Court Rules For Paramount In Lawsuit Over ‘Top Gun’ Movies
from the shot-down dept
A couple of years back, Mike wrote about a lawsuit brought against Paramount Pictures over its Top Gun movies. There were several things that colluded to make this lawsuit a thing, as Mike laid out. First was the mess that is copyright termination rights and the second is movie studios’ habit for licensing factual articles for movie rights.
See, the original Top Gun movie, while being entirely fictional, was at least partially informed by a factual news piece written by Ehud Yonay in California. Yonay told the story of real world pilots with callsigns at an elite training facility. Paramount licensed the piece for rights for the movie. In all reality, it didn’t have to do this, for reasons we’ll get into in a moment, but it did. As Mike pointed out, studios tend to do this sort of thing as an insurance policy of sorts, to prevent annoying lawsuits that may or may not have any actual merit.
In the subsequent years, Ehud Yonay passed away. Shosh and Yuval Yonay, Ehud’s widow and son respectively, reclaimed the copyright for the article, 35 years having passed since the licensing deal. And because the surviving Yonays can’t claim there is any direct copying of Ehud’s article in the movie, because there isn’t, they instead claimed that both movies are “derivative works” in order to get around that. Derivative works are their own flavor of mess, since the very concept of derivation in creative expression can route around the idea/expression dichotomy and, well, here we get a suit that is so twisted into a copyright pretzel that you’ve got the surviving family of a journalist suing over two fictional movies after having reclaimed rights to a factual article neither of them had any hand in writing. Cool.
Well, not cool, according the court that ruled for Paramount in the case for the most obvious of reasons.
“To the extent Plaintiffs contend that the Works are similar because they depict or describe fighter pilots landing on an aircraft carrier, being shot down while flying, and carousing at a bar, those are unprotected facts, familiar stock scenes, or scènes à faire,” the judge wrote.
In a brief response, Paramount said it was happy with the ruling.
“We are pleased that the court recognized that plaintiffs’ claims were completely without merit,” a studio spokesperson said.
At the end of the day, if the court wasn’t going to by into the bizarre derivative argument, it’s the only logical way for the court to rule on this. There simply isn’t any actual copying from the factual article to the movies. Everything laid out in the suit amounts to attempting to sue over the “copying” of ideas, concepts, or other unprotectable elements. Again, the movie is filled with names, locations, plot points, and antagonists that are all completely absent from Ehud’s article. You know, because it’s fiction.
Now, the Yonays have already said they plan to appeal the ruling. They almost certainly shouldn’t. The ruling from the lower court is as plain as it is detailed.
“To the extent there are similarities between the characters in the Works, the characters in the Article are real people and are therefore not protected by copyright law,” he wrote.
The judge also noted the many differences between the movie and the article, including the plot, dialogue and setting, and ultimately concluded that the works are not substantially similar.
In fact, they’re not even really all that close. I would argue, actually, that the only lesson to be learned here is that studios should shy away from licensing the rights to factual journalism for fictional works entirely, if this is how those efforts are going to end anyway.
Filed Under: copyright, ehud yonay, termination rights, top gun
Companies: paramount


Comments on “Court Rules For Paramount In Lawsuit Over ‘Top Gun’ Movies”
I used to work at a tech support call center for a well-known company. We were CONSTANTLY being lectured about not setting up inappropriate expectations in the mind of the customer. Seems like licensing rights to factual journalism just sets up inappropriate expectations in the minds of the journalists (and their surviving family) that they have some leverage over the studios that they don’t really have.
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Re: You lost me…
The call center information is a total distraction to whatever you were trying to convey because I just tuned out after that.
Re: Re:
Hey, don’t blame AC for your lack of an attention span. I was able to read their comment perfectly fine, and I’m an ADHDer.
Re: Re: Re:
Don’t make this an ADHD thing, I’ve got ADHD and Loves Mossad is right. The post is an absurd parallel to introduce I to discussion, irrelevant to any point at all, the point being made isn’t related to the story, and the whole thing is bizarre considering it’s a circumstance where the totality of obligations are clearly spelled out in a contract vs. buying shit with an SKU.
Re: Re: Re:2 Thank you
Autism spectrum here 😏
We all have our niches…
Appreciate you & thanks.
Re: Re: Re:2
So AC pointing out that they’ve got a naturally short attention span for some things yet were able to read a short comment that someone else complained their attention span was too short for is “making it an ADHD thing”? Only to someone who doesn’t understand ADHD.
Re: Re: Re:2
AC said: “Seems like licensing rights to factual journalism just sets up inappropriate expectations in the minds of the journalists (and their surviving family) that they have some leverage over the studios that they don’t really have.”
Mamba said: “…the point being made isn’t related to the story…”
Your reading comprehension, ch… Oh, wait. No.
Re: Re: Re:2
Agreed with both ACs above.
Yonay got the short end of very big Hollywood lawyers
“See, the original Top Gun movie, while being entirely fictional, was at least partially informed by a factual news piece written by Ehud Yonay in California. Yonay told the story of real world pilots with callsigns at an elite training facility. Paramount licensed the piece for rights for the movie.”
Sad in a lot of ways… this little guy is being erased from all traces by a lawsuit.
Re:
Without the lawsuit, would you even know the name ‘Yonay’?
Time erases all tracks, eventually.
Re: Re: My Username checks… 😆
Ehud Yonay
“No Margin for Error: The Making of the Israeli Air Force”
1993
Go to a library often?
Re:
He’s dead, so…I doubt he cares.
This suit seems more like attempted robbery to me, or maybe extortion. Weaponizing copyright–sadly, not that novel an approach.
Not surprised the court ruled the way it did.
“We by and prchase…”
Re:
u are not meant to be seen or heard
I feel the need ..
the need for greed.
the original license
I think the original license was to prevent bad pr if the author got the idea to get pushy at a bad time. His relatives dont have that leverage at this late date.
Warms my heart to see a content creator responsible for so much American pleasure at the movies prevail against a couple of parasites and their scum attorney(s).
I’m not even sure what copyright law was supposed to do here. If copyright law doesn’t protect general events mentioned in news stories then journalists just aren’t going to report the news anymore? If journalists can’t sell rights to a story while holding onto it in perpetuity the news industry is just going to disappear? What?
Team Yonay fucked up by trying to go toe-to-toe with the experts in copyright overreach. Really they should have realized that Ehud did a deal with the Devil. There was no chance that the suit was going to end in their favor.