you watch them do it (saying and doing nothing at the time). And it’s not until they turn it into something a few years that’s potentially worth something that you start raving about it, isn’t that–well, wrong?
Am I misunderstanding this?
I think Mr. Levin should be more concerned with the marketing of this film. The schmucks over at WB have assembled the worst team in history. This movie deserves something better than the crap the WB marketing team will spew out. And I know they’ll scream Batman. Well, a lobotomized monkey could have marketed Batman. It’s BATMAN for God’s sake. Watchmen will take a savvy team. WB has no such team. Good luck Mr. Levin.
Shouldn’t Warner Brothers be entitled to the spoils – if any — of the risk they took in supporting and making Watchmen? Should Fox have any claim on something they could have had but chose to neither support nor show any interest in?
In this case, what is morally right, beyond the minutiae of decades-old contractual semantics, seems clear cut.
Hang on– you ARE talking about the same global multimedia giants that defend copyright to the death, lobby to endlessly (and ludicrously) extend corporate copyright terms, regularly sue average US citizens for hundreds of thousands of dollars, fight to re-educate American children and citizens around the world to respect their concept of “intellectual property”, and battle organized artists for fractions of pennies of profit made off of their creative efforts…
…and you expect them to suddenly go “Oh yeah, I guess the other studio had more “passion and personal involvement”… and that’s what’s truly important.”?!!
If mega-media companies actually linked creative investment to profit participation, there would be no need for the WGA or SAG and the world would be a better place. Are you actually trying to appeal to a sense of what is “morally right”?
Really?
And what IS up with those “free screenplay drafts” anyway?
I’ve no reason to believe Media Messiah knows what he/she’s talking about.
Clearly there remains an underlying rights issue.
It’s the basis of this entire lawsuit.
The person who says this is all for show is a cynical know it all, blow hard. I assure you no one wanted this nightmare, certainly not an aging film producer with more than enough legal headaches to battle.
I foresee a settlement, obviously.
There won’t be a delay in the release.
Hearing it’s around the corner.
Also hearing that it’s going to hurt. It’s being discussed as I type in private online industry forums, for Pete’s sake.
Everyone knows someone in this town, and they all blab.
A most recent post I read asserts the following:
Fox will get awarded a smidgen, maybe more, of everyone’s take.
When Paramount refuses, as they should, to give up any of their stake,
Larry Gordon and Lloyd Levin will have to fall on their swords and give up more of their substantial ownership of this film than the other players. Sadly, this is as it should be.
They have had this material for well over 15 years… my guess is more like 20+. Being the people with the longest track record with the material, everyone is looking to them to explain how these rights could not have been cleared properly. Lloyd Levin’s open letter is passionate, but it clearly states that the producers take is that the passion people had for this film is more important than decades old contractual minutiae? Oh, Mr. Levin, for shame. You know better, you must.
You have been acquiring comic book rights for decades and know this minutiae you speak of is pretty darn real, and meaningful.
As for free drafts, stop your belly-aching, people.
If you’ve seen your movie hit the screen, you’ve given it your all– and that means turning in some free work. We’ve all done it.
Good writers get paid handsomely, and if tweaking here or there is required, assuming you have good relationships– it happens.
Levin’s point was that he assembled a team of people with passion for this film. He made his point.
Kent has it closest.
Levin is pounding the table, and this actually is the time for table pounding. I’m sure he has another movie to sell and having his name all over the internet as the passionate producer guy isn’t going to hurt him a bit. Welcome out from behind Larry Gordon’s shadow, Mr. Levin.
Anonymous,
Are you aware that not that long ago, WB lost nearly $40 million because their lawyers neglected to properly vet the underlying rights for DUKES OF HAZZARD?
Gee, I guess that was a publicity stunt too…
Come to think of it, WB has been the most ‘gung-ho’ studio in Hollywood. They took chance on the likes of Matrix, Speedracer, The Exorcist, 300 & many more. Not only they profited from it but pratically define each of the movie’s genre
Fox was highly regarded with Star Wars which was the mastermind of Lucas himself.
