The origin of copyright law takes us back
to the 1710 and Queen Anne, the Monarch who
had just overseen the Unification of England
and Scotland into then, brand-new Great Britain.
Also on her busy schedule was the Statute
of Anne: the very first copyright law. It
gave authors control over who could make copies
of their books or build on their work a limited
time.
Later a group of rebellious colonists, thought
the Statue of Anne was a good idea, and so
copy/pasted it into their own constitution
giving congress the power:
“To promote the Progress of Science and
useful Arts, by securing for limited Times
to Authors… the exclusive right to their
respective Writings”.
Basically, copyright is a contract between
authors and society: if you promise to make
more stuff, we promise not to copy it or build
on it for 28 years.
Here’s an example from the modern day: let’s
say you’re trying to be a director and you’re
looking for a project to get started.
Harry Potter is a story you’d love to remake.
But since J. K. Rowling published ‘The Sorcerer’s
Stone’ in the United States in 1998 it still
has copyright protection, so you can’t use
it.
Instead you need find something from a long
time ago, like, for example:
Star Wars: A New Hope!
George Lucas released Star Wars: A New Hope
in 1977! That’s more than 28 years ago,
So great! Get filming!
Alas, no.
While Star Wars should have lost copyright
protection in 2005 it’s actually copyrighted
until 2072!
That’s 95 years after publication, not 28!
So you can’t use it unless Lucas lets you.
Why does his copyright last for ages?
Well, as long as there has been copyright
there have been authors arguing that it’s
too short.
And perhaps, they’re right. How’s a poor
guy like George Lucas supposed turn a profit
in the mere 28 years between 1977 and 2005?
There was only the first theatrical release
of ‘A New Hope’,
And the theatrical re-released in 1978
and 1979
and 1981
and 1982
and then there was the 1982 VHS and Betamax
releases
the 1984 broadcast television release
the 1985 Laser disc release
the 1989 widescreen Laser disc release
the 1990 VHS re-release
the 1992 widescreen VHS release
the 1993 Laserdisc re-release
the 1995 VHS re-re-release
and the 1997 special edition theatrical release
Han shot first, you bastard.
and the 1997 VHS special edition release
and the 2004 DVD release
And now you, dear filmmaker, come along and
want
make your own version of Star Wars:
a New Hope? For shame!
That like stealing food right out of George’s
Lucas’ mouth.
Four times Congress has agreed with authors
that the length of copyright is too short
to turn a profit and so extended it:
First in 1831 from 28 years to 42 years, then
again in 1909 to 56 years, in 1976 to the
lifetime of the author plus 50 years, and
in1998 to the lifetime of the author plus
70 years.
That’s a great deal for authors who have
already made stuff, but does it really help
society get more movies and books?
It’s hard to imagine, for example, that
Edgar Rice Burroughs started writing ‘A
Princess of Mars’ and ‘Tarzan’ in 1911
because the copyright laws had just been extended
and would not have done so otherwise.
Or that J. K. Rowling, while living on benefits
in Scotland, was busy doing the math and wouldn’t
have written Harry Potter if the copyright
protection was just for her whole life and
not an additional seven decades thereafter.
Because, exactly who needs incentives after
they’re dead? Dead is the point at which
literally no incentives in the whole universe
can motivate you to write one more screenplay.
Because you’re dead.
If you’re the kind of person who is only
motivated by plans that unravel after your
demise, you’re either amazingly awesome
or deranged.
But so what? So what if every kindergartner’s
macaroni artwork is protected by copyright
for 175 years?
Why does it matter?
Because the main beneficiaries of copyright
after death are not the authors, or society
but companies. Companies like… Disney.
Remember all the good old Disney movies?
Yeah, all of them came from works no longer
under copyright protection at the time.
The whole of the Disney Empire and all the
childhood magic that it produces only exist
because there was copyright free work for
Walt Disney – you know the guy who actually
started the whole company – to rework and
update.
But the corporate, Waltless Disney was the
big pusher of the 1998 life +70 years copyright
extension. It made sure that no one could
make more popular versions of their movies
in the same way they made a more popular version
of Alice in Wonderland.
This near-infinite control subverts the whole
purpose of copyright which is to promote the
creation of more books and movies, not to
give companies the power to stop people making
new creative works based on the efforts on
their long-dead founders.
New directors and authors need the freedom
to take what came before to remake and remix
(romeo & juliet, emma). And they should be
able to use creative material from their own
lifetime to do so, not just be limited to
the work of previous generations.
At the turn of the century, George Lucas wrought
upon civilization a new word: anticipointment.
The tremendous let-down that was the lazy,
bland, and soulless new trilogy.
George Lucas’s was completely within his
rights to make those movies into the sterile,
toy-marketing vehicles they were. He owned
Darth Vader and could tell the origin story
as he wished – and that’s the only version
you’ll ever get to see.
But, imagine for a moment, if copyright still
worked as first intended.
In 2011 the whole of the original Star Wars
trilogy – all of its artwork, its characters,
its music – would have left copyright protection
and been available to aspiring directors and
writers to build upon and make their own versions
of.
There would be a treasure trove of new Star
Wars stories for fans to enjoy.
But as long as the current copyright laws
remain as they are, no living person will
ever get to tell a Darth Vader story, or a
Harry Potter Story, or a Hobbit Story or any
other story that matters to them, that the
author or, when after their death, their company,
disagrees with.