[THE_EPISTLE] copyrights
henkinex at AOL.COM
henkinex at AOL.COM
Thu Apr 27 18:32:51 BST 2006
The partner was Harry Saltzman
-----Original Message-----
From: schwartzboiko at ADELPHIA.NET
To: THEEPISTLE at OGHAM.ORG
Sent: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 10:24:01 -0700
Subject: Re: [THE_EPISTLE] copyrights
--For what its worth - as I recall the Bond books were sold individually, most
to the Brocolli and his partner at the time (whose name I can't remember and am
too lazy to look up right now) and 2 to others. The 2 others were "Casino
Royale" and "Thunderball". A deal was made for "Thunderball" and that became
the 4th Bond movie. "Casino Royale" was produced as a TV drama in the '50s on
US television with Bond as an American and Leiter as British. Then it became a
comedy in the '60s. The rights to "Thunderball" must have reverted to the
original owner after the original movie. That allowed it to be remade as "Never
Say Never Again".
marty schwartz
schwartzboiko at adelphia.net
---- Debora <debora_gale at LIBERO.IT> wrote:
> Public domain... Copyrights... Rights owner... Etc... What an interesting
argument! I read in 1983 there was the war of bonds, a battle between Roger
Moore and Sean Connery: the official Octopussy VS the unofficial Never say never
again. And I read the rights battle was more exciting then the two movies
(personally i saw the 2 movies in DVD and I prefer Roger's Octopussy).
> Was the Val Kilmer movie endorsed by Saint Club? There is not reference to
Charteris in the credits.
>
> Debora
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Martin Schwartz
> To: THEEPISTLE at OGHAM.ORG
> Sent: Wednesday, April 26, 2006 8:15 PM
> Subject: [THE_EPISTLE] copyrights
>
>
> Lupin is public domain. Holmes is public domain tho' some publishers
> still pay for authorization from the descendants. In the US, some of
> the oldest Charteris stories may be out of copyright tho Charteris, as I
> recall, and Ian can answer this better than I, was so scrupulous about
> maintaining his rights, that a way may have been found around this. In
> any event, the stick figure is a trademark and, if reprinted in recent
> editions of the canon, might be renewable indefinitely, along with the
> name, "The Saint".
> I say this because I was involved last year in reproducing a radio play
> of the old "Superman" radio series at the LA branch of the Museum of
> Broadcasting. The name "Superman" could be used but other names, like
> "Clark Kent", had to be changed. Go figure.
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