The legal situation seems confusing here. Are you suggesting that the film was not produced by Warners, but that they took action for copyright infringement on the grounds that the script for this film deliberately copied elements of the narrative from that of 'The Exorcist'? If so, in what country or countries did this action take place? Who is the rights owner to this title? Ultimately this will be the person/company who decides whether to carry out a re-release and they will only do this if (i) they think they can make money out of it, and (ii) they will not be in danger from costly legal action. Given that Warners re-released 'The Exorcist' as recently as 1998 (in the UK these new prints are still in distribution, as is a video release deriving from them), I would have thought that any commercial reasoning behind the original lawsuit might well still apply. They may have lost a case in one country, but they might still be able to appeal and even that doesn't stop them from starting one somewhere else. Given that both 'Jackie Brown' and the remake of 'Shaft' performed poorly at the box office, I wouldn't have thought that the impetus for a high-profile rerelease of a blaxploitation title would be that grate, especially if it could involve a legal wrangle. Another possibility might be to try and get an arthouse or rep distributor interested (e.g. Milestone in the US or the British Film Institute over here), because the profit element wouldn't be such a major motivation, but again, they could not afford to run the risk of serious legal hassle. Leo Dr. Leo Enticknap Director, Northern Region Film and Television Archive School of Arts and Media University of Teesside Middlesbrough TS1 3BA United Kingdom Tel. +44-(0)1642 384022 Fax. +44-(0)1642 384099 Brainfryer: +44-(0)7710 417383 ---- Online resources for film/TV studies may be found at ScreenSite http://www.tcf.ua.edu/ScreenSite