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February 1998, Week 2

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Subject:
From:
Lang Thompson <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Film and TV Studies Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 6 Feb 1998 19:31:35 -0500
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The copyright notice can be anywhere in or on a copy of a work but in
practice there are standard places to lessen confusion.  I'm not sure how
the question relates to the Wiseman film:  are you asking whether that
final statement is copyrighted, in which case yes.  Other legal issues such
as libel won't be affected by the copyright.
 
At 06:15 AM 2/6/98 -0500, you wrote:
>I have a legal question for anyone out there.  Does it matter where the
>copyright is placed in a film?  Specifically, if the copyright is placed
>at the end of the credits does that have any bearing--leagally--on
>anything that might come after the credits?  I am thinking of something
>such as the "brief statement" which occurs at the end of Frederick
>Wiseman's _Titicut Follies_, stating that changes have been made at the
>MCIB corrections facility since the making of the film.  Does it matter at
>all in a strict legal sense that Wiseman puts this statement "after" the
>film in a sense?
>
>cheers,
>brian
 
------------------------------------------------------
Lang Thompson
http://www.tcf.ua.edu/wlt4
New at Funhouse:  Pazz & Jop Ballot, Overlooked Albums
of 1997, expanded links.
 
"I saw weird stuff in that place last night.  Weird,
strange, sick, twisted, eerie, godless, evil stuff.
And I want in."  --  Homer Simpson
 
----
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