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Inside out the movie copyright
Inside out the movie copyright







inside out the movie copyright

While "Deep Impact" was more widely praised, with more nuanced performances and assured direction (by "ER" alum and frequent Spielberg collaborator Mimi Leder) and made a sizable dent in the box office, "Armageddon" was a straight up blockbuster.

inside out the movie copyright

It's also very clear that Bay, deeply insecure about his own film, did some unscrupulous things to make sure that his film came out on top. But what is clear is that it came after "Deep Impact" was being worked on. It's unclear where the initial idea for "Armageddon" came from, particularly since almost a dozen writers had their hands on the screenplay. The competition continued even after "Deep Impact" was released, with Disney Studios chairman Joe Roth giving "Armageddon" an additional $3 million for even bigger visual effects sequences, to be incorporated just a few months before "Armageddon" was set to debut. We spoke to someone who said that Bay told him that Bay and a confederate snuck into Paramount while the film was being edited and actually stole dailies so that the "Armageddon" production team could see what the competition was up to. This wouldn't be the first time Disney had been accused of plagiarism (some accounts suggest the entire concept of Disney-MGM Studios - now Disney's Hollywood Studios, in Orlando, Florida - was lifted entirely from discussions with Universal that Disney chief Michael Eisner had when he was still running Paramount) and it wouldn't be the last.īut this kind of skullduggery went on even throughout production.

inside out the movie copyright

In the nonfiction book "Tales from the Script," the writer says that, while taking a meeting at Disney, he spoke about the "Deep Impact" script, and noticed that the executive he was meeting with was furiously taking notes. Years later, Rubin claimed that Disney had outright stolen the idea for the project. And why was everyone in such a hurry? Because over at the Disney lot in Burbank, a suspiciously similar project was brewing. Spielberg intended to direct the project (ultimately called "Deep Impact") himself, injecting some popcorn movie heft to his newly developed studio, but commitments to "Amistad" prevented him from making the movie in the window that he had allotted. The subsequent drafts of the screenplay took it away from "When Worlds Collide" and "Hammer of God" enough that neither was credited this left Clarke deeply unhappy, particularly since DreamWorks had used his name in promotion of the project.

inside out the movie copyright

Clarke, with similar subject matter (an asteroid on a collision course with earth).Įventually, the filmmaker would merge the projects with a script by Bruce Joel Rubin (later re-written by Michael Tolkin).

" Armageddon."īut which actually came first? And which holds up better, 20 years later?Īccording to a May 1998 issue of Starlog magazine (remember them?), producers David Brown and Richard Zanuck came up with the concept for "Deep Impact" sometime in the late 1970s, when they were contemplating a way to update the 1951 film "When Worlds Collide." The producers took the concept to Steven Spielberg, who had already bought the rights to "The Hammer of God," a novel by Arthur C. It happens every couple of years, where two incredibly similar movies will come out around the same time, whether they're about magicians, terrorists targeting the white house, or destructively erupting volcanoes.īut perhaps the most famous - and still talked-about - tale of conceptual overlap came in the summer of 1998, when dueling films about death from above (one's a comet, the other's an asteroid) invaded cinemas worldwide.









Inside out the movie copyright