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Harlan Ellison is Suing Paramount and Pocket Books

Well I'm not surprised he's going to do this, not at all. The man is big on creator right and rabidly protecting anything he's created. So this is well in character for him. Plus, I think he's got a pretty good track record with his court actions, so he wouldn't be going into this if he didn't think he could win.

The knock on effect, should he win or they settle out in his favor, could be to drive CBS/Paramount further to the realm of reboot for any future 'Trek projects-- basically wiping the slate clean and make sure they hold all the cards 100%

Yep...you nailed it...I totally agree

Rob
Scorpio
 
Harlan Ellison is a loon. He hasn't published anything memorable in decades so he decides to start a frivolous lawsuit.What a waste of space he is.:rolleyes:
 
H.E.'s always been a douchebag.

an interview from a while ago:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=omxaG1RKsC0

christ, he berated the poor woman for not knowing a single concentration camp's name.

I'm appalled by his rant. I don't have the word to express the disgust I feel towards his reaction to the student who didn't know the concentration camp's name.

In another interview, he went on to say that "if you don't remember the past, we're doomed to repeat it". Okay, if we don't remember the names, dates and other superficial minutiae, we'll be burning whole groups of people alive?
 
Harlan Ellison is a loon. He hasn't published anything memorable in decades so he decides to start a frivolous lawsuit.What a waste of space he is.

I'd like to see your judging credentials.

Every time anyone criticizes any aspect of Trek or in any way "threatens" the Franchise, some folks automatically bad-mouth the critics. Ellison may not have "published anything memorable in decades" but next to him and the two or three other sf luminaries who wrote for TOS, Gene Roddenberry was a rank amateur.
 
Since when did you need judging credentials to post an opinion on a web site?:lol:

Every time anyone criticizes any aspect of Trek or in any way "threatens" the Franchise, some folks automatically bad-mouth the critics. Ellison may not have "published anything memorable in decades" but next to him and the two or three other sf luminaries who wrote for TOS, Gene Roddenberry was a rank amateur.

On the issue of Rodenberry we agree. But on Ellison I stand by what I said. He has done nothing lately except sue people. The script he wrote was over 40 years ago and is the property of the studio. Case closed.
 
i suspect a discussion about harlans point about the danger of not being aware of the past belongs more in misc or tnz.
 
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Since when did you need judging credentials to post an opinion on a web site?

Well, when you describe Ellison as "a waste of space" one has to ask in what respects you can demonstrate being more productive and less of a "waste" than he.
 
On the issue of Rodenberry we agree. But on Ellison I stand by what I said. He has done nothing lately except sue people. The script he wrote was over 40 years ago and is the property of the studio. Case closed.

Well, no, case not closed, because we don't know that the script he wrote 40 years ago belongs to the corporation. We haven't seen his contract; it's entirely possible that he had a different contract than was standard at the time and that thus he retains ownership of the script and of the characters in it. It's also entirely possible that he does not.

Only two entities have seen his contract and would know for sure: Harlan Ellison and CBS. Ellison thinks he owns them; CBS thinks he does not. Case won't be closed until the court issues its ruling.
 
On the issue of Rodenberry we agree. But on Ellison I stand by what I said. He has done nothing lately except sue people. The script he wrote was over 40 years ago and is the property of the studio. Case closed.

ellison hasnt written as much as he did in the past due to health issues.
but when he did through the 90's he regulary was nominated and often won a variety of literary awards.

personally i feel very hot and cold about ellison the person.
on the one hand he has done a lot to help certain authors but then refuses to release the stories in last dangerous visions to help not only the authors still alive as well in many cases now the familes they left behind after they died.

as for his contract with city i dont know about it but some of them the authors did retain certain rights to the characters they created for their story.

for instance if tpau had been uses a a regular character for enterprise his estate would have been paid .


hmm in researching this i just found this more detailed article
that indeed harlan may have a case..
espcially considering in the past the studio has paid him...

courthouse news

Ellison's current lawsuit follows a long battle for royalty rights to the episode. Ellison signed a contract with Paramount's predecessor in interest, DesiLu Studios, when he wrote the 1967 screenplay. However, DesiLu never registered its copyright of the episode, and didn't even register the episode as having been broadcasted. After Paramount took over the rights to "Star Trek," it registered a significantly edited copy of Ellison's episode as having been produced in 1975. But Ellison had already registered his own copyright, using the original screenplay without editing.
Since then, Paramount issued two agreements to pay Ellison royalties for the "City on the Edge of Forever" episode. Ellison has also received part of a Writers' Guild of America settlement with Paramount that the guild filed after Paramount authorized earlier novelizations of "Star Trek" episodes.
Now, Ellison says, Paramount is again withholding payment after licensing the rights to his "City" plot to Simon & Schuster.
Ellison wants damages, interest, accounting and costs.
 
