Thing is: "
Ant-Man & Wasp" is a shrinking movie. It showed real-life Tardigrades in their natural environment. You can't claim copyright for real life things. The makers of
"The Revenant" can't claim ownership of the concept of "bear encounter in the wild".
What makes this particular case special are the freakinglish close similarities in the
changes of the real-life thing:
- Exact match in size of supersized Tardigrade: Like, both Tardigrades are enlarged to the exact same size: Around 2m in height. Tardigrades are microscopic beings. If you'd enlarge them for a story, they could be anything from fist-size to space-wale size. That they have the exact same, enlarged size is suspicious.
- Blue-ish Color of Tardigrade: In all other media, wether Ant-Man, that Neil-de-Grasse-Tyson bit, or webcomics, Tardigrades are usually depicted as flesh-colored. That change alone doesn't mean that much. But it's suspicious that all the visual changes are similar.
- FTL-capability: That's really the big one. "Tardigrades in space" is one thing. Using specifically Tardigrades as a means for faster-than-light-travel is pretty unique, no matter how much everyone here tries to downplay this. It would be one thing to have the Tardigrade as part of a machine (Frank Herbert says hello), but that specific image of having a lone Tardigrade floating in space zapping into hyperspace - that's really freaking unique!
- The blue sparkling: This is really the icing on the cake, and what made me think this guy has a case: Not are just all the relevant content changes the same. They even LOOK the same. The visuals are 100% identical, like a life-action adaptation of an animated content. Even if there are slight alterations in the exact technicalities of the backstory (mushroom spores...). That shit doesn't look coincidental.
Now, any two of these changes at the same time wouldn't be suspicious. And if I'm completely honest, I really don't see that much similarities in the characters of the video game and the show. And a lot of the other aesthetic similarities (blue overalls, dark grey corridors) are super generic sci-fi tropes and make more a case for
both sides being pretty unimaginative in most regards.
But yeah, all these similarities regarding the
Tardigrade do raise an eyebrow. Not any of them alone, but the combination of all of them.
Now it's completely, 100% possible that both sides came to the same concept at the same time independantly. Lots of things have been invented at the same time during history. But even in this case, the one who was "earlier" usually got recognition & compensation if someone else used the same specific idea after him, even if he came to it independantly.
So yeah, I'm not exactly rooting for this guy (or against CBS for that matter), but as someone highly interested in creation of artistic content, this lawsuit really is kinda' interesting in how they are going to deal with it, and especially how much a unique "idea" you can come up with is really worth.