OK now I understand. Before, I knew that the company who released the original version of the would own the rights to the character in the adaptation, but I had assumed those rights would be totally different from the original version. So to use your Batman '66 example, they'd own all of their characters who appeared on the show, but they'd be separate from the comics, or TAS, or Burtonvese versions.The adaptation would be, but all adaptations have to license the character from the same owner, because the character is legally the same entity no matter how they're reinterpreted. The producers of the adaptation may have the rights to the adaptation itself and anything original to it, but they're only borrowing the pre-existing character and universe from the original owners. (Which is why Marvel can no longer publish comics about ROM the Spaceknight, since they no longer have the license to the toy character, but they can still use the Dire Wraiths and other concepts they created for the ROM comics, since those are original to Marvel. And it's why DC didn't publish any Batman '66 comics for decades, because that was a 20th Century Fox show and DC didn't have the rights to its original characters like King Tut or Egghead.)
OK.Yes, that is Steven DeKnight's point, that this is a Disney practice.
Yeah, I get all of that now.The whole point is that it shouldn't come down to title alone. That's why DeKnight calls Disney's practice a scam, because they're treating their retitled, slightly reformatted continuations as new shows when they're actually not. The point is that if they were honest about it, they would admit they're continuations and pay the cast and crew accordingly, as was done in the other cases you mention.
Again, that's the point -- that Disney uses new titles as an excuse for restarting the contracts. And DeKnight is saying a new title shouldn't be enough justification to do that.
OK now I understand. Before, I knew that the company who released the original version of the would own the rights to the character in the adaptation, but I had assumed those rights would be totally different from the original version. So to use your Batman '66 example, they'd own all of their characters who appeared on the show, but they'd be separate from the comics, or TAS, or Burtonvese versions.
Marvel TV is gone, and the (mostly incompetent) people who ran it gone as well. They ran the Netflix shows, and obviously never really worked well with the MCU, their stuff was always going to get mostly shoved aside anyway.
I still think Daredevil is a different beast and shouldn't have been used as an example because years have passed and it ended its original run completely, contracts ended and that was that.
Is it the same behind the scene crew working on Daredevil or did they move on in the 5 years to other work?
Doing a google search, there is no shared Producer, executive producers, Creator, cinematographers, writers, editor...
For all intents and purposes, this is a new show.
Like Justified. Frasier. Star Trek: Picard (Season 3). And any number of shows that can use the same lead actors and characters but are basically all new behind the scenes and probably start again with their contracts (though I would imagine the leads do quite well as their "start".)
Disney may do this with kids shows like Zac and Cody live on a plane or whatever, since that's a continuous production with no halt besides the normal between seasons hiatus, but to bring Daredevil into the conversation seems more like they're bringing it up because people perk up when they hear "Marvel".
"Probably?" So you're assuming that you, an outsider making guesses, are more qualified to talk about TV contracts than a man who's been working in the TV industry for 24 years. This is why I can't stand armchair quarterbacks.
You're getting it backward. DeKnight didn't bring Daredevil into the conversation. The conversation began with someone on Daredevil: Born Again's crew talking about the contract he was working under, and DeKnight picked up on it to bring a larger issue into the conversation. People pay a lot of attention to Marvel, so that gave DeKnight an opportunity to call people's attention to something that happens with less well-known shows.
But are you telling me you think there's a stronger possibility that, to use an example with names I know, Terry Matalas got paid with a season 10 The Next Generation contract or season 3 of Picard? It's a pretty good guess that's honestly (be honest) almost certain that we know how the studios drew the contracts. It's identical to Daredevil: Born Again season 1. And it's a fair one.
I understand that all of the versions of Batman belong to DC, but what I thought was that every version of Batman who appeared in an adaptation was a separate completely unique character when it came to the rights. So if they had a giant database of all of the stuff they owned somewhere, than rather than one entry for all Batmans (Batmen?), you'd have separate entries for the comics Batman, the Dark Knight trilogy Batman, the BTAS Batman, ect. And if I wanted to do a crossover story where they all met, I'd have to negotiate seperately for each one.Any character that originated in the comics belongs to DC, period, regardless of how they're changed for an adaptation. It's the new characters and story elements created for the adaptation that are copyrighted by the makers of the adaptation. Although I imagine it might also apply to specific elements of a licensed character that are changed for a licensed adaptation, like costume designs, say.
Oh yeah, I know that, I might have just explained what I was talking about badly.And there's a difference between ownership and copyright. One entity can own a concept or character, but another entity may have the exclusive right to the specific stories they're licensed to tell about it, which is why only Sony can make Spider-Man movies even though Spider-Man belongs to Marvel. Licensing is basically buying the exclusive right to use the property in a certain form from its owner. It's not unlike when I sell an original story or novel -- I own the story, but the publisher I sell it to buys the exclusive right to publish it for the term specified in the contract, so I couldn't republish it myself or sell it to someone else until the contracted term expired.
I understand that all of the versions of Batman belong to DC, but what I thought was that every version of Batman who appeared in an adaptation was a separate completely unique character when it came to the rights. So if they had a giant database of all of the stuff they owned somewhere, than rather than one entry for all Batmans (Batmen?), you'd have separate entries for the comics Batman, the Dark Knight trilogy Batman, the BTAS Batman, ect. And if I wanted to do a crossover story where they all met, I'd have to negotiate seperately for each one.
It is getting a little scary when a movie has to make almost 1/2 a billion dollars just to make a profit.
The Marvel's film's budget is over $270 million.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/caroli...million-bill-for-the-marvels/?sh=6709c29f38da
Disney. Learn some self-control!
If it is just 90 minutes then they can have more showings a day which could be a good thing.So if it really is 90 mins long (maybe that rumour has been debunked), that’s $3m a minute.
If it is just 90 minutes then they can have more showings a day which could be a good thing.
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