So if we sit back and think this thru’, which studio you think will want to gamble with an unknown, unfamiliar script? You got to be an idiot not to know the answer by now.
Reading Levin’s article, I can’t help to feel Fox is a sore loser. When they saw the making of this movie and the reaction Watchmen is receiving from the media and fans, they felt damn stupid to have let this pass and now trying to wrestle in their ‘lost’ rights.
Kudos to WB and I do hope sincerely they will win the court battle. And to Fox, accept defeat and fire those stupid executives of yours.
Nothing in this letter absolves WB from deciding to move ahead on a project that, according to Judge Feess (by way of this website), WB was informed they didn’t have the rights to distribute. Despite the fact that the producer wants to cast WB as well-intentioned and above reproach for taking a chance on a project Fox didn’t want to pursue at a particular time it doesn’t change the fact that WB was (again, according to Judge Feess’ prior ruling) alerted by Fox that they would have a problem before production ever began.
Wow. That sure was long-winded way for Lloyd Levin to say, “FOX, I don’t give a f*&k about your intellectual property rights. I’m just going to do what the f*&k I want, because I’m an ignorant jackass.”
@Media Messiah:
It looks like our debate continues into a new post. I’m glad to see you’ve at least gone from saying that Fox should pay WB billions of dollars (your original position) to at least recognizing that WB should have to pay Fox something. But I still disagree with your current stance. You said:
Fox’ position however, appears to be “Hey, we want to block the film’s release, for no reason but to do it, no other reason given, or necessary”…and that position, is an absurd one.
Why, exactly, is that absurd? Suppose I decide to make a movie version of a story to which I don’t own the rights (It could be Watchmen, or The Dark Knight Returns, or The Autobiography of Media Messiah). Suppose I win the lottery and decide to spend all of my winnings — $100 million dollars — making my movie version of someone else’s story. Maybe I even send the rights holder the script, tell them I’ve got financing, and ask them for their permission. But they pass. Does that mean that whoever owns the story just loses their rights, and I can go ahead and make the movie anyways? That is the absurd position, but that’s exactly what you’re saying WB should be allowed to do with Watchmen. Even if we assume that WB has some rights — and note, while you state that WB has some rights, in fact, the judge hasn’t decided who owns any of the rights other than the distribution right, which the judge said Fox owns — it doesn’t own the right to distribute the film. But what you’ve done is turn it on its head: instead of a distribution “right,” your position is that Fox has a distribution “obligation,” and if they choose not to exercise their right, they should only get a small payout. But the benefit of having a “right” is that you can choose to exercise it or not, without fear of losing it.
My lord, the negativity and toxicity of these commnents. We sure have a load of disgruntled screenwriters on this site. You can smell the stench of cynicism on some of these posts.
What Levin is saying is simple: Fox wanted NOTHING to do with ‘Watchmen’. They PASSED ON IT. They didn’t understand its concept. They couldn’t see its box office potential.. And now they’re swooping like a chicken hawk to grab it because they know the movie will make money. And in the majority of the miserly posts so far on this thread, you’re siding with Fox?! Over such contemptous, cowardly, uncreative behavior?
Warner took the risk on the project. They put in the time, the money, and the resources. They deserve the ‘spoils’ of their labor. Fox needs to be trounced on this one.
Whoa! It would be a nice day in the Neighborhood if Fox gave up the distrib asset or got “trounced” in court but that ain’t gonna happen, Watchmen-lovers!
If the court chose to rule an entertainment contract unenforceable solely because some creative emo got tired of the terms, LA would be a deserted dust bowl, TVs would go blank, bats would infest the local multiplex and there’d be no more tinny tunes playing on your Ipod. The entire industry rests on the notion that if you sign the deal, you live with the deal. So stop whining! Fox & WB are big boys (or gals) and they’ll work it out. I’m guessing Fox is gonna improve their bottom line a bit and WB’s gonna make life miserable for a couple of producers and an exec or three but that’s business.
It seems as if nobody did the right thing in this entire production save for the talent.