screenwriting

CREATOR TIP: Don’t Negotiate Worthless Option Agreements #indiefilm #filmlaw #filmmaking #screenwriting #producing

A few weeks ago, I wrote about the importance of Option Agreements to a producer who is trying to acquire the rights to a screenplay when raising money for your film.

An option agreement is a contract that gives the filmmaker the exclusive right to buy the screenplay copyright during a defined period of time for a specific amount of money.

Now let’s talk about a mistake that a lot of filmmakers make when negotiating an option agreement with a writer… a mistake may transform your valuable option agreement into a little more than a right to keep negotiating with the writer. The big mistake? Failing to negotiate the purchase price when you negotiate the option.

When you negotiate the option agreement you must, at the same time, also negotiate the purchase price and other key terms of the screenplay sale. A filmmaker who has negotiated the option agreement to a screenplay but not the purchase agreement holds a worthless option. It is worthless because although the filmmaker may exercise the option, the sale terms have not been agreed on and, therefore, the screenwriter is not obligated to sell the script to the filmmaker for a certain price.

In the case of a worthless option, what the filmmaker really has is not a right to buy the script but a right to negotiate for its sale. The screenwriter may demand as much money for the script as he or she wants and the only choice the filmmaker has is either to agree to pay it or not to buy the script.

Example: Wendy Writer has written a script called King Axolotl, a monster flick about a giant fire-breathing aquatic salamander, which Petra Producer is very interested in making. Suppose Petra didn’t negotiate a purchase agreement when she negotiated the option agreement for the script. It’s now six months later, and Petra has a backer interested in funding the picture. Petra tells Wendy that she wants to buy the script for $65,000. Wendy, knowing that Petra has an interested financier whom she doesn’t want to lose, decides to hold out for a higher purchase price—$100,000. After all, Wendy figures, she is not obligated to sell the script to Petra at any certain price, so she might as well hold out for a higher price. Petra has lost her leverage over bargaining for the purchase price. Without a purchase agreement tied to an option, the option is pretty much worthless. At best, it’s a shopping agreement – the right to show the script around without the right to buy it at a certain price.

The most common reason a filmmaker fails to negotiate the purchase terms is that it the purchase terms is the trickiest part of the option/purchase agreement. It’s often a bit overwhelming and easier to just “kick that part down the road.” How much should you offer to pay for the script? What contract clauses do you need? What rights do you need and what rights should the writer keep?

However, the reality is this: few investors outside the “bank of mom and dad” will give you money for a project when you can’t promise that you can purchase the rights to the screenplay for a predetermined price.

The good news is that these are things you can learn. I spend a whole chapter in The Pocket Lawyer for Filmmakers walking you through some of the key deal points in option/purchase agreements. Even if you don’t own my book, this is an area where partnering with an experienced production attorney can provide you with the certainty your investors need in order to finance your film.

For more on the deal points of an option/purchase agreement, see The Pocket Lawyer for Filmmakers .

Parts of this blog been excerpted from The Pocket Lawyer for Filmmakers.

© 2017 Thomas A. Crowell, Esq.

Thomas A. Crowell, Esq. (tcrowell@lanesash.com) is a partner at the law firm of Lane Sash & Larrabee, LLP. He focuses his practice on intellectual property and media law.

NOT LEGAL ADVICE

CREATOR TIP: NO COPYRIGHT FOR CONCEPTS #indiefilm #comicbook #filmmaking #screenwriting #artists #filmlaw

Let’s say that you are a writer with a great idea for a comic book character: “Maggot Man – Carrion Eater of Justice!” Your new superhero has the powers of a maggot and a sense of righteous indignation… but little else. You figure you’ll flesh out your character once you start working with the right artist.

So, you go to meet-up groups looking for the right artist with whom to collaborate. You tell a several artists about your character idea, take a look at their portfolios, and finally decide on somebody who seems like a good fit. But just as you finish up the comic book script and sit down to talk with your new partner, you see your character on the web . . . created by one of the artists you interviewed for the project!

You have timestamp emails showing that you sent your idea to the plagiarizing penciller before he created the project. Heck, you even have a Facebook post from him, it which he writes “Thank you for telling me your comic book idea; it sounds great!”

It looks like you have a slam-dunk lawsuit for copyright infringement or idea misappropriation, right?

Not so fast. Unless your conversations rose to the level of creating a contract for the protection of your idea with this purloining painter, you may be out of luck. That’s because the law really, really, really doesn’t like giving anyone a monopoly over an idea. In fact, copyright law expressly does not protect ideas.

The plain and simple truth is that if you post your idea on the Internet or tell somebody your concept at a cocktail party, chances are you can wave (and waive) goodbye to owning that idea.

This is because the law sees artistic ideas as building blocks for expressive works. Anyone who had exclusive rights to an idea would have a monopoly over that idea, which would frustrate the policy of copyright law, which is, to encourage authors in the creation of new expressive works.

And note: this whole “no-copyright-protection-for-ideas” thing is media agnostic — which means that it doesn’t matter if you’re writing the screenplay, recording a song, or have a great idea for a painting — there’s still no copyright protection over an idea.

So, what you do when all you have is just a concept and you want to work with other people to flesh out?

Well, one thing you can do is get a copy of The Pocket Lawyer for Comic Book Creators and The Pocket Lawyer for Filmmakers to find out how to protect concepts from misappropriation.

Parts of this blog been excerpted from The Pocket Lawyer for Comic Book Creators.

© 2017 Thomas A. Crowell, Esq.

Thomas A. Crowell, Esq. (tcrowell@lanesash.com) is a partner at the law firm of Lane Sash & Larrabee, LLP. He focuses his practice on intellectual property and media law.

NOT LEGAL ADVICE

Filmmaker's Tip: Can't Afford the Screenplay? Try an Option. #indiefilm #filmmaker #screenwriting #screenplay

A filmmaker who wants to make a movie using someone else’s script must buy the motion picture rights to that script in order to make the movie. However, a filmmaker won't want to buy a script unless she knows that she can get it made. After all, the filmmaker needs a little time to secure funding, interest actors, and hopefully, set up a distribution deal. But here's the rub -- the filmmaker can’t attach all those elements (financiers, talent, distributors) to the project unless she has the right to make the film from the screenplay.

This is where the option agreement comes in handy. An option agreement is a contract that gives the filmmaker the exclusive right to buy the screenplay copyright during a defined period of time for a specific amount of money. 

Optioning and Selling the Screenplay

● Under U.S. copyright law, all screenplay sales, assignments, and transfers must be in writing to effectively transfer the copyright.

● Both sides in the transaction need to be especially careful that everybody understands which rights are granted and which rights are reserved.

● What is being purchased is the copyright to the screenplay. A producer must make sure that all the screenplay’s authors and contributors sign off on the deal.

● When you negotiate the exclusive right to buy (the option), you should also negotiate the sale (the purchase agreement).

For details on the deal points in an Option/Purchase Agreement, See The Pocket Lawyer for Filmmakers.

© 2017 Thomas A. Crowell, Esq.  

Thomas A. Crowell, Esq. (tcrowell@lanesash.com) is a partner at the law firm of Lane Sash & Larrabee, LLP. He focuses his practice on intellectual property and media law.

NOT LEGAL ADVICE