The Copyright Wars
Publisher
: Princeton University Press
Summary :In 1948 several Soviet composers, including Dmitri Shostakovich,
objected to the use of their music in an American spy film, The Iron
Curtain, that was distinctly anti-Communist.
These Soviet composers
understandably feared the gulag for appearing in Hollywood’s
first Cold War effort.1 Though their music was unchanged, they protested
its political use. When Shostakovich sued in the United States,
he failed. The works were in the public domain, thus freely available
for anyone’s use, the composer had been credited, the film did not
claim that he agreed with its views, and the music had not been distorted.
How, the court asked, had the artist’s rights been violated? “Is
the standard to be good taste, artistic worth, political beliefs, moral
concepts, or what is it to be?”2 But in France a court ascertained
“moral damage.” The film was banned and the composers were
awarded damages.
In 1988 the director John Huston sued to prevent the Asphalt Jungle,
which he had filmed in 1950 in black and white, from being
shown on television in a colorized version. In the United States, according
to the work-for-
hire
doctrine, the film studio—and not the
director it employs—is the author. But in France, after Huston’s
death that year, his children and his screenwriter invoked the continuing
aesthetic claims, or “moral rights,” that remain with authors
in French law even after they have sold their works. Over the next six
years, five different French courts first prevented screening, then allowed
the film to be broadcast only if the director’s objections were publicized, and finally levied hefty fines on Turner Entertainment,
the errant colorizers.
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