Hmm... if this is true then I can see where Ellison is coming from, but I think that regardless of how slighted he may feel or where he stands legally, Star Trek has become a worldwide phenomenon that has grown beyond the wildest expectations of the people involved in making it.

In his Director's Commentary for TWOK, Nicholas Meyer opines that once you put out a film for public consumption you lose all proprietary posession and responsibility over it. I think the same goes for a TV show such as Trek and its writers. The show has long since passed into the public consciousness and I think that while Ellison may legally still own his creations, I don't think he creatively owns them anymore.

It's been 40 years. After a certain amount of time, copyright disappears - you don't need permission to stage a Shakespeare play for example. I know that the passage of 40 years is a lot different from 500 years, especially when the author is still alive, but I think it's a sufficient enough length of time to justify the usage of a story element without having to secure the author's permission.
 
It's been 40 years. After a certain amount of time, copyright disappears - you don't need permission to stage a Shakespeare play for example. I know that the passage of 40 years is a lot different from 500 years, especially when the author is still alive, but I think it's a sufficient enough length of time to justify the usage of a story element without having to secure the author's permission.

Date of death plus 75 years.
 
It's been 40 years. After a certain amount of time, copyright disappears - you don't need permission to stage a Shakespeare play for example. I know that the passage of 40 years is a lot different from 500 years, especially when the author is still alive, but I think it's a sufficient enough length of time to justify the usage of a story element without having to secure the author's permission.

Date of death plus 75 years.

Date of death plus 90 for us in Euro-wotsit
 
Hmm... if this is true then I can see where Ellison is coming from, but I think that regardless of how slighted he may feel or where he stands legally, Star Trek has become a worldwide phenomenon that has grown beyond the wildest expectations of the people involved in making it.

In his Director's Commentary for TWOK, Nicholas Meyer opines that once you put out a film for public consumption you lose all proprietary posession and responsibility over it. I think the same goes for a TV show such as Trek and its writers. The show has long since passed into the public consciousness and I think that while Ellison may legally still own his creations, I don't think he creatively owns them anymore.

It's been 40 years. After a certain amount of time, copyright disappears - you don't need permission to stage a Shakespeare play for example. I know that the passage of 40 years is a lot different from 500 years, especially when the author is still alive, but I think it's a sufficient enough length of time to justify the usage of a story element without having to secure the author's permission.

The law disagrees with you. And since we're talking about the law, that's the only thing that's relevant.

You should rewrite your statement above to say, "... I think 40 years ought to be sufficient time to justify the usage of a story element without having to secure the author's permission," because as your statement stands now, it's factually inaccurate.

With Ellison, the question, of course, boils down to who owns the actual episode, shooting script, and characters for and in "The City on the Edge of Forever." And it sounds to me like no one's actually quite sure.
 
With Ellison, the question, of course, boils down to who owns the actual episode, shooting script, and characters for and in "The City on the Edge of Forever." And it sounds to me like no one's actually quite sure.

Exactly. As some posters mentioned very early on in this thread, it's very likely that Ellison had a slightly different deal for his work in Star Trek.

Generally, non-staffers sell all rights to everything in their scripts, including characters and realized concepts.

But since no one here is privy to the actual contract Ellison had (or didn't have), none of us actually knows the status. From what I've read, it sounds shaky at best for Ellison, but again, I don't know the nature of the original contract. And I can't believe Ellison or his "fanbase" didn't note any of the Guardian use for forty years.

That falls into lack of enforcing one's copyright and he could just lose his case for that reason alone. (This is why CBS/Paramount so vigorously defends its own copyrights and trademarks of Star Trek. If you don't enforce them, you can lose them)

--Ted
 
Ellison may be a raving belligerent asshole, but he's usually right about everything he rants about. The link to his rant about writers getting paid for their work and for their public appearances and the link to college kids being stupid and arrogant is 100% on point. The difference is that he has the balls to speak his mind. I respect that.
 
With Ellison, the question, of course, boils down to who owns the actual episode, shooting script, and characters for and in "The City on the Edge of Forever." And it sounds to me like no one's actually quite sure.

Exactly. As some posters mentioned very early on in this thread, it's very likely that Ellison had a slightly different deal for his work in Star Trek.

Generally, non-staffers sell all rights to everything in their scripts, including characters and realized concepts.

But since no one here is privy to the actual contract Ellison had (or didn't have), none of us actually knows the status. From what I've read, it sounds shaky at best for Ellison, but again, I don't know the nature of the original contract. And I can't believe Ellison or his "fanbase" didn't note any of the Guardian use for forty years.

That falls into lack of enforcing one's copyright and he could just lose his case for that reason alone. (This is why CBS/Paramount so vigorously defends its own copyrights and trademarks of Star Trek. If you don't enforce them, you can lose them)

--Ted

ah you might wish to read the report from courthouse news
i posted above.

according to it harlan as had ongoing disputes about the use of his creation in the trek novels and in the past they had an agreement worked out.
 
